
Turning Marketers & Sellers Into Full-Stack GTM Athletes with Jaleh Rezaei, Co-Founder & CEO at Mutiny
the gtm engineer
Agent-first creative bet and execution
Jaleh discusses betting on AI creative, initial struggles, and recent breakthroughs generating high-quality assets.
Jaleh Rezaei is the CEO and Co-Founder of Mutiny, a Sequoia backed company building an agentic AI platform for go-to-market teams. Before Mutiny, Jaleh spent four years in product marketing at VMware during a period of rapid growth, then joined Gusto as employee number 12 and led marketing & BD as the company scaled from 12 to 500 people. While at Gusto, frustration of being blocked by engineering and design dependencies led Jaleh and her co-founder Nikhil to start Mutiny in 2018. While initially focused on no-code website personalization and ABM, about a year ago, Mutiny doubled down on agentic AI, and rebuilt the platform from the ground up. Mutiny now replaces the manual work of creating landing pages, case studies, and sales materials with an AI agent that can generate on-brand assets in minutes.
In this podcast, we discuss:
* Why marketing is shifting from channel specialists to full-stack GTM athletes as AI agents get closer to handling the tactical work of running ads, managing campaigns, and optimizing spend across platforms like LinkedIn, Meta, and Google
* How building personalized landing pages at Gusto showed Jaleh the power of personalization and the frustration of not being able to scale it
* How Mutiny’s agent extracts brand guidelines, case studies, and resources to generate on-brand customer-facing assets that lets sellers create the hyper-personalized deal materials they need without waiting on their marketing team
* Why the buying experience represents your brand to prospects, and how speed + personalization are some of the biggest differentiators in competitive deals
* Why Jaleh thinks marketers need to spend time learning how to sell in order to build empathy for what selling actually looks like
Episode highlights:
* At Gusto, Jaleh’s team built personalized micro-pages for startup segments like Y Combinator companies. Instead of sending them to a generic website, each page showed the exclusive YC offer, listed other YC companies already using Gusto, and included their testimonials. The result was a 2x increase in conversion rate because the page made the purchase decision feel obvious and risk-free. At the time, this level of personalization was only possible for a handful of segments, and scaling it required resources most teams like Gusto’s didn’t have.
* Most companies staff their sales org with enough reps that each can go deep on a relatively small book of accounts, where closing deals requires constantly providing custom one-pagers, ROI decks, case studies, and tailored business cases. However marketing teams are infrequently large enough to deliver those assets for every account. Pre-agents, even the best marketing teams could only realistically personalize for five to ten verticals, so one-to-one ABM was reserved for a small number of top accounts. As a result, reps ended up spending a significant time creating these assets themselves instead of focusing on selling.
* Mutiny’s agent automatically extracts a company’s brand standards, design guidelines, images, case studies, and resources during onboarding, then generates personalized assets like deal-specific case studies, custom landing pages, and tailored ROI decks that comply with those standards. Jaleh notes that the agent often understands brand guidelines better than most people on the marketing team outside of brand design.
* Jaleh explains that when Mutiny was evaluating an AI CRM, the rep was slow to respond, apologetic that he didn’t have the answers to their questions, and kept delivering underwhelming materials. Over time, the internal conversation shifted from thinking the product was strong, to questioning whether the company could be trusted at all. The buying experience became the lens Mutiny used to evaluate the entire brand. Jaleh argues that this is why equipping sellers with the tools to respond to live deals quickly with personalized and high-quality assets matters so much. Every interaction a rep has with a prospect is a reflection of the company, and a seller who can’t deliver what a buyer asks for in a timely way risks eroding trust.
* In sales and marketing there are two things that matter most: (1) connecting the customer’s pain to your product and (2) building trust. Connecting pain comes from deeply understanding users, communicating through their eyes and making it clear what you are solving for them. Trust comes from speed, substance, and reliability.
* Jaleh’s top suggest for building the GTM athlete muscle is to spend time selling. There’s no better way to build empathy for customers (and sellers) than talking + selling to prospects yourself. This enhances the quality of support and depth of understanding that drives the marketer’s work.
Where to find Jaleh:
* Mutiny
Transcript details:
(00:00) Intro
(02:52) Jaleh’s background and Mutiny’s evolution from website personalization to agentic AI platform
(06:02) How AI changes GTM roles from channel specialists to full-stack athletes
(08:33) Why specialization has become more important in marketing over the last 10 years
(11:05) The Gusto micro-page example that doubled conversion rates for YC startups
(13:03) Why the best insights come from talking to customers
(16:03) The sales versus marketing dependency problem and how agents close the gap
(19:15) Speed, personalization, and why the buying experience is your brand
(23:20) The two things that matter most in marketing and sales
(24:42) How to connect your product with the customer’s pain
(30:05) How Mutiny is making it easier to automate the time consuming parts of marketing so you can focus on creativity + true product marketing
(31:08) Why scaling ABM pre-agents wasn’t realistic
(32:42) How agents enable sellers to run one-to-one ABM with marketing guardrails
(36:24) The evolving role of marketing and sales collaboration with AI
(39:04) How AI raising the floor makes creativity in marketing more important than ever
(44:41) How ABM is changing
(48:39) How Jaleh recommends personally getting better at connecting product to pain
(51:05) Favorite underrated tool, favorite creative campaign, and wrap up
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