nash - APAC Launcher / GTM Lead
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Requirements
• You have 5-10 years of experience, and your career probably doesn't fit neatly into one box. You might have started in management consulting (McKinsey, Bain, BCG) and moved into an operating role at a technology or logistics company. You might have been an early employee at a startup where you did everything from product scoping to closing the first enterprise deals. You might have run strategy and operations at a retailer or marketplace and now want to be closer to the customer. • The common thread: you understand how complex operations work, you can design solutions to hard problems, and you've been responsible for commercial outcomes, even if your title was never "Account Executive." • You think in systems, not features. When you look at a customer's delivery operation, you see the architecture: where data flows, where decisions get made, where the manual workarounds are hiding real cost. You can sketch a solution on a whiteboard in a customer meeting and then translate it into a scoping document for an engineering team the same afternoon. • You can build a financial model, run a discovery workshop, and write an executive memo, sometimes in the same day. You move between strategic thinking and hands-on execution without friction. You don't need heavy process to make progress. • You're curious about how operations actually work. When a Head of Supply Chain describes their delivery model, you listen for the constraints and trade-offs, not just the pain points. You understand unit economics, fleet mix decisions, and why a 2% improvement in delivery success rate matters more than it sounds. • An existing network in Australian retail, grocery, or logistics is valuable. An existing network across broader APAC is a differentiator. • Profile examples: • Management consultant (MBB) who moved into an operator, product, or commercial role at a technology or logistics company • Early-stage operator at a marketplace, logistics, or delivery company who wore multiple hats across strategy, product, and customer acquisition • Strategy and operations leader at a retailer or commerce business with deep exposure to supply chain and delivery • Solutions or product leader at an enterprise technology company where every engagement required designing a bespoke deployment alongside the customer • This role is probably not right for: Career enterprise sellers looking for a quota and a territory. The commercial component is real, but it's embedded in strategic and solution design work, not separated from it. • HOW THIS ROLE WORKS • You join a small, high-performing APAC team alongside a Customer Success function and the regional GM. Nash is a startup. The team is lean. You'll have significant autonomy and direct access to Nash's founders, product leaders, and engineering team. That access isn't ceremonial. You'll be in product discussions weekly, shaping what Nash builds based on what you're learning in the field. • For APAC expansion, you'll work with the GM and Nash's founder network to open doors and build market intelligence. The model is strategic groundwork first, committed resources later, not premature team-building. • The first 90 days are weighted toward Australian pipeline and strategic account work. APAC expansion research starts in parallel and deepens as the Australian motion gains traction.
Responsibilities
• CLOSE NEW ENTERPRISE CUSTOMERS IN AUSTRALIA • Own new enterprise opportunities in Australia end-to-end, from first conversation through to signed partnership. But "sales cycle" undersells what this actually involves. • Each deal starts with understanding a customer's delivery operation in detail: how orders flow, which carriers run which zones, where manual workarounds mask systemic problems, what their cost structure actually looks like. From that understanding, you design the Nash solution. Which products apply. How they integrate with existing systems. What the deployment sequence looks like. What outcomes the customer should expect and when. • You'll work directly with Nash's product and engineering teams to shape proposals. Sometimes you're configuring what exists. Sometimes you're identifying a gap that becomes a product investment. The best deals at Nash aren't closed by selling features. They're closed by designing a system that solves a problem the customer couldn't solve with their current stack. • You'll work with senior operators and executives at retailers, grocery chains, quick commerce companies, and logistics businesses. Australia's retail market knows Nash. We already work with some of the country's largest brands. Your job is to convert that credibility into new partnerships, not by running a volume play, but by identifying the right enterprise accounts and building deep, strategic relationships. • SUPPORT THE GROWTH OF EXISTING STRATEGIC ACCOUNTS • Work alongside the GM to expand our largest customer relationships. These accounts are multi-product, multi-year partnerships where the next phase of growth depends on identifying what Nash should build and deploy next. • This means running structured assessments of a customer's current operations, mapping where new Nash capabilities could change their cost structure or delivery experience, and building the business case that gets a new workstream funded internally. You'll model scenarios: what happens if this retailer shifts 30% of volume from third-party carriers to a captive fleet? What does route optimization save across 200 stores versus 50? What's the real cost of a failed delivery when you account for redelivery, customer churn, and call center load? • You'll work closely with Product and Engineering to translate what you learn in the field into product direction. The line between selling and building is thin at Nash. Your customer conversations directly shape our roadmap. • This is strategic work, not account management. You're helping senior operators see what's possible and building the commercial and technical structure to get there. • LAY THE GROUNDWORK FOR APAC EXPANSION • Nash's international plan calls for a first enterprise customer outside Australia and New Zealand. Your job isn't to run a full sales cycle in a new country while also closing AU deals. It's to do the strategic groundwork that makes expansion possible: identify which markets have the strongest fit for Nash, map the top 10-20 target accounts, build a view of local carrier ecosystems and competitive dynamics, and start activating warm introduction pathways through Nash's founder network, advisors, and your own connections. • This looks like research, relationship-building, and a handful of well-prepared trips rather than sustained in-market selling. You'll build the target list, secure the first executive meetings, and develop enough local context to design a credible entry plan. When a conversation gets serious, you'll work with the GM and Nash's global team to shape the engagement. • New markets also mean new operational patterns. Delivery in Tokyo works differently than delivery in Sydney. Carrier ecosystems, regulatory constraints, customer expectations, and cost structures all shift. Part of this work is understanding those differences well enough to know where Nash's existing product translates and where adaptation is needed. • BUILD THE PLAYBOOK • Every engagement teaches Nash something. You'll capture what works (and what doesn't) across deal cycles, competitive positioning, pricing, and regional nuance. The goal is to leave behind a playbook that makes the next hire faster and the next market easier. • WHAT SUCCESS LOOKS LIKE • First 6 months: • Material contribution to multiple new Australian enterprise deals closed or in final stages • A healthy pipeline of qualified enterprise opportunities with clear next steps • Strategic account value assessments completed, with new use cases scoped and costed • Active collaboration with Product and Engineering on at least one customer-driven product investment • APAC expansion research complete: target market identified, top accounts mapped, initial outreach underway • First 12 months: • Material contribution to meaningful new revenue closed from Australian enterprise pipeline • A documented, repeatable enterprise sales approach for the Australian market, including solution design templates and engagement frameworks • First qualified enterprise conversations in an APAC expansion market, with a credible entry plan and timeline • A clear recommendation on where Nash should expand next in APAC, what it takes, and when to commit dedicated resources
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