Sourcing high-performing SaaS AEs is harder than it looks. The best ones — consistent quota attainers with relevant stage and ACV experience — are rarely applying to job boards. They're being approached, and they're selective about what they respond to. Effective sourcing in this market means knowing where to find them, how to identify the right ones quickly, and how to write outreach that earns a reply.

This guide covers the sourcing channels that produce the highest-quality AE candidates in 2026, the Boolean search structures that surface relevant profiles faster, and the outreach principles that separate responses from silence.

Market context: SaaS AE roles take 45–60 days to fill on average. Most of that time is lost in the sourcing and first-screen phase. A tighter sourcing process at the top compresses the entire timeline.

The four sourcing channels that produce results

Channel 01
LinkedIn Sales Navigator
The highest-signal sourcing channel for SaaS AEs. Filter by title, company size, industry, seniority, and geography. Use "Account Executive" + "SaaS" or specific product categories. Save searches and set alerts for new profiles matching your criteria.
Channel 02
Talent Marketplaces
Platforms like We Build Pipe where AEs self-select and publish structured performance profiles. Candidates here are actively or passively open and have already disclosed quota history, ACV, and stage experience — reducing screening time significantly.
Channel 03
Layoff & Transition Lists
Curated layoff tracker spreadsheets and communities (Layoffs.fyi, Sales Hacker, RevGenius) surface recently displaced AEs who are actively looking. Timing matters here — outreach within 2–3 weeks of a layoff announcement captures the most responsive window.
Channel 04
Referral Networks
AEs refer other AEs. If you've placed a strong candidate, ask them directly: "Who's the best AE you've worked with who might be open to a conversation?" A warm referral from a peer cuts response time and pre-qualifies fit before the first call.

Boolean search strings that work on LinkedIn

These strings are structured for LinkedIn Recruiter and Sales Navigator. Adjust title variations and company names based on the specific segment you're sourcing for.

Mid-Market AE — B2B SaaS
("Account Executive" OR "AE" OR "Account Manager") AND ("SaaS" OR "B2B software") AND ("mid-market" OR "midmarket" OR "commercial") NOT ("SDR" OR "BDR" OR "intern")
Enterprise AE — specific verticals
("Enterprise Account Executive" OR "Senior Account Executive") AND ("Salesforce" OR "HubSpot" OR "Gong" OR "Outreach" OR "Workday") NOT ("sales development" OR "customer success")
High-attainment signal — profile keywords
("President's Club" OR "quota attainment" OR "100%" OR "top performer" OR "top 10%") AND ("Account Executive") AND ("SaaS" OR "software")

Outreach that earns a response

Most recruiter outreach gets ignored because it's generic, vague, or clearly templated. High-performing AEs receive 5–10 recruiter messages per week on LinkedIn. Getting a response requires demonstrating that you've actually read their profile and that the opportunity is worth their time.

The three-line outreach structure

  • Line 1 — specific observation: Reference something concrete from their profile. Not "I noticed your experience" — but "I saw you were at [Company] during their Series B-to-C growth phase, which is directly relevant to what I'm working on."
  • Line 2 — specific opportunity: Name the segment, stage, and OTE range. Vague opportunities get ignored. "Mid-market AE role at a Series C DevOps company, $180K OTE, $700K quota" gets read.
  • Line 3 — low-friction ask: Don't ask for a call immediately. Ask if it's worth a 5-minute conversation to see if there's a fit. Lower commitment = higher response rate.

Response rate benchmark: Cold LinkedIn outreach to SaaS AEs averages 8–12% response rates. Personalized, specific outreach with a named OTE and company stage typically reaches 22–30%. The difference is almost entirely in specificity of the first line.

Timing your outreach for maximum impact

Even great messages get buried if sent at the wrong time. Tuesday through Thursday, 7–9am and 12–1pm in the candidate's timezone consistently outperforms other windows for cold LinkedIn messages. Avoid Friday afternoons and Monday mornings — lower open and response rates across the board.

For AEs who have recently changed jobs or been laid off, the optimal outreach window is 3–6 weeks post-transition — early enough that they're still evaluating options, late enough that they've had time to decompress and think clearly about next steps.