

#TINYTERM REDDIT SALES PLUS#
You'll get beaten up out there if you don't know what you're doing, plus a lot of people you'll be calling on are professionally trained to deal with salespeople, so to them you're just 1 of the 20+ salespeople calling them daily, so what makes them want to talk to you or give you any time of day?ĭon't get me wrong, good salespeople make a lot of money because their ability to bring new business to their companies is invaluable to their organization, but it's not something anyone can just do, otherwise everyone would be in sales. The article makes it sound like making 100 cold calls in a day is easy work, but the reality is it's tough. The catch is people can't explain the amount of stress involved in all levels of sales, especially the early stages. If you can cold approach comfortably and do well, this would almost definitely be an excellent fit."

You’ll know pretty quickly if this is something you can hack or not. The only real way to tell is try it for a few months. If you are a hustler and are good with girls (this is a dead giveaway, can you cold approach a girl and have decent results? You’d most likely be a good fit then). Even guys who I thought would kill it have given it up for greener pastures.
#TINYTERM REDDIT SALES FREE#
Feel free to give it a try however, it’s completely possible you will make it. If you’re your a nerdy guy who as Aspergers and can’t pick up the phone you will most likely have a hard time getting your first job, then subsequently fired if you do get your first job. "Can I Do Sales? The best sales guys I have met have a very high EQ with a level of social skills and the ability to hustle and grind. The poster does address what I asked vaguely, but I was hoping for some anecdotes from this sub reddit. "SMB AE - 100k-120k (Estimate) and Mid Market AE - 120k-150k (Estimate)" "The career progression typically goes: SDR (6 months to 2 years) => Small Business Account Executive (1+ years) => Mid Market Account Executive (1+ Years) = > Enterprise Account Executive." Is there some large underlying con to this career path? And overall, people are fired a lot of the time due to how competitive a career this could be. This seems to good to be true.What is the catch? I have to imagine the newbies (25 years of age or younger) get fired more often due to lack of experience. According to Wall Street Play Boys you can make 100k within three years of starting your career (Link: ).
