Being a Name Brand Salesperson for a Really-Big-Company
Monday, December 17th, 2007
If this is your first time visiting, you can receive this blog by RSS Feed or email .
Summary: Selling name brands for big corporations might look easy on the surface; it’s not.
It was my first day of my new job. I had worked for years for small companies and was incredibly excited to finally be selling for a really-big-company. This was a Fortune 10 company that everyone knew; I could finally let the products and services sell themselves and relax a little. I had paid my dues and I was now on selling-easy-street. I could not have been more wrong. Before you answer the siren song of a really-big-company sales position please consider the following.
Quota/Budget. Those really-big-company executives may have gotten their executive position for all the wrong reasons but they definitely are smart enough to know that brand name recognition normally translates into an easier sale for you. They compensate for that fact by giving you a large sales budget like you’ve never seen before.
Competition. As Reggie Jackson used to say, “Fans don’t boo nobodies.” The more visible your company is, the more likely your prospects and customers are going to be a target of fierce competitive activity.
Bureaucracy. You only thought you had to do a lot of paperwork when you worked at those smaller companies. Really-big-companies will bury you in meaningless and redundant paperwork, CRM systems, ERP systems, SFA systems, expense voucher systems, ad infinitum systems.
Account Base/Territory. You can’t believe how much really-big-companies segment sales territories. Since market share is high, they figure that you don’t need very much geography or accounts/prospects to meet your quota. The fewer companies you have to contact the more important it is that you don’t damage any sales opportunities, especially considering the big sales budget that is assigned to you. Every sales presentation can become a do-or-die effort.
![]()
No doubt there are some advantages in selling for a really-big-company. But don’t take a sales job for one of these companies thinking that it is going to be easy. Life and work have a way of always balancing advantages and disadvantages. Nothing that pays you a significant income is going to be easy.
If you’re not already a subscriber, click here (salesvitamins.com) to subscribe and automatically receive Sales Vitamins™ as new posts become available. © 2008 Scott R. Sheaffer







