I’m looking to get out of working in the trades, I’m looking to transition into an entry sales position. Something possibly in finance like mutual funds like Brad was/is doing or something else like saas sales which realLifeAlpha has suggested to me.
So I’m trying to figure out what the best approach here to get an entry level position. My resume would only have my trade position in there. So how exactly can I stand out and be given a chance at a sales job with nothing but trade work/construction in my resume. Do I make something up here to show I have some sales experience. Would this be shooting myself in the foot? Any suggestions or help on building a resume to get these sales roles?
I lack some of the education that other potential hires might have too like a bachelor degree in something so it could be a tough sell with my current resume.
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03-02-2021, 05:44 PM #1
Sales brahs. How to transition from a tradie to sales?
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03-02-2021, 05:55 PM #2
I've done car sales and roofing sales
You can start from there.
You can join an MLM like Primerica
Roofing 101 is the roofing company that I was part of. They have great sales training. It's door knocking at first then it's appointments and getting people to sign the papers.
or you can get into Real Estate sales
After a while then you can do SaaSFinancial Freedom/Passive Income Crew
Entrepreneur Crew
MMA Crew
Cinematographer Crew
Photographer Crew
Ski/Snowboard Crew
Guns Crew
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03-02-2021, 06:01 PM #3
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Do people really make money walking door to door selling crap? I was taught as a little kid from my entire family, to never answer the door for them. That was also in NYC, where some of them are fakes and trying to scope out homes to rob. Still don't answer the door for them, as well as for Jehovah's Witnesses.
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03-02-2021, 06:12 PM #4
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03-02-2021, 06:16 PM #5
Would probably do car sales, Tried doing a few different sales positions and it wasn't for me mostly because the products or services I was selling I didn't really believe in it which made it hard to sell and I wasn't closing deals I was generating leads so kinda chit overall I say car sales because people need them and basically come to you something like a cleaning service or health insurance in my opinion gonna be alot harder look into working at At&t or t-mobile the stores where you go to buy phones usually a pretty decent base pay plus commission on phone sales and stuff so one of the better gigs.
Last edited by Realclout; 03-02-2021 at 06:29 PM.
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03-02-2021, 06:30 PM #6
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03-02-2021, 06:39 PM #7
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03-02-2021, 07:13 PM #8
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03-03-2021, 07:33 AM #9
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03-03-2021, 07:42 AM #10
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03-03-2021, 07:43 AM #11
The education part will hit you, but why not try tradie sales? Selling a product or device you are used to using.
Try the saas, but i mean, they might have a university requirement, not so sure how Canadians do it
Finance, definitely will need a degree. Does Canada offer free education or stipends for going to college? Get an easy degree or something interesting then get into sales.
Also food or nutrition company sales if your into BB and health
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03-03-2021, 03:08 PM #12
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03-03-2021, 03:10 PM #13
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03-03-2021, 03:11 PM #14
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03-03-2021, 03:13 PM #15
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03-03-2021, 03:13 PM #16
B2B sales is probably the best any job that is an account manager type positions and you deal with the purchasing manager of another company and just keep them happy is probably goat since you don't have to generate leads or any of that nonsense I think it is lower payer or no commission since you're dealing with established accounts and more of a customer service position opposed to sales from what I can tell.
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03-03-2021, 03:35 PM #17
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03-03-2021, 03:41 PM #18
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03-03-2021, 03:46 PM #19
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03-03-2021, 03:50 PM #20
I believe you, I don't know that position very well and I am sure there is differences between companies I just generally know that sometimes maybe more so in an account manager position you might not be getting a commission because not really selling more so maintaining accounts so more so customer service but could be wrong. Doesn't seem like a bad gig at all but not sure if it's for me.
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03-03-2021, 03:53 PM #21
Finance sales is a snake pit and you have zero education/background/connections. How are you going to be able to put together 8 figure mutual fund deals for MOGGERS with no education? Would you buy from a tradie?
Get into something like pharma, SAAS, medical equipment, commercial IT, high end energy, etc. Have you schooled yourself in the game yet? Are you ZIGZIGLARMAXXING?
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03-03-2021, 03:57 PM #22
I'm in tech sales.. there are more places hiring than people available to jump into the field right now. It's such a lucrative career and flies wayyy under the radar.
Your best bet would be scanning LinkedIn for "sales development representative" or "business development representative" and find some gigs that are hiring locally or in your area. it's an entry level sales role, but you earn your keep pretty quick. I'm currently at a $200k base plus commission salary. Next job will be $300k plus. It's really not hard to break into the field. PM me if you want more tips.
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03-03-2021, 04:04 PM #23
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03-03-2021, 04:07 PM #24
God damn, Absolute mogger salary, Incomemaxxing hard. Has it taking you awhile to get to that point and have you found techniques that work to basically automate the sales process or can it be easy to hit a rough patch and fall into a rut. I was thinking a job paying 100-200k is pretty top tier but 300k that's like 1% of earners where as 100k-200k is 25% feels batman I hope I make it one day hoping to get over 105k in I.T but it'll take some time but I believe it's doable once I get more qualifications and experience.
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03-03-2021, 04:09 PM #25
It be like that most of the time if you aren't producing especially if you're getting a jooocy salary they'll tell you to fuk off only time you will probably stick around without producing is zero commission roles they don't want somebody leaching hard and doing nothing you have every bodies jobs in your hand if you jack around people could lose their job or company fail.
Last edited by Realclout; 03-03-2021 at 05:29 PM.
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03-03-2021, 04:32 PM #26
Yeah it's heavily dependent on the situation and company you start out in. Some SDR/BDR roles you get put into a boiler room, high call/email style role where you either hit your numbers and move up, or you don't and you are out the door. Bigger companies have more of a boiler room SDR approach, and smaller tech companies spend time on education and course correction to make sure the new hire finds their footing.
I'm a director at a smaller tech company and try to poach SDR's from local larger companies. You can become a closing rep with me in 9-12 months, or wait two years in a larger company.
It has taken 7 years for me, been in the industry and have taken a few calculated risks to get where I am. Not everyone just becomes a BDR and seamlessly moves up the ranks over time. It can be a stressful job, and depending on your company being funded by venture capitalists and how hardass your boss is, it can straight up suck.
A ton of BDR's who started around when I did moved into customer success, account mangement, or out of the tech field entirely But those who know how to close, forecast accurately, and communicate well internally, are set up for 200k-300k by the 8-10 year mark of their career.
For reference I started out at $50k/year, $40k base and 10k commission. Moved up from there at the same company over six years to an enterprise role, 90k base, 60k commission, 150k total. After that I jumped into my current role which is an even 100/100 split.
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03-03-2021, 04:41 PM #27
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03-03-2021, 04:44 PM #28
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03-03-2021, 05:34 PM #29
Interesting, I should be on a relatively similar trajectory then, Feels good man. Non-sales role but I.T related. Also, you're salary makes a lot more sense being director was thinking you were making that much just as a SDR/BDR Would you attribute the higher earning to a better profit split considering it looks like your base is only 10k higher but commissions 40k higher perhaps due to director role taking a percentage of all sales opposed to only yours...?!
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03-03-2021, 05:35 PM #30
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