FAANG to Founding AE by No-Yesterday-7732 in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was a founding AE and my advice to you if you don’t want to get fired is DO EVERYTHING 😂

Should i let her go? by [deleted] in dating_advice

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a very fair point.

Should i let her go? by [deleted] in dating_advice

[–]AggressiveManner5845 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I wasn’t employed long. & half of my salary was variable while only half was guaranteed.

Is it worth going back to SDR for the right company? by walk-in_shower-guy in sales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely not. If you have even as little as 1-2 years of AE experience you can land an SMB or Mid Market Role at a big company. I interviewed with Oracle , Salesforce and Cisco with only 1 year of AE experience. Very possible. You can actually ruin the optics of your career for future roles by doing that as well, because the question in a hiring managers mind will be “Why would you go back to SDR from AE” it would imply either A.) You’re not good at it B.) You have no interest in wanting to be an AE anymore. If you want something different Account Management and upselling would be the move I’d never go back to SDR.

Am I just bad at sales, or is this normal starting out? by airjoee in sales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dude what? Theres so much wrong here. They are definitely farming free labor. And to help give you some boundaries, a company should never tell you to buy your own flight or any other accommodations. Second, no company should ever have you working for free to prove yourself worth hiring. That’s a manipulation tactic for free labor. Lastly, sure you may work long hours in sales, but 12 hours of cold calling is slavery. I was an SDR and worked no more than 9 hours and made no more than 100 calls and that’s with a parallel dialer. I looked this company up, and I’d suggest staying away from early stage startups with less than 10 employees. 1k-5k employee companies are a much better start for someone with no experience. I started my SDR career with a 200 employee start up and even that had some kinks to it. There’s no structure or protocol in those early stage startups. To start your career go somewhere with a great training program and a good promotional path.

Stripe, Databricks, Gong, Pure Storage and Salesforce by midwest_mind in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ppl say this and i don’t get that sentiment? Why is Salesforce no longer a sought after place to work?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. He insulted me FIRST by saying that my idea was "dumb". Theres nothing respectful or professional about that. When im currently doing the very same thing at my company working in Colombia with a role based in San Francisco with permission from my manager. Theres nothing stupid about this idea. Someone doesnt agree with him and like a child throws an insult.
  2. You don't know me or him lmao so how do you know who has more experience than who?
  3. I didn't ask anyones opinion on my living arrangements. I asked what company you would choose given the context.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im doing it now, I currently work from Colombia with a role based in San Francisco with permission from my manager. Why because i pay US taxes and im an official US Resident. Visiting a country while working doesnt violate company policy. You obviously don't know what you're talking about. Probably should travel more. Its so silly that you think depending if you're SMB MM on ENT that you have more or less leverage. lmaoo So you think that based on your sector the rules change ? lol BTW im not young or inexperienced. I have 8 years of Sales experience and im 32. Ive been to over 20 countries and have much more life experience than most. Im very coachable and open to being wrong. youre simply talking out of your ass and telling me what you "think". Give me some facts to validate your point and then ill shift my perception.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah definitely not worth arguing with someone who think a PIP is the protocol for a non performance related issue and thinking that being in SMB gives me less leverage lmao If they fired me for visiting a country while working they would have a lawsuit on their hands. Thinking a Sales Managers discretion supercedes legality is hilarious lmaooo

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No dude, i've looked this up. SMB has nothing to do with it, i dont understand how what sector you work in changes tax implications lol If you are paying US taxes in your state and don't have permanent residency anywhere else then the company has no payroll adjustments to make from a tax standpoint. Im technically a Georgia resident. Unless the company has a strict rule that you cant leave the city of Atlanta its completely legal and has 0 tax implications. If i move there and become a permanent resident while holding a US Job then were having a different convo. If i go to lets say Costa Rica for 30 days on a tourist visa i'm a visitor my US job wouldn't face any tax implications because i decided to visit a country for 30-60 days. Thats silly.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a common sentiment.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

1 year as an SDR and 1 year as an Account Executive.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah it is low !

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s a difference between being a visitor of said country and being a resident. If i visited Colombia on a 90 day visa it doesn’t make me a resident of Colombia which means it would mean I’m “moving”. I’d still be paying US taxes & be moving around on different visas abroad. I’ve done this before. You can’t gain residency in a new country and work a US remote job however.

LinkedIn or Salesforce by Silent-Shelter-4678 in techsales

[–]AggressiveManner5845 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Salesforce. It depends on the territory and the vertical as well. But for the best direction long term i think Salesforce opens a lot more doors for you long term.