Pros
The paycheck arrives on time, and you’ll learn quickly how to survive in a high-pressure sales environment. If you enjoy constant micromanagement and unrealistic expectations, this may be the place for you.
Cons
This is one of the most toxic sales cultures I’ve experienced. Leadership seems to manage almost entirely through fear. Every day feels like you’re one missed KPI away from being threatened with losing your job instead of being coached to improve. The obsession with KPIs has completely overshadowed common sense. Instead of focusing on building meaningful customer relationships, leadership pushes activity for the sake of activity. Quantity always wins over quality.The VP in Texas will never understand that. One of the biggest examples is the constant “World Cup” sales contests. Rather than encouraging strategic prospecting, they create a culture where reps spam prospects with nonstop emails and calls just to move up a leaderboard. It’s no surprise customers are frustrated and ignoring outreach. Leadership celebrates the numbers while damaging the company’s reputation in the marketplace. The bullpen office setup only makes things worse. Everyone is packed together listening to managers criticize reps, pressure them over metrics, and constantly remind everyone how replaceable they are. It’s difficult to focus, impossible to have private conversations, and creates an atmosphere of anxiety instead of collaboration. There is very little real leadership or mentorship. Managers spend far more time tracking dashboards than developing people. Coaching is often replaced with public pressure and unrealistic expectations. Turnover is high, morale is low. No remote work and you have to clock in and out from your desk. I