Pros
- World-class sales training and onboarding that provides a strong foundation for enterprise selling. - Access to large, recognizable customers and meaningful sales opportunities. - Smart, ambitious, and highly capable colleagues who are driven to succeed. - Strong brand recognition that helps open doors with prospects. - Exposure to complex sales cycles, executive stakeholders, and large-scale customer challenges.
Cons
- Annual account realignments can make it difficult to build long-term momentum and relationships within a territory. - Resource ratios are often challenging. Many Account Executives are expected to operate with limited BDR and SE support relative to their workload. - Internal politics can outweigh performance. In certain organizations, there appears to be significant incentive and pressure on managers to identify underperformers (to the point of false documentation), which can create a culture of fear rather than one of coaching and development. - Performance expectations are not always communicated consistently. - Employees may receive positive feedback throughout the year only to discover later that leadership views their performance differently, making career planning difficult. - Leadership quality varies dramatically by organization. While some leaders are exceptional, others create environments that feel punitive, adversarial, or unnecessarily aggressive. I've even been shouted at in an interview this year (2026), to the point that I would consider it abuse. - The company would benefit from placing greater emphasis on manager effectiveness, coaching ability, and employee development alongside quota attainment. - High performers are not immune from these challenges. I've seen strong, respected employees with many years of success struggle in environments where management focused more on documenting deficiencies than developing talent, opportunities, and pipeline.