paul78 wrote: » Hi - in my experience, every company that I have worked at, the sales person is more highly compensated, followed by pre-sales, and then post-sales. The caveat is that the sales person's compensation is variable and based on achievement of a quota. The actual base compensation of the sales people is generally lower but given variable component, a good sales person will generally make more money. Also - my observation was true regardless of sale of technical services/product or some other product.
NightShade1 wrote: » I dont find this fair... as the sales man depends a lot on the presales guy but well thats my personal opinion...
paul78 wrote: » That may be true. But sales actually does require quite a bit of intrinsic soft-skills which not everyone has. And there is a certain type of mercenary mindset that is needed by good sales people. And managing and filling a full sales pipeline can be quite challenging. A pre-sales person is dealing with a qualified lead which in most organizations has already been vetted and "found" by sales. And dealing with the commercial negotiations is typically the sales person's job which can also be an arduous art-form.
Jackace wrote: » Sales usually has a bigger upside in pay, but they also have a bigger downside. If you are good at sales and can manage those relationships then you can make a lot of money, but if not you will be poor. I have tried sales before and I do okay at it, but it is not something I enjoy and thus my motivation is low. The hardest or most demanding thing about sales for me was generating solid leads. It's exhausting the number of phone calls most sales people perform in a week, many of them solicitation type phone calls. It's just not an enjoyable way to make a living for me.
Valsacar wrote: » The question is wrong, it's not about who makes more money, it's what job would you enjoy doing more.
jibbajabba wrote: » In our company ... Pre-Sales - doing the work - permanent employed - bonuses paid out quarterly based on Sales performance - pretty secure job Sales - Closing the deal - permanent employed but salary comission based - if targets not reached - back on the (job)market - more money - less secure job
lantech wrote: » Yes, you have to have a good presales guy. There is no doubt about that. But you also have to have a good salesman. Think of it like this. A potential customer has a need to be filled. There are multiple companies out there that can fill that need. Maybe the company you work for deals with only one vendor or maybe multiple vendors. And that goes the same with other companies as well. So the company that has a need to be filled calls your company and several other companies in the process. You all design a solution that will fill that potential customers need. Each company has its own price that it wants to sell their solution for. The question for the potential customer is why should they go with company A when company B also has a solution that will work. This is where the salesman comes in. He is the one that closes the deal for your company in some way. The easy part is designing a solution for a company. The hard part is getting that company to buy your solution when there are other companies out there that can also offer a solution for that potential customer.
NightShade1 wrote: » lower base payscale? haahhah thats what you think...the one in my company has a really high base pay scale( his base pay scale is higher than any postsales engineer not even if its a senior one is higher than the base payscale of that saleman) and i have seem the same on other companies... ah yeah he has a good commission... Anyways its true what you say i have seem sales man with low pay scale but you know where? in the computer stores... not in IT selling wireless solutions, Microsoft solution etc...
antondsilva said: I earn more than 90 percent of the sales guys I work with. The 10 percent who earn more than me are the senior guys with my level of experience (15+ years) and hit over 120 percent of their targets. Again Presales means different things in different places. In some companies they are demo dollies. In IT services/Consulting companies, they play a more consultative role . And then there are places where Presales is Presales + architects + customer success all roled in one . Depends on what you are doing and which compnay you work for and what is your specialisation. If you are the Presales guys who is designing a solution involving multiple products and infrastructure that drives business process transformation and not just selling a particular product, then definitely you are worth more than the sales guy who is primarily driving relationships and commercials.
SteveLavoie said: Sales is not about technology... it is about business, people and money.. as @scott28tt said, if you're driven by technology be an SE. Lot of exposure to customer, and almost no support in the middle of the night.