'Anonymous wrote:DS is in medical sales for a cardiac device. He loves it. The device is fairly well known and pretty popular, so most of his job is about keeping those connections and keeping the facilities updated on changes. He also gets to go into cardiac procedures from time to time to see the device being used.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you have to be brutally honest with your dc that this is NOT going to be successful career path for him unless he is very good looking and personable.
If you're not good looking, there's always phone sales. Dial for dollars!
Anonymous wrote:How do you break into pharma sales? My kid is also interested. They are personable and good looking - I know that helps.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have to be brutally honest with your dc that this is NOT going to be successful career path for him unless he is very good looking and personable.
Anonymous wrote:What’s the contribution to society by just selling things? Sounds like a pure money grab.
Anonymous wrote:A very wise professor told me that everyone is in sales, whether they realize it or not. Riding up the ranks is almost any org requires sales skills. If your kid is good at it, he can go super far.
Anonymous wrote:I have a kid in middle school who is bright but not super bright, and does fine academically but not straight As and not super focused. But they are incredibly charismatic and street smart. I already know they will end up in sales and do really well there because people gravitate to them (and this is all in a very pure, genuine, sweet way - I can't stand the little kids who are super self-assured and are young hustlers).
We have plenty of time but just need to figure out the right path to get them there. They will not be gunning for Ivies. But they should go to a good school surrounded by smart, motivated kids who will be accomplishing things. We will have to figure out where that is.