The Great Filter – Why Most People Should Quit B2B Sales Today
If you want fairness, choose a role where performance is measured by compliance and consistency. If you want wealth, stay in sales and accept the only rule that matters: compensation follows captured value.
Walk into any growth-stage B2B sales organization, and you see two populations immediately:
- One group is stuck in grievance. They stare at the CRM, explain shortfalls with lead quality, territory math, product gaps, or “unrealistic quota.” They want a manager to prescribe the playbook and then validate the effort. Their mindset is hourly, even when they’re paid a salary plus commission.
- The other group is operating a different model. They talk about leverage, pipeline physics, conversion rates, deal control, and enterprise value. They create their own opportunities. They build customer confidence and earn the right to ask for a decision. They are not looking for comfort. They are looking for the wire.
If you identify with the first group, here’s the most respectful advice I can give you: exit sales on purpose. Move into HR, operations, finance, project management, enablement, customer success, analytics, or any role where the exchange is stable and the scorecard is predictable. Those functions matter. They are important and critical to most companies. They keep companies alive. They are also structurally designed to be fairer.
Sales is designed to be variable, value-based, and exposed. That’s the point.
The safety-net trap
Most people walk into sales carrying the wrong conditioning. School teaches that effort should correlate with reward. Show up, do the work, get the grade. Many corporate functions reinforce it. Do the tasks, hit the process metrics, stay inside the lines, and get the raise.
That conditioning becomes a trap the moment you step into a quota role.
In “fair” roles, compensation tracks your cost and your consistency. Your output is capped by your time, so your income is capped by a band. It’s stable, and it’s a ceiling.
Sales is different because it’s one of the few places left where pay can scale with impact. You are not paid for effort. You are paid for outcomes. That makes it feel brutal to people who want certainty, and it feels like freedom to people who want upside.
The moment you need the world to be fair, sales will punish you. The moment you accept the model, sales becomes one of the most rational games in business.

