Blog
Notes:
How does one become a Sales Engineer when one is starting from scratch?
In this episode of the We The Sales Engineers Podcast, I share with you a comprehensive look at my journey to becoming a Sales Engineer.
I was recently interviewed by Joseph M. Smith, Founder of Techniche Tips, about how I transitioned from communications engineering to sales engineering, how I found my first job after university, what my day looks like as a Sales Engineer, and so much more.
Key Takeaways:
- What it was like growing up in Lebanon
- The value of education
- How to commit to something even if you have to pivot
- How I switch from Civil to Communications Engineering in college
- How I navigated being job search process after university
- The importance of building connections when looking for a job
- How I pivoted from communications engineering to sales engineering
- My definition of sales engineering
- Three types of knowledge required for all sales engineers
- The proper way of connecting with people in LinkedIn
- How Sales Engineers’ days differ
- What my day as a Sales Engineer looks like
- How to find available sales engineering positions
- The difference between boot camps and an academy at a company
- Why being an SDR does not guarantee you an SE job
- How to be a sales engineer without being one
- The advantage of having a coach
- The number one characteristic that an SE needs to cultivate
Quotes:
There will be sacrifices. As long as you have the family in mind First, you will most likely succeed. At least that’s how I see it. — Ramzi Marjaba
Don’t say you’re tired. Don’t say you don’t feel like it today. You commit to something, whatever it is, go do it and go try different things. — Ramzi Marjaba
It’s not that I can’t do it, it’s how can I do it. — Ramzi Marjaba
I didn’t learn anything in university that actually helped me with my job. It was a piece of paper to show that I can learn. Everything I learned for the job was on the job. — Ramzi Marjaba
Resumes don’t get you jobs; connections get you jobs. So go to barbecues, where we talk to people. — Ramzi Marjaba
Don’t send LinkedIn connection requests without any messages. — Ramzi Marjaba
You’re trying to show the value. Someone wants to pay you money. And what you’re giving back in return has to save them more money. — Ramzi Marjaba
It’s nice to have as many answers as you possibly can. Because that will speed up and help close the sales, the deal faster, help answer the customer faster. And that way, you don’t have to worry too much about following up and worrying about other stuff. — Ramzi Marjaba
You can apply and try your luck. But you can always increase your luck with connections. — Ramzi Marjaba
If you look at the 8020 rule, the Pareto rule, where 20% of your effort leads to 80% of the results. That 20% should be connections. — Ramzi Marjaba
If your end goal is to be a sales engineer, SDR is not necessarily a stepping stone there. It’s its own career. — Ramzi Marjaba
I would say start being a sales engineer today. You don’t have to have a job as a sales engineer to start thinking like one. Sales engineering is all about solving problems and seeing the value. It’s about active listening, asking the right questions. — Ramzi Marjaba
Links from the show:
- Get sales engineering coaching: https://wethesalesengineers.com/learn-more-about-the-hotline/
- Connect with Joseph M. Smith on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jmsmithtech/
If you enjoyed this podcast, please support the show by dropping a review or rating on iTunes – https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/we-sales-engineers-resource-for-sales-engineers-by/id1378292171