Great Product and People. Disorganized, Unprofessional Sales Culture with Little Incentive - Business Development Manager VALD Employee Review

2.0
Jul 30, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

VALD offers innovative, impactful tech that’s respected across health and performance. The team is full of smart, mission-driven people who care about doing great work. Opportunity to work with elite clients across sports, healthcare, and tactical sectors.

Cons

Sales culture is unbalanced and competitive, with senior reps holding key accounts while new reps are left to scramble. Leadership drives aggressive revenue goals without clear strategy or support. You're expected to deliver, regardless of resources or fairness. Promises around commission and incentives often fall flat — inconsistent structures, delayed payouts, and minimal recognition. Work-life balance is a challenge. Long hours and personal sacrifices are expected, but rarely appreciated or rewarded. Micromanaging is out of control. A consultative, relationship-driven industry doesn’t align with the internal pressure for fast, transactional sales. It leads to friction and lost trust — both internally and with clients.

Explore other reviews about VALD

4.0
Oct 13, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good environment, autonomus, set your own schedule

Cons

not many cons, just somewhat unclear expectations at times.

1.0
Feb 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Being remote gives you flexibility, and the pay was good for my position.

Cons

Aside from the remote work and pay, working for Vald was one of the most stressful experiences I have ever had. - Lack of support from leadership - Intimidation and fear-mongering (I heard explicitly from old colleagues that they were outright told their jobs were on the line constantly, or they were being "watched" by leadership) - Extreme micromanaging (expect little/no autonomy and to have every email, message, and call critiqued and criticized) - Extremely high employee turnover - Aggressive revenue goals and transactional sales tactics in a relationship-based industry (expect to become the pushy salesman to hit your quota) - Absolutely zero work/life balance (working "overtime" and weekends is almost a necessity, especially at the beginning of your employment) - Unfair territory assignment (some sales reps had much larger territory distribution than others, giving them more opportunities. Finding opportunities in 3-4 counties is significantly more difficult than trying to find opportunities in 3-4 states.) - Account Hoarding (senior sales reps tend to hold key accounts for themselves, with newer sales reps scrambling to find traction) - Lack of professional development (they prioritize hiring practitioners with zero sales experience, only to fire them or have them "managed out" when their only development is going out and learning via "trial by fire") - Culture vs Reality mismatch (the pillars they claim to stand by are non-existent in their day-to-day handling of their employees) - Short ramp-up period for complex sales cycles (I hope you learn fast) - Reputation Risk (The pressure to use overly aggressive sales tactics risked damaging long-term industry relationships)

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