Remote sales sounds like the dream — work from anywhere, set your own schedule, and earn without a ceiling. But anyone who’s tried it knows the reality hits differently. Without the structure of an office keeping you accountable, most people quietly fall apart.
Kai Law has built his career helping salespeople figure out where things go wrong — and how to fix them before the commission checks stop coming.
Consistency Is Your Only Boss Now
When nobody’s watching, your habits become your manager. The top remote closers aren’t necessarily the most talented — they’re the most consistent. That means setting daily activity targets (actual numbers — calls made, demos booked), working defined hours, and reviewing your own performance like a coach watching game tape.
Sporadic bursts of hustle don’t build a career. Boring, repetitive routines do.
Your Data Doesn’t Lie (Even When You Want It To)
Inconsistency rarely announces itself. It hides in your calendar gaps, your ignored follow-ups, your call duration trends. If you’re not tracking KPIs — dials, show rates, conversion at each funnel stage — you’re flying blind.
A good CRM isn’t optional. It’s the mirror that shows you what’s actually happening versus the story you’re telling yourself about how hard you’re working.
How High Performers Protect Their Energy
Sustainable remote sales is a long game. The people who last aren’t grinding themselves into the ground — they’re managing energy, not just time. That looks like:
- Removing your phone from your workspace entirely
- Setting hourly micro-goals instead of intimidating daily totals
- Taking real breaks, eating real food, moving your body
Small habits compound. Burnout doesn’t announce itself until it’s already arrived.
Stop Blaming the Leads
Bad leads are a convenient excuse. Sometimes they’re real — but more often, they’re a way of avoiding responsibility for your own activity levels. The fix? More outreach. If conversion rates are low, volume is your lever. Control what you can control.
If there’s a legitimate systemic problem, document it with data and bring it to management like a professional — not a complaint.
Commission-Only Roles Demand Real Preparation
High upside comes with real risk. Before going all-in on commission-only work, save three to six months of expenses as a runway. Splitting your focus between a full-time job and a side sales role rarely works — you’ll do both poorly.
Vet every opportunity carefully. Ask about actual close rates, how the top reps are performing, and what support exists. Many remote sales roles are contractor positions with none of the safety nets people assume.
Community Changes Everything
Isolation is the hidden enemy of remote work. Sales masterminds and peer groups provide something you can’t manufacture alone — outside perspective. Fresh eyes catch patterns you’ve normalized. Accountability partners notice when your numbers slip before you’re ready to admit it.
Kai Law’s own career inflection points? Most of them came from persistent follow-up and honest peer feedback. Not talent. Not luck. Just showing up, consistently, over time.
Our Host
John is the Amazon bestselling author of Winning the Battle for Sales: Lessons on Closing Every Deal from the World’s Greatest Military Victories and Social Upheaval: How to Win at Social Selling. A globally acknowledged Sales & Marketing thought leader, speaker, and strategist, he has conducted over 1500 video interviews of thought leaders for Sales POP! online sales magazine & YouTube Channel and for audio podcast channels where Sales POP! is rated in the top 2% of most popular shows out of 3,320,580 podcasts globally, ranked by Listen Score. He is CSMO at Pipeliner CRM. In his spare time, John is an avid Martial Artist.




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