You crushed your quota. Commission check hits the account.
Your first instinct? Celebrate! You earned it, right?
Not quite. You’ve earned a reward, sure. But if every check disappears faster than a cold call prospect can hang up the phone, then you’re just renting a lifestyle.
Here’s the truth: Top sales pros don’t just sell like professionals—they
manage their money like professionals. They know the high of a commission check can’t replace long-term financial freedom.
I’ve got the financial low-down.
1. Don’t Spend It All in One Place—Or All at Once
When a big check hits, it’s tempting to splurge. New watch. Fancy dinner. Extra drinks on you.
But here’s the catch: commission highs come and go. Quarters fluctuate. Markets shift. Now more than ever, you can’t treat every paycheck like a lottery win.
Try this instead:
Split your check. A solid money rule: 50% to lifestyle, 30% to savings/investments, 20% to debt.
Set auto-transfers. Remove temptation. Have a percentage automatically move to savings or investments the minute you get paid.
Living below your means is how you avoid feeling broke—even during dry spells.
2. Build the "Oh Crap" Fund
Sales is high-risk, high-reward.
One quarter, you're crushing it, the next you're staring down a dry pipeline and a mortgage payment.
Enter your emergency fund.
This isn’t optional—it’s survival. Ideally, you want 3–6 months of living expenses saved in a separate account, untouched unless it’s a true money emergency.
Having this cushion keeps you from making desperate decisions when things get tight—and keeps your mind clear to prospect fanatically.
3. Debt Doesn’t Care About Your Commission
Credit cards. Car payments. Student loans.
Debt is a silent killer of long-term wealth. And the more you make, the more it sneaks in. Why? Because it’s easy to think, “I’ll just pay it off with my next check.”
Then the check comes. And goes.
Start taking control:
List your debts. Highest interest first.
Choose a strategy. Snowball (smallest balance first) or Avalanche (highest interest first). Stick to it.
Automate payments. No missed due dates. No excuses.
Pay with cash. And stick to it. If you can’t afford to pay for it all now. You can’t afford it, period.
Freedom means having money that belongs to you—not a credit card company.
4. Your Future Self is Counting on You
It’s easy to feel invincible when you’re 25, 30, 35—closing deals, stacking checks.
But
time moves fast. And if you don’t start investing for the long haul, future-you will be making cold calls at 70.
Start with your 401(k) if your company offers one—especially if there’s a match (that’s free money). If not, look into IRAs or Roth IRAs. Even small monthly contributions grow massively over time thanks to compounding interest.
The earlier you start, the easier it is. The later you start, the harder it gets.
5. Plan, Don’t Wing It
You wouldn’t wing a sales call with a high-value prospect, right? The same goes for your finances.
You need a plan.
Set financial goals. Pay off $10K in debt. Save $20K this year. Max out your Roth IRA.
Track your spending. Use an app or spreadsheet. Know where every dollar goes.
Meet with a financial advisor.