How to Become a Business Development Manager
- What a Business Development Manager actually does
- The most reliable routes into the role
- What hiring managers screen for — and the pay
The Business Development Manager is the engine room of new revenue. Where an account manager grows what a company already has, a BDM is hired to win what it does not yet — opening doors, building pipeline from scratch and closing first-time business. It is one of the most commercially valued roles in UK sales, and one of the most directly rewarded. This guide explains what the job really involves, what it pays in 2026, the targets you will carry and how to move into it.
In this guide
A BDM owns the new-business end of the sales cycle. In most UK businesses that means generating your own pipeline as well as closing it: researching target accounts, prospecting decision-makers, running discovery, building proposals, negotiating and winning the first contract. Some BDMs inherit warm inbound leads; many are expected to self-source a meaningful share of their own. The common thread is accountability for revenue that was not there before you arrived.
It helps to place the role against its neighbours. An SDR or BDR works the very top of the funnel — booking meetings for someone else to close. An account manager protects and grows existing customers. A BDM sits between and above both: full-cycle, new-logo focused, carrying a number. In smaller companies the BDM does everything from prospecting to onboarding; in larger ones the role narrows to closing qualified opportunities, with SDRs feeding the pipeline.
Business development pay is decided far more by your sector and sales motion than by your postcode. Our 2026 UK Sales Salary Guide shows the six traditional field-sales sectors converging on a tight £62K–£72K senior-IC base band, while technology and SaaS pays the highest base at every level — £100K for a senior individual contributor.
On-target earnings depend on the commission structure sitting on top of that base. In SaaS, a mid-level individual contributor carries an OTE multiplier of about 1.91×, meaning variable pay roughly equals base at target. In base-led B2B and professional services, the variable element is smaller and steadier. To see the number for your specific sector and region, read the 2026 salary statistics or the relevant industry pages, and understand how the pay is built in our commission and OTE guide.
OTE is a target, not a salary. Across the UK market only about 54.8% of account managers and 66% of SDRs actually hit quota (RepVue). Treat a quoted OTE as the reward for strong performance, not a number you can budget your mortgage against — and always check what proportion of the team genuinely achieves it before you accept.
There is no single set of BDM metrics — they are designed around how a business actually sells, which is why they differ so sharply by sector. That said, most BDM scorecards draw from the same family of measures: new-business revenue or gross profit against quota; self-generated pipeline (often a 3x coverage ratio to target); win rate on qualified opportunities; average deal size; and sales-cycle length. Activity metrics — calls, meetings booked, proposals out — usually sit underneath as leading indicators.
What changes is the emphasis. A SaaS BDM is typically measured on new ARR and pipeline velocity over a short, repeatable cycle. A construction or industrial BDM may carry fewer, larger, longer deals where specification wins and project timelines dominate. An FMCG BDM might be judged on distribution, listings and volume. Before you accept a role, get clear on which one or two numbers actually decide your commission — that is the job.
Prospecting resilience comes first: the willingness to build pipeline when no one is calling you back is what makes or breaks a new-business career. After that, the differentiators are commercial — genuine discovery that uncovers a quantified problem, the credibility to talk business outcomes rather than features, disciplined pipeline management so the forecast is trustworthy, and the negotiation nerve to protect margin at the close. Sector knowledge accelerates all of it; buyers give time to people who understand their world.
The most common route is up from an entry-level sales role — an SDR or BDR in tech, a sales executive or graduate sales role elsewhere: spend twelve to eighteen months proving you can book and influence pipeline, then make the case for a closing role. The second route is sideways — an account manager or field rep who can evidence genuine new-business wins, not just renewals. If you are coming from outside sales entirely, lead with transferable evidence of persuasion, resilience and target ownership, and consider entering through an entry-level sales or graduate role first.
Whichever route you take, build a CV that proves impact in numbers rather than adjectives — our guide to writing a sales CV shows how. Then prepare for the kinds of evidence-based questions covered in our sales interview guide, where you will be expected to walk through real deals you have created and closed.
Business development is one of the clearest springboards in sales. Strong performers move into senior BDM or strategic new-business roles, then into team leadership — a sales manager or head-of-new-business position — and on toward sales director. Others deepen as high-earning individual contributors. The full picture, with the typical pay jumps at each rung, is mapped in our sales career progression guide.
For people who enjoy winning new business and want pay tied to results, yes. It carries real pressure and variable income, but it is among the best-rewarded and most transferable skill sets in commercial life, and it opens a direct path into sales leadership.
A BDR (business development representative) generates and qualifies pipeline at the top of the funnel, usually booking meetings for others. A BDM (business development manager) owns the full cycle and carries a closing number. BDR — mainly a technology-sector title — is typically the entry rung; BDM is the next step up.
In 2026, field-sector BDMs cluster around a £62K–£72K senior base, while SaaS pays up to £100K base with variable pay that can roughly match it at target. The figure swings widely by sector — see our salary guide for the detail.
Rarely. Most UK employers prioritise a demonstrable sales track record over qualifications. A relevant degree can help in technical sectors, but evidence of pipeline and revenue matters far more.
Almost never in reputable businesses. The standard structure is a base salary plus commission or bonus. Be cautious of commission-only new-business roles unless the earning mechanics and lead supply are genuinely exceptional.
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