Sales Career Path: From SDR to Sales Director
- The UK sales ladder, rung by rung
- Salary checkpoints and realistic timelines
- How to accelerate your progression
Sales is one of the few careers where you can multiply your earnings several times over without ever changing field. The path from a first entry-level sales role to a director’s chair is well-trodden and surprisingly clear — but it is not automatic, and it is not a single ladder. This guide maps the route, the realistic pay jump at each step, and how to earn the next move rather than wait for it.
In this guide
Most UK sales careers follow a recognisable shape. You start at the top of the funnel and move toward owning more revenue, more complexity, or more people:
One of the most useful things to understand early is that the ladder forks. The management track moves into leading people — manager, director, VP. The individual-contributor track goes deeper into selling — senior AE, strategic or enterprise account manager — and at the top it can out-earn middle management. If you love selling and dislike the idea of managing, you are not stuck: elite ICs are highly paid and in demand. Choose the track that fits you, not the one you assume you are supposed to want.
The reason sales attracts ambitious people is the size of the steps. Our 2026 UK Sales Salary Guide shows the arc clearly — and confirms that sector and sales motion shape the number as much as seniority does.
From a £33K entry base to a senior individual-contributor band of £62K–£100K, and on to a director base from £106K to £290K-plus with equity, the multiplier over a career is substantial. For the detail by role, see the SDR & BDR benchmarks and the Sales Director report, and understand how variable pay scales with each step in our commission guide.
Promotion in sales is earned with evidence, not tenure. At every step the same principle applies: consistently hit your current number, then demonstrate the skills of the next role before you hold the title. Someone in an entry-level role who wants to close should be influencing deals and shadowing reps; an AE who wants to manage should be mentoring juniors and owning a forecast. Make the case with data — quota attainment, deals, accounts grown — on a results-led CV (our sales CV guide shows how), and rehearse the step-up narrative using our interview guide.
Sometimes the biggest pay rise is a new logo on your email signature. The 2026 market data shows a new-hire premium of 8–15% for people who switch employers — often more than an internal promotion delivers. But moving is not automatically the right call: counter-offers, relationships, equity vesting and culture all matter. Weigh a move properly rather than chasing the headline number; our counter-offer guide covers how to think it through when your current employer tries to keep you.
Treat your career like a pipeline. Be deliberate about the skills each step requires, find managers and mentors who have made the move you want, keep a running record of your achievements in numbers, and build a relationship with a specialist recruiter who can tell you what the market actually pays and which moves open doors. A good recruiter is an asset between jobs and a sounding board within one.
It varies, but a common arc is one to two years in an entry-level sales role, several years closing, then a move into senior IC or first-line management around the five-to-eight-year mark, with director roles typically ten to fifteen years in. Pace depends on performance and company growth, not years served.
No. The individual-contributor track — senior, strategic and enterprise selling — offers genuine progression and pay, and top ICs can earn more than middle managers.
At the top, Chief Revenue Officer and VP of Sales roles in scaled technology and professional-services businesses pay the most, with total compensation past £400K once equity is counted. Among individual contributors, enterprise SaaS and professional-services BD roles pay highest.
Hit your current target consistently, then evidence the capabilities of the next role before you are given it — and make the case with hard numbers.
For most people an entry-level sales role — an SDR or BDR in tech, or a sales executive, graduate or trainee role elsewhere — it teaches the fundamentals quickly and leads directly to higher-earning closing positions.
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