Applied on LinkedIn, I had a phone screening followed by another interview that was more in depth. Third interview with the CEO and founder.
The initial stages of the interview process were fine, but the interview with the CEO and Founder was an absolute trainwreck.
To start, the CEO was late to the call and did acknowledge it and apologize. He seemed frustrated and just his body language and tone were giving off bad energy despite me trying to bring things down to a better place.
His demeanor was immediately aggressive and confrontational. Rather than a collaborative discussion or standard executive alignment, the interview felt like an interrogation. He conducted himself as though I was actively wasting his time, despite the fact that his team had invited me to interview and move forward in the process.
The Turning Point
The conversation peaked in toxicity when he grew defensive and abruptly ended the interview, stating they were looking for someone who would "bring their own Rolodex of accounts," when asked what accounts would I target, and that I might not be the right fit. I told him I'd examine who the ICP would be and be more methodical than throwing names out there. He responded with having done this for 20 years too, so he doesn't need to be schooled on ABM, they do ABM.
Advice to Management / Candidate Insight
If you are an experienced sales professional looking for a strategic, growth-oriented environment, look elsewhere. The leadership here (at least this one) seems to operate on an incredibly outdated, transactional philosophy of sales.
Expecting a modern enterprise sales executive to simply "bring over a Rolodex" ignores how modern B2B buying cycles, legalities, and corporate relationships actually work. Top-tier professionals should be hired for their methodology, sales acumen, negotiation skills, and ability to close complex deals—not because a company expects them to poach clients under the table. A toxic interview culture usually mirrors the internal corporate culture. Bullet dodged. It's unfortunate. Based on what I researched on them; I really liked the company and what they've accomplished over the past 20 years. But I think they're won success is getting in front of their own good and blinding them from having a bit of humility.