• Why I Left the U.S. for Medical Device Sales in London
    Jun 27 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com/podcast


    She broke into medical device sales, moved across the world, and now she’s navigating the UK healthcare system. Rachel Littleton shares what it’s like selling medical devices in London as an American, the steep learning curves she faced, and what no one tells you about the first year in the industry. This is for the person curious about what it takes to leap into a new career and a new country.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Network with intention by reaching out to actual reps and hiring managers on LinkedIn, not just clicking apply.
    • Expect to feel overwhelmed in your first year. It’s normal, and pushing through it is part of the process.
    • Treat every person in the clinic like they matter, because they do. Secretaries and MAs can be your biggest allies.
    • Focus on helping patients first; the money will follow when your purpose is in the right place.
    • If you ever get a chance to work abroad, go for it. You’ll grow professionally and personally in ways you can’t imagine.


    00:00 - Start

    02:26 - Who Is Rachel Littleton?

    08:16 - Biggest Stressors In First 6 Months As A Rep

    10:05 - Moving To The UK

    17:26 - UK Healthcare vs US Healthcare

    21:30 - How Different Is The Medical Sales Field In The UK vs US

    26:35 - Being Passionate In What You Do

    28:43 - Rachel’s Advice For Those Interested In Medical Device Sales

    30:14 - Rachel’s Advice To New Reps



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    35 mins
  • Why Age Doesn’t Matter in Medical Sales
    Jun 6 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com/podcast


    Jacob interviews Shannon Holly, who transitioned into medical device sales at 48 years old after a 28-year career as a syndicated morning radio host. They discuss breaking into the industry later in life, the emotional process of career change, reinventing yourself with confidence, overcoming judgment and fear, training and adapting in your first six months, what it’s like working in the OR, the wide range of procedures she now supports, product knowledge vs. physical product handling, differences in medical device divisions, the value of mature professionals, and why fulfillment matters more than comfort.


    Key Takeaways:

    1. Reinventing yourself is possible at any age. It’s never too late to chase fulfillment over familiarity.
    2. A strong mindset will carry you further than a perfect resume. What matters is how committed and coachable you are.
    3. You don’t need to be the youngest candidate to succeed. Maturity, discipline, and emotional intelligence are huge assets in the OR and in conversations with physicians.
    4. Not all device roles involve trays or physical products. Some are focused entirely on training, presence, and being a trusted clinical expert.
    5. When you know your product and show up with confidence, you earn the trust of surgical teams. Even without years of experience.
    6. You won’t feel ready at the beginning, but taking the leap and trusting the process is the only way to find out how capable you really are


    chapters:

    00:00 - Start

    02:25 - My Successful Past In Radio Broadcasting

    05:58 - Why Change Careers At 48 Years Old & 28 Years In My Profession

    12:51 - First Six Months As A Rep

    19:25 - Becoming Familiar With The Job

    23:54 - A Day In Shannon’s Division

    28:32 - A Bad Moment In Shannon’s Job

    31:22 - Most Rewarding Day On The Job


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    37 mins
  • From Entry-Level to Regional Manager: The Med Device Growth Story You Need to Hear
    May 23 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com/podcast


    Jacob is joined again by Seth Colletti, who started in boat sales, broke into medical device sales after college, and became a regional sales manager in under five years. They talk about climbing from associate rep to manager, working for two of the largest med device companies, how to survive the first year of sales, training at big companies versus the grind of a startup, how to handle OR chaos, being seen as a true resource, personal connections to the product, and how to stay relevant in the industry.


    Key Takeaways:

    • Be prepared to get overwhelmed your first year. it’s normal to feel like you're drinking from a firehose. Don’t panic, just stay consistent and give yourself time to settle in.
    • Don’t rely only on company training. Go beyond, call top reps, build your own network inside and outside your team, and stay curious.
    • Ask yourself daily if you're providing value. If not, leave the room or find a way to make yourself useful. staff and surgeons remember reps who make their jobs easier.
    • Never lie. If you don’t know something, say so, and then find the answer. Trust is everything in this job.
    • Top performers don’t just “work hard,” they work smart. Busy doesn’t equal productive. Spend your time doing things that actually drive revenue.
    • If you’re not in it for the right reasons, you’ll burn out. Find a division or product you believe in. it makes the long hours worth it.
    • Your success is your responsibility. If you want to grow, keep learning. Books, podcasts, conversations with mentors. and treat self-development like part of your job.


    00:00 - Start

    02:56 - Seth’s Career In Medical Device Sales

    04:44 - First Year Experience

    09:45 - The Expectations I Wanted To Achieve My First Year

    12:19 - When Did Your Nerve Start To Calm Down During Your First Year

    15:29 - What Traits Do You Think You Need To Stand From Other Reps

    25:36 - Difference Between A Big Company vs A Startup

    33:03 - Story About A Bad Day For Seth In The Field

    38:11 - Moments That Make You Love Your Job

    41:53 - Advice For Upcoming Reps

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    46 mins
  • How Roxy Beat Bankruptcy And Changed Her Life!
    May 9 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com/podcast


    From filing for bankruptcy to working with the top medical device companies, Roxy Tirado shares her full journey. Topics include grit and perseverance, what it’s really like being a female in medical device sales, landing multiple job offers in six weeks, surviving and thriving at Medtronic and Intuitive, the pressure of big-name companies, building confidence, preparing like a pro, investing in mentorship, and staying grounded in gratitude and humility.


    Key Takeaways:

    • Don’t wait for rock bottom. If you're feeling stuck or beat down in your current role, don’t wait for a breaking point—make the move now.


    • You don’t need sales experience. Roxy broke into top companies like Medtronic with zero B2B sales experience. Hard work and coachability mattered more.


    • Ask for help. Utilize mentors and community. Roxy leaned on others when she doubted herself, and it made all the difference.


    • Be human first, sales rep second. Build relationships with honesty and authenticity. People buy from reps they trust, not robots with brochures.


    • Play the long game. It's not about a quick sale—it’s about becoming someone your clients can count on for the long haul.


    00:00:00 - Start

    00:02:04 - Who Is Roxy Tirado

    00:08:00 - What Was Your Experience, First 6 Months With Medtronic

    00:16:11 - Finding Motivation While Being Told You Will Fail Every Day

    00:21:09 - Accepting Failure To Succeed

    00:26:44 - Keep Relationships When You Move On

    00:39:13 - Changing Companies

    00:46:09 - Reflecting On From Being Bankrupt To Successful

    00:55:58 - Biggest Takeaways From The Last 3 Years In My Career

    01:04:15 - Future Plans



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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • How RepPrep.ai Is Impacting Medical Device Sales
    Apr 25 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com


    Veteran-turned-medical device rep Edward Dix joins the show to share his story of breaking into orthopedics, transitioning to diagnostics, and launching RepPrep.ai. An AI-powered pre-call tool for sales reps.


    Topics include military-to-sales transitions, trauma and ortho grind, rep relocation, growing territories, how diagnostics differ from ortho, how RepPrep works, real-life impact on patients, and putting reps first in tech.


    Key Takeaways

    🔵 Start where you can, not where you want.If you're early in your career, being flexible with location can fast-track your entry into medical device sales.


    🔵 Be moldable.Being new is an advantage. You’re trainable and don’t bring bad habits. Use that to your benefit and absorb everything you can early on.


    🔵 Sales isn’t just case coverage.Top reps go beyond just “covering” and actually sell. That means approaching docs, understanding their needs, and building relationships.


    🔵 Passion outperforms pressure.Reps who find purpose beyond the paycheck—like helping patients—usually outperform those chasing commissions.


    🔵 RepPrep.ai gives you the unfair advantage.Reps can now get hyper-personalized doctor insights and talking points in 30 seconds, including competitive analysis, relevant research, and how their product ties to each physician’s practice.


    🔵 Own your career like a business.Keep your own CRM. Track revenue. Track contacts. If you're laid off, your data and success history should follow you.


    🔵 AI won’t replace you, but reps using AI will outperform those who don’t.Using RepPrep isn’t about laziness; it’s about efficiency. Do better research in less time and show up prepared, every time.


    00:00 - Start

    01:37 - Who Is Edward Dix?

    04:50 - Working In Orthopedics With Zimmer

    13:00 - From Ortho To Oncology

    21:49 - Inspiration For RepPrep AI

    25:47 - What Is RepPrep AI

    33:32 - RepPrep Is For The Rep First And Foremost

    40:57 - Competition Doesn’t Compare

    46:36 - Giving Reps The Upper Hand To Their Own Careers

    50:07 - What Rep Is RepPrep Targeted For?

    52:58 - Contact Edward or RepPrep.ai


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    57 mins
  • 8 Months From Associate To Full Line Rep In Medical Device Sales
    Apr 4 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com


    From breaking into medical device sales in under three weeks, getting three job offers, jumping from associate to full-line rep in just eight months, learning from trial by fire, dealing with challenging surgeons, building trust through repetition, mastering case prep, learning how to sell without overselling, understanding relationship-building inside the OR, and sharing what it's really like to grow from an EMT and personal trainer to making six figures on the #1 team at a major med device company.


    Key Takeaways:


    1️⃣ Grind early, learn fastYour first 6–12 months in the industry should be all about absorbing knowledge. Be in every case you can, take trays home, study them, ask questions, and get your reps in. More exposure = more confidence later.


    2️⃣ Don’t focus on being the expert—focus on being helpfulEarly on, you won't know everything, and that's okay. Instead of trying to “sell,” build relationships, observe, and support the team. Trust builds influence.


    3️⃣ Ask more, talk lessSurgeons don’t want to hear a sales pitch—they want solutions. Lead with questions, not product dumps. The right question opens more doors than the best feature ever will.


    4️⃣ Volume creates valueDanee’s fast-track success came from putting in major volume—cases, calls, reps. More time in the OR and with your team puts you ahead faster than any shortcut.


    5️⃣ It’s okay to mess up—just don’t stay downYou’ll get yelled at, make mistakes, and forget things. That’s part of the journey. The real flex is how you recover, learn, and keep showing up.


    6️⃣ Your past is your superpowerDanee’s used his EMT and personal trainer background to connect with surgeons, patients, and coworkers. Whatever your background is—use it to your advantage.


    7️⃣ Want the promotion? Act like it before you get itDanee became a full-line rep in 8 months because he already operated like one. Take initiative, own your territory, and deliver value before it’s officially your role.


    00:00 - Start

    02:13 - Danee’s Medical Device Sales Story

    04:14 - First 6 Months As An Associate

    08:19 - When Did You Feel Comfortable In The Industry?

    12:04 - What Helped Make Those First 6 Months Easier?

    15:40 - What Convinced You To Full Line Rep After 8 Months?

    20:02 - This Is Not Common, But Doable

    23:30 - What Was The Biggest Transition Going From Associate To Full Line?

    28:41 - Danee’s Advice For First Year Reps

    31:41 - Worst Case Ever Experienced

    35:16 - Best Case Ever Experienced

    38:14 - Danee’s Most Rewarding Feature About Medical Device Sales


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    41 mins
  • Planning For Your Territory In Medical Device Sales [ft. Jason Elmore]
    Mar 28 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com


    Territory planning, segmenting call points, gap analysis, setting boundaries in sales, working smarter not harder, maintaining work-life balance, time management strategies, challenges with different med device company structures, and how to stay intentional as your career grows.


    Key Takeaways:

    1️⃣ Know your plan before your feet hit the ground

    — Don’t just show up and hope. Create a clear territory plan, identify accounts, and know who you need to talk to before you leave the house.


    2️⃣ Your territory is like running a franchise

    — Treat it like a business. Even if you’re W-2, think and operate like you’re building something of your own.


    3️⃣ Not all accounts are created equal

    — Ask yourself: is the juice worth the squeeze? Chase opportunity, but make sure it’s scalable and smart geographically.


    4️⃣ Work smarter and harder

    — Everyone says “work smarter, not harder,” but Jason and Jacob challenge you to do both. That’s where the big wins live.


    5️⃣ Don’t lose everything for a paycheck

    — Med device sales can be rewarding, but don’t let it steal your relationships, your peace, or your future. Build a business you can step away from when it counts.


    00:00 - Start

    01:06 - Intro

    02:29 - Territory Planning

    07:50 - Targeting

    11:24 - Segmenting

    15:17 - Gap Analysis

    15:58 - Geographical Management

    17:56 - Time Management / Prioritization

    19:26 - Work-Life Imbalance

    25:25 - Work Smarter & Harder

    31:36 - Don’t Be A Slave To Your Territory

    34:48 - Time Audit

    37:35 - How To Find Jason Elmore


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    37 mins
  • Which Accounts Should You Spend Your Time At In Medical Device Sales
    Mar 21 2025

    Want To Learn How To Grow Your Territory?? If so → https://www.newtomedicaldevicesales.com


    If you’re new to my channel, my name is Jacob McLaughlin. I’m the founder of New to Medical Device Sales, an exclusive training program designed to help people break into the competitive field of medical device sales. Our average person lands a six-figure role in just 8.5 weeks, earning $105,502 annually. With thousands of success stories from candidates with all kinds of backgrounds, our program equips you with the tools to succeed in this industry.


    4 years ago I moved out to Arizona not knowing anyone and had $1200 to my name.

    I came to this exact spot to journal and share how excited I was to be starting my journey in life.

    Last night I took time to reflect over the past 4 years. It’s truly amazing how you can change your life in such a small amount of time.


    My take aways:

    1. Go after your dream because even if it doesn’t workout like you thought it would, it will bring your right where you’re suppose to be.


    2. Believe in yourself. Nobody is going to believe in you as much as you will, know that good things will happen.


    3. Change is inevitable. Change is going to happen so you can either accept it and keep moving forward or not.


    Please bet on yourself and go after your dreams because your life can be better than you ever thought it could be if you do 💯

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    15 mins