What B2B Actually Is
B2B — business to business — means selling products or services from one company to another. It happens over email, phone, and video calls. It’s remote by nature. And it pays significantly more than most roles available to someone without a traditional corporate background.
It is not cold calling strangers. It is not an MLM. It is not commission-only with no floor. W2 remote B2B roles come with a base salary, benefits, and commission on top. The structure is real. The income is real. The flexibility is real.
The Myth That’s Keeping You Out
The biggest lie about B2B is that you need sales experience to get sales experience. That’s not how entry-level B2B actually works. Companies hire people at the ground floor specifically to train them. What they’re evaluating isn’t your resume — it’s whether you can communicate clearly, listen well, and follow through.
Every woman who has ever managed a difficult customer, talked someone through a problem, or followed up when nobody else did already has the foundation. The gap isn’t skill. It’s language — knowing how to describe what you bring in terms a B2B hiring manager recognizes.
What the Income Actually Looks Like
Entry-level remote B2B roles start somewhere in the $40,000–$65,000 range as a base, with commission on top. That’s not the ceiling — that’s the floor. Mid-level reps with a year or two of track record regularly earn six figures. And the work happens from home, on a schedule that can bend around real life.
The Part Nobody Tells You
Getting in isn’t complicated, but it is specific. There’s a right order to things, a right way to describe what you bring, and a right set of companies to target based on where you’re coming from. Most people skip the early steps because no one told them those steps existed — and then they apply, get ignored, and conclude the door is closed when it isn’t.
The difference between women who make this transition and women who stay stuck usually isn’t skill. It’s that one of them understood the process and the other tried to figure it out alone.
The picture is clear. The skills translate. What most people are still missing is the specific process — which companies to approach, how to frame your background in the language they actually respond to, and what to do first. That process is what the course covers, week by week.
See what’s inside →You Are Not Starting From Zero
Every job you’ve ever held, every difficult conversation you navigated, every time you solved a problem someone else gave up on — that’s your foundation. The work now is translation, not reinvention. And that translation process is something you can learn.