In the context of the global crisis presented by the COVID-19 pandemic, the authors investigate the perspectives of sales managers
regarding their organizations’ responses to the crisis and future expectations in a post-COVID-19 world. While there has
been much discussion about these topics in the sales literature, very little research has examined them globally by collecting data
from many nations and across many continents. Yet, how can global events be understood without analyzing global data? In
response, the authors convened the first, to their knowledge, global data coalition by hosting video-recorded group interviews
with 76 sales executives representing 27 nations. This inductive investigation, informed by institutional logics, reveals how organizations
accepted new norms, retained old ones, or blended the old with the new in response to the crisis. The results simultaneously
validate certain emerging concepts on a global scale (e.g., customer success management, bricolage) and give rise to
several insights not currently detailed by extant scholarship (e.g., localization, cultural cringe). This work also catalyzes new, relevant
avenues for international research and sheds light on issues facing sales practice globally
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.