2020 and all the light we cannot see

Alex Opacic • December 17, 2020

2020 and all the light we cannot see

I typically read 8-9 fiction books per year, this year it’s taken me 9 months to read one. I’m not necessarily a fan of a particular genre, I just like a good story that captures me and allows me to escape into its world.

My least favourite genre is war history but at the start of this year I wanted to see what all the hype about All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doer was all about, and I must say, my curiosity couldn’t have been more timely.

Set in World War 2, the story follows a blind French girl and a German boy as they navigate through life in a world filled with darkness, hate and hopelessness, all leading up to their world’s crossing paths and together trying to survive. Doer does an amazing job of telling the story through their eyes and elegantly describes some of the beauty they experience in an apocalyptic world.

The book is made up of short chapters with a theme for each chapter. I picked up the book late January, and in March the following happened in this exact order:

Our (my pregnant wife and I) almost 2 year old daughter was starting her terrible 2s early, I quit my full time job to launch into my own business (athlete2business), Covid hit and was officially a world pandemic, a global economic crisis happened, classed as the worst recession in 100 years and finally our 2nd daughter was born. About this time (late March) I was up to chapter 3 themed “The Girl.” In a way, what was happening in the book, was happening in reality and I think that’s why I was so drawn to it.

The best way I can summarize the last 9 months of my life is by borrowing Anthony Doer’s style and telling my story in themes (don’t expect the same literary genius please) and no better way to start than that same chapter/theme I was on in March…

The Girls

March 12th, 2pm I quit my full time job and officially launched into my business and at 2:30pm the NBA was cancelled “due to Covid.” I saw the news on social media as I walked out of my ex-employer’s office and immediately thought “WTF is going on!” I straight away knew this Covid stuff was serious, the world is in trouble and so is the economy…I’m in trouble. My salary was $0, I had 3 months worth of savings and just launched a recruitment agency when employers were firing instead of hiring.

I got home that day and immediately held my wife, her pregnant belly and our daughter. We hugged for a while and a sense of happiness, excitement, and burning desire swept me. I knew as long as we have each other, everything was going to be fine. With that in mind, I went to work and started building my business. A couple weeks later, our 2nd daughter was born and our family was complete. Amaliya was born at 3:30am April 2nd, and at 8:45am that day I had my 1st client inquiry in my inbox. My girls are my life. Their love gives me fuel to keep thriving, pushing forward and instils a sense of purpose and passion everyday. Somehow, that client who inquired that morning, gravitated towards this passion, partnered with a2b and I took off.

Education & Awareness

The reason I started this business is to help athletes transition from sport into a post-sport career they can be passionate about and fulfilled in. After I finished playing basketball I struggled for a long time to find that passion and fulfilment I had in sport, so I wanted to ensure no athlete goes through the same rough patch I did.

I also wanted to make the corporate world aware of the high performance habits athletes can transfer into their organisation/business and the value they bring not only to a business culture but the bottom line too $$!

I religiously began using social media & technology (Webinars) to educate athletes on how to transition better and I started raising awareness of their high performance habits, skills and attributes which the corporate world can benefit from. Businesses started listening and reached out to me to hire athletes. Athletes found value in my content and I quickly started emerging as “The athlete transition guy.

2-2-4

To survive in business you need sales. In the middle of Covid, sales were tough to find. Businesses who were actually hiring were few and far between. So I had to be tough and diligent with my time and process. With the help of my business coach Paul Lyons, I came up with a process that I followed diligently without being emotionally attached to the results. The process is 2-2-4. That’s 2 hours of business development (cold calling, online networking etc), 2 hours of candidate sourcing (looking for athletes who are/can be high performing sales professionals) and 4 hours of everything else which included social media activity, running webinars, partnering with referral partners and admin. If I did that everyday, I should survive. I followed 2-2-4 and not only did I survive, I thrived.

Embrace The Struggle

I spoke to 100s of ex-athletes who have become successful sales executives. I asked every single one, “how did you manage to be successful in sport and now also in business?” Almost all of them have said “I embrace the struggle.” This inspired me as I felt I was constantly struggling.

New born causing lack of sleep, a two year old who is probably the world’s MVP of terrible two’s, growing a start-up business in the middle of a global pandemic and recession, bills, mortgage, being there for my wife and also trying to look after my health and keeping our family safe. I was struggling to keep it all together. Firstly, my wife is the ROCK of this family and incredibly supportive so without her I’d be beyond lost.

I was struggling but I embraced it. My purpose (helping athletes find their post-sport purpose) and the love for my girls kept me focused and I just pushed through the struggle.

Resilience. When I was a BDM, my colleagues would often say I’m one of the most resilient people they’ve met. I truly believe that came from sport. Elite level sport is mostly a struggle. Athletes learn to embrace it and become resilient. This resilience stays with us for the rest of our lives.

The Flow State

Throughout this year I’ve been so focused on growing my business, sometimes I forgot who I was doing all this for – my girls. I work from 7am-5pm, I come home help with the night time routine (sometimes neglected that too) and at 7pm when the girls are asleep I’d work again until 11pm. I did that for months. I was oblivious to the fact I was neglecting the most important people in my life – my family. I woke up to this fact when my wife pulled me up on it and we had a heart to heart discussion. Communication and empathy is key in any relationship 😉

At a similar point in time when my wife and I had this talk, I came across Jason Silva’s video about describing the flow state. He mentions high performance or flow happens when you operate half way between surrender and discipline. Athletes especially are familiar with the flow state (Kobe describes it brilliantly) but I’ve never seen it explained theoretically as Jason did. Take his explanation as you may, but this is how I took it – Life is short so spend it with those you love. Business success doesn’t really matter in life, being a good husband, father and human does. Let go of the chase for monetary success, f#ck it. Just enjoy life and those around you, that is all that really matters. However, be disciplined enough to get your work done, chase your dreams without any attachment to the results because the only results that matter are to find love and peace within.

So funnily enough, the last 3 months I’ve operated between surrender and discipline and my business results have sky-rocketed. This is my flow and “I’m feeling it.”

The Future

It’s been an unbelievable year filled with ups and downs. Throughout the downs, I’ve tried really hard to focus on all the light in my life – I’m doing what I love, my work is a 10 min walk from my house, I have my girls and we are healthy.

I’ve been so grateful of the support I’ve been getting from clients, athletes, people in the community, friends and family. Everyone has stated how important and needed my work is – creating employment pathways for athletes. I of course feel the same. More importantly, I feel strongly about the transferable skills & attributes that athletes gain from sport, which allows them to succeed in business. I’m so focused on getting this message out throughout the world in 2021 and beyond.

My vision is to be the world’s leading provider of athlete transition services and supplier of high performance staff.

Be aware of the light in your life, focus, love, be disciplined, work hard.

2020 was a big lesson, I hope everyone has a prosperous and happy 2021!

News

By Alex Opacic March 9, 2025
How to Structure a Salesperson's Remuneration Package: A No-Nonsense Guide How do you pay your sales team? What’s the right balance between base salary and commission? What truly motivates high-performing salespeople? I’ve spent seven years headhunting elite sales talent (2018–2025) across industries and seniority levels. This guide breaks down what actually works when structuring a competitive remuneration package that attracts and retains top performers. Base Salary vs. Commission: What Salespeople Actually Want The old-school belief that salespeople are purely motivated by commission is outdated. Security, stability, and guaranteed income (base salary) have become bigger motivators than potential earnings. In major cities, the cost of living is high, and sales professionals—especially experienced ones—aren't taking risks on low base salaries with “unlimited commission potential.” Here’s what top performers expect: Senior-Level Sales Professionals (10+ years experience): $200K+ base Mid-Level Sales Professionals: $150K–$180K+ base Junior-Level Sales Professionals: $90K–$100K+ base ⚠️ The Risk Zone: $110K–$140K for Mid-Level Salespeople This range can be problematic. It’s too high for junior talent but often too low to attract experienced mid-level professionals. If you’re hiring at this level, your commission structure needs to be bulletproof —more on that shortly. Commission Structure: The 60/40 Rule and the Flight Risk Factor Typically, top sales performers expect a 60/40 split (60% base, 40% commission). But here’s the key: ✅ Commission is secondary to base salary. With the right negotiation and rapport, high performers won’t be as focused on commission if the base is solid. ✅ Only ~20% of the market is truly commission-driven. These salespeople are entrepreneurial by nature, meaning they’re a flight risk —likely to jump ship when things get tough or leave to start their own business. If your team is built on commission-heavy hires, expect high turnover and a weak employer reputation. Sales is no longer a “sink or swim” profession. It’s a legitimate career, just like law, engineering, or accounting, and sales professionals expect to be paid accordingly. High cost of living is creating pressure, stress and anxiety at alarming levels. Secure base salary means safety, comfort and piece of mind which is an optimal performance mindset - something career salespeople will fight for, run through brick walls to ensure they keep. Safety motivates people more than potential earnings! (80% belong in this bracket!) 20% are able to be comfortable with being uncomfortable, they live in the risk zone - these are entrepreneurial salespeople and are a flight-risk as employees. Finding and Paying A-Players: What Works (And What Doesn’t) Now, let’s get granular on hiring high-performing salespeople at different salary levels. Scenario 1: You Want a High Performer Who Can Convert Quickly 🔹 Required: Someone with a strong network, high closing ability, and industry credibility. 🔹 Realistic Salary Expectation: $150K+ base, with an OTE (On-Target Earnings) of at least 40% more. A top sales pro who’s already earning well won’t move for the same money. If they have a loyal network that converts, they need a serious financial incentive, as wherever they are now, they should be converting that network into cash. The biggest factor in them moving that network from current company to yours, will be a base salary increase of at least $20-30k. 💡 Hiring Tip: If budget is tight, consider this strategy: Find a strong mid-level salesperson earning $120K base. Offer $150K+ base but delay commissions for 12+ months (performance-dependent). That extra $30K in guaranteed salary is a huge motivator for high performers. ✅ Key Hiring Test: Ensure their 90-day plan includes a clear, convincing strategy for converting their network. If they can’t articulate this, they don’t have a network worth leveraging. Scenario 2: You Need a Strong Salesperson But Can Only Offer $100K–$120K Base 🔹 Common Employer Ask: “We want someone with a network who can convert.” 🔹 Reality Check: At this salary level, that’s unlikely. Well, the network part is unlikely. Salespeople with strong networks who convert consistently earn $180K+ total comp. If someone at $100K–$120K claims they have a high-performing network, be sceptical—they’re likely just good at interviewing. 💡 Better Approach: Instead of chasing an instant network, hire for: Hunting ability (prospecting and new business development) Strong closing skills Some industry knowledge (but sales skills matter more than product knowledge) If you’re relying on a strong commission structure, make sure it’s proven. If fewer than 40% of your current sales team hits their commission targets, your “strong comms structure” is irrelevant to high performers. Scenario 3: Your Budget is $70K–$100K Base 🔹 Best Strategy: Hire for coachability, resilience, and a strong prospecting mindset. 🔹 Key Focus Areas: Prospecting ability (more important than discovery or closing skills at this level). Willingness to learn and be coached. Competence in sales fundamentals. If your time to coach is zero , don’t hire at this level. Even at $100K base, some level of guidance will be needed. ✅ High performers at this level expect commission potential of at least 40% on top of base. If you’re offering lower OTE, expect lower engagement. ⚠️ The Danger Zone: $110K–$140K for Mid-Level Salespeople This salary range can be a tricky spot. It’s too high for junior talent and too low to consistently attract experienced mid-level professionals who are already performing at a high level. If you’re hiring in this range, your commission structure needs to be bulletproof —and you’ll need a compelling narrative around why someone would make the move. Most commonly, high performers in this range are those with 2–5 years of experience , earning around $100K base and consistently hitting or overachieving target . But here’s the catch: 👉 If they’re moving into a similar role, in the same industry, for the same base salary—you’ve got to ask: why are they really leaving? There are exceptions, of course, but be cautious. At this salary range, you’re better off focusing on: Prospecting and closing ability over network Talent from outside your industry who are hungry to break in Sales professionals who bring energy, resilience, and drive —even if they lack specific industry contacts 💡 If industry network and contacts are a must , be prepared to offer $20K–$30K more on base to make the role attractive enough for someone to walk away from a good situation. Bottom line: In this range, don’t get fooled by polished interviewers. Focus on real ability, upside, and hunger. There's a lot of career salespeople at this level who are mostly average, so be cautious. Final Takeaways: What Defines a High-Performing Salesperson? The best salespeople don’t just have “great energy” in interviews—they have: ✔️ Athlete Mindset : Resilience, competitiveness, discipline, and grit. ✔️ CHEC: Communication skills, Humble confidence, Emotional intelligence, and Commercial awareness. And finally— always have a clear, structured commission plan. Especially at the lower salary levels, transparency on commission can make or break a hire. Get the Pay Structure Right, and You’ll Attract the Best 🔹 Base salary is the #1 motivator for top salespeople today. 🔹 Commission matters, but only in a fair and achievable structure. 🔹 Misaligned pay expectations will either push top talent away—or leave you hiring the wrong people. If you get this right, you won’t just attract great salespeople—you’ll build a team of high performers who stay, thrive, and consistently close deals. Want to Hire Elite Sales Talent? I specialize in headhunting top-performing sales professionals with the athlete mindset + CHEC. If you’re looking to build a high-impact sales team, let’s connect .
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