Mirakl

Sydney, New South Wales, AUS
750 Total Employees
Year Founded: 2012

Mirakl Leadership & Management

Updated on February 27, 2026

Mirakl Employee Perspectives

Tell us about your journey into sales management. What specific roles, networking opportunities and/or projects helped you get to where you are in your career today?

Every experience contributes to where you end up, and for me, that pivotal moment came from seizing the chance to join a startup initiative within Wayfair, which was a new program. During my five-year tenure, I worked closely with my manager and built bridges across sales, marketing, product, category management and other departments to leave a lasting impact on the business’ expansive growth. This experience truly honed my sales leadership skills and core values — being tenacious, collaborative and ambitious.

Now, at Mirakl, my journey in sales management continues, building on a solid foundation of past experiences. The company’s focus on innovation and marketplace solutions provides an ideal platform for embodying and enhancing my leadership values. Engaging with our diverse client base and witnessing the transformative impact of Mirakl’s technology not only reinforces my approach to leadership but also continuously ignites my passion for contributing to our company’s growth and making a significant impact in the market.

 

What advice, skills or best practices do you find most valuable in sales? How do those skills translate into sales management?

There are so many important skills, but two have been a focus during my career: communication and prioritization. In communication, I learned the “inverted pyramid” concept early in my career. It is a methodology used by journalists to “lead with the headline” and later bring in the supporting pieces of information. To this day, I remind myself of it when prepping for client meetings or expressing my ideas to executives. It’s hardly novel, but it has helped me improve my directness and consciousness. 

Prioritization. A friend and former sales leader shared a personal mantra with me: The rule of 1,000. “There are 1,000 things to do, 100 things that matter and only 10 that make a difference.” It’s simple, but I ask myself this question at least once a week. I did the same as an account executive when assessing my pipeline, territory and activities for the quarter. Distractions abound these days more than ever. Grounding exercises like this one are key to maximizing the returns on our efforts.

 

What is your top advice for sales professionals interested in breaking into sales management?

Being a sales leader is a two-sided coin. It requires leading and fostering a group of people to reach their potential while finding ways to impact the advancement of the business beyond the immediate scope of your team. You’ll want to demonstrate abilities in both areas. Both areas require a lot of effort, energy and attention. In my experience, it’s clear that younger leaders often excel in and enjoy the coaching and mentorship aspects of leadership. Yet, they might find themselves at a crossroads when it comes to making a tangible impact on the business’ broader objectives, sometimes feeling as though they’re spinning their wheels.

My advice here: Don’t force the issue. Be communicative with your manager and leaders about your intentions, but be mindful as you look for ways to make a difference. Seek out projects that are genuinely interesting to you. That passion will show through. You’ll be eager to give updates and seek feedback on your proposed next steps.

Justin Bolger
Justin Bolger, Senior Director Business Development

How do your managers coach and support sales team members to reach their goals?

At Mirakl, coaching is in the DNA of our culture at every level of the organization. Whether it’s manager-to-employee guidance or peer-to-peer collaboration, we’ve built an environment where continuous development is prioritized and used to help drive success.

Our approach to coaching is multifaceted, particularly for our sales teams. New team members progress through a role-based onboarding program designed to give each new hire a strong foundation for success. The program includes leveled certifications where new hires receive tailored feedback from both managers and peers. Throughout the sales cycle, sales leaders treat every interaction as a coachable moment, whether it’s through call reviews, one-on-one meetings or pipeline reviews.

Most importantly, coaching flows in all directions, not just top down. Because we’ve prioritized building a coaching culture, this two-way dialogue gives everyone a voice in shaping our collective success and reinforces that coaching is a shared responsibility.

 

What practices or programs empower your salespeople to take ownership of their growth?

At Mirakl, enablement means partnership. Our go-to-market field teams’ success is our success, so we commit to continuous “everboarding” and personalized support at scale. From day one, our global team partners with every team member, in every region, as a trusted guide for their development.

Every team member is trained in our core methodologies: MEDDPICC and the Challenger Framework. These frameworks enable teams to coach themselves and each other on live opportunities, beyond formal sessions like deal drills.

AI has transformed how our sales teams work. Gong, our revenue intelligence platform, uses AI agents to analyze account health and rep development, delivering personalized, data-backed insights in real time. Our sales support teams use Dust to build custom AI agents — request-for-approval builders, sales collateral locators and more — that automate routine tasks, freeing reps to focus on high-value activities.

Most importantly, Internal mobility isn’t just encouraged; it’s embedded in our culture. Whether through our structured business development representative-to-account executive program or by identifying gaps and creating new roles, team members are empowered to chart their own career paths and actively work toward their next opportunity.

 

How do you balance accountability with autonomy across your sales organization?

At Mirakl, we balance accountability with autonomy through clarity and culture. Expectations and feedback are clear so that everyone knows what success looks like and where they stand. While we embrace a “village mentality” where we win and lose together, each team member ultimately owns their individual performance and KPIs.

Autonomy comes from empowerment: Sales support team members across the organization know the role they play in the sales teams’ success and are ready to support, but it’s up to each individual to raise their hand when they need help. This creates a culture where people are accountable for their results while having the freedom to drive their own success and seek support on their terms.

Courtney Tucci
Courtney Tucci, Director of Sales Enablement