Show Off Your Recognition

Badges & Embeddable Assets

Earned recognition deserves to be seen

Whether you are a nominated salesperson or a company with multiple nominees, we have created assets you can use to showcase your achievement on LinkedIn, your website, email signatures, and anywhere else you want to stand out.

For Nominated Salespeople

Honorable Mention Badge

Use this badge on your:

• LinkedIn profile (Featured section or banner)

• Email signature

• Personal website or portfolio

• Resume or CV

Download:

LinkedIn Banner

Dimensions: 1584 x 396 px (LinkedIn banner size)

Shareable Card

Perfect for LinkedIn posts, Instagram, or Twitter.

Dimensions: 1080 x 1080 px

Note: Personalized cards with your name are available after validation. Check your email for download link.

Winner & Finalist Badges

Available to 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place recipients only. Download links sent via email.

Executive Endorsed Badge

Available to nominees who received an executive endorsement. Automatically added to your profile.

For Companies

Leaderboard Badges

Show that your company produces top-performing salespeople.

Embeddable Leaderboard Widget

Add a live-updating badge to your careers page or website:

Requires Silver tier (10+ nominations) or higher.

"Our Salespeople Are Recognized" Banner

For careers pages and recruitment marketing:

Dimensions: 728 x 90 px (leaderboard) and 300 x 250 px (medium rectangle)

Your Embed Code

Copy and paste this into your website's HTML:

Linking Guidelines

Usage Guidelines

Do not:

Alter the badge design or colors
Use badges if you have not been validated
Imply endorsement by Salesperson Inc. beyond the award
Use winner badges if you received an Honorable Mention

Traditional B2B Sales Lead Generation

Do:

Use badges to celebrate your achievement
Share on professional platforms
Add to your email signature
Include on your company careers page
Link back to your profile on salesperson.com

Need Something Custom?

If you need a specific format, size, or variation for your use case, let us know.

Contact Us →

Do not Have a Badge Yet?

National Salesperson Day grows every year because people like you participate. Nominate someone. Share the day. Help us build a movement that gives B2B salespeople the recognition they've earned.

Get nominated to earn your recognition.

Nominate a Salesperson →Nominate yourself →

National Salesperson Day grows every year because people like you participate. Nominate someone. Share the day. Help us build a movement that gives B2B salespeople the recognition they've earned.

National Salesperson Day grows every year because people like you participate. Nominate someone. Share the day. Help us build a movement that gives B2B salespeople the recognition they've earned.

Latest Blogs

John Buie | Founder and CEO

First National Salesperson Day 2026

January 16, 2026 is the first National Salesperson Day. Not the first attempt at sales recognition, but the first dedicated day built specifically for B2B sales professionals, timed for when they need it most, backed by an awards program and research report that give the day substance beyond a hashtag. This article is an invitation. We are building something that does not yet exist: a professional recognition tradition for the people who generate revenue. The companies and individuals who participate in year one are not just observing a day. They are shaping what it becomes. Early adopters will influence the norms, define the standards, and create the stories that carry this forward for decades. National Salesperson Day will exist in 2036 and 2046 regardless of what happens this year. But what it becomes depends entirely on who shows up now.
Jason Hagerman | Customer Success Director

Professional Recognition Days History How They Grow

Nurses Week started in 1954. Administrative Professionals Day began in 1952. Customer Service Week was proclaimed by Congress in 1992. These recognition days did not emerge fully formed. They started as ideas, grew through persistent advocacy, and became institutions through consistent observance. Professional recognition days succeed when they address a genuine appreciation gap, rally a community around a shared moment, and provide actionable ways to participate. The pattern is consistent across professions: identify an undervalued group, choose a meaningful date, create participation pathways, and show up year after year until observance becomes expectation. National Salesperson Day follows this proven model for B2B sales professionals, a group that generates revenue for every company yet lacks dedicated recognition. This article examines how professional recognition days become institutions and why the companies that participate early shape what these traditions become.
Ged Dimacali | Director of Operations, Salesperson.com

Meaningful Sales Recognition Framework

‍"Great job" means nothing. Salespeople hear it constantly, forget it immediately, and gain nothing from it. Meaningful recognition is specific, timely, and acknowledges effort as well as outcome. It names exactly what someone did, why it mattered, and what made it difficult. Top-performing sales organizations recognize the deal that almost fell through, the creative problem-solving, and the persistence through months of rejection. Generic praise is forgettable. Specific acknowledgment of what made something hard is what salespeople remember, what shapes their behavior, and what builds the culture that retains top performers. This article provides a framework for transforming well-intentioned but ineffective recognition into appreciation that actually resonates, whether you are a sales leader recognizing your team or a marketing leader building cross-functional partnership.
Delma Carel | Senior Sales Representative, Salesperson.com

Sales Marketing Alignment Cross Functional Recognition

‍Sales and marketing alignment is one of the most discussed and least solved problems in B2B. Companies try shared metrics, joint meetings, and integrated technology. Most still struggle. What research shows actually works is simpler and more human: cross-functional recognition. When marketing publicly appreciates salespeople who close their leads, something shifts. Trust builds. Collaboration improves. Lead follow-up increases. This article explores why recognition from marketing carries more weight than recognition from sales management, introduces a three-level framework for cross-functional appreciation, and provides practical approaches for marketing leaders who want to transform their relationship with sales. The multiplier effect is real: recognition given across organizational boundaries returns dividends that internal recognition cannot match. National Salesperson Day on January 16th gives marketing teams a dedicated moment to lead this transformation.
John Buie | Founder and CEO

Sale Recognition Research Performance Retention

Recognition is often dismissed as a "soft" initiative, something nice when budgets allow. The research says otherwise. Gallup studies show recognized employees are 63% more likely to stay and 2.7x more likely to be highly engaged. SHRM found companies with structured recognition programs see 31% lower voluntary turnover. For sales teams facing constant rejection, the impact is amplified: recognition neurologically counterbalances the accumulated weight of hearing "no" dozens of times per week. This article examines the peer-reviewed research on recognition and performance, the neuroscience of why appreciation changes behavior, and evidence-based approaches for building recognition into sales and marketing operations. The data is clear: recognition is not soft. It is a measurable business strategy with documented ROI that sales and marketing leaders can no longer afford to treat as optional.
Jason Hagerman | Customer Success Director

B2B Sales January Quota Reset

January is the hardest month for B2B salespeople. Annual quotas reset to zero overnight, pipeline built over months disappears from reports, and pressure to prove yourself starts immediately. Unlike retail, B2B sales cycles mean January effort will not show results for months. While most companies focus recognition in December around holidays and year-end celebrations, B2B salespeople need appreciation most in January when the weight of a fresh annual target lands on their shoulders. This article explores the psychology of the quota reset, why the B2B calendar is fundamentally different from retail, and how sales and marketing leaders can support their revenue teams when it matters most. National Salesperson Day is January 16th specifically because that is when recognition has the greatest impact.

See if you or your company made the list.

Nominees, finalists, category winners, and feature stories from National B2B Salesperson Day. Plus the weekly Salesperson.com newsletter.