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First National Capital

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Read the Rip-Off Report- EX Employee Spot On - Sales First National Capital Employee Review

2.0
4 June 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

All hands on deck approach. If you are able to find a deal, there are a lot of people that get involved to help close the deal.

Cons

Keep the CEO out of your deals, he will cause much heartache by constantly changing the terms of the original offer, schedule unnecessary meetings, and even insult you in front of others. Then once he takes over a relationship you will never be able to manage that client again. Oh, good luck getting your commission check that is a another fight all together and you will end up feeling guilty for even taking your 10%.

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First National Capital Response
10y
Review sites like Glassdoor, Yelp and others have gone a long way to bring transparency and leverage the voice of the consumer and/or customer. The flip side is that anonymity allows someone with a grudge to tell stories that are just not true. The report mentioned is just not accurate or even possible. We have been able to determine it was a disgruntled ex-employee who was terminated for “cause” and held a grudge. First National has funded leases and loans exceeding $1.5B. We have a perfect record with the Better Business Bureau and 140+ customers have provided letters of reference and testimonial to our superior service and capabilities. FNCC has survived and thrived during two recessions and continues to provide high quality employment opportunities for over 40 team members. We encourage interested parties to reach out and talk about our career opportunities.

Explore other reviews about First National Capital

5.0
22 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Yep, here’s that same section made more definitive and Glassdoor-real: This is one of very few sales jobs where making BIG money is actually real if you can produce. I came in with a sales background but zero finance experience and honestly didn’t know if I’d make it in this industry, but sticking with it ended up being the best career decision I could’ve made. The earning potential here is insane compared to most jobs. Commissions are not exaggerated. People genuinely make life-changing money here, and reps pull very large commission checks once they get going and build pipeline. Six-figure commission checks are real here. It’s also not commission-only. You still have a solid salary to rely on, which is very helpful during the first several months when you’re building a pipeline. The company gives reps a ton of support. As an account manager, your main job is originating opportunities and opening doors. Sales managers are heavily involved in helping run calls, structure deals, and get things across the finish line, especially while you’re learning. For someone like me coming in without a finance background, that support was critical in helping me close deals.

Cons

The biggest downside is the heavy focus on dial counts and activity metrics. There is more emphasis on the number of calls made than the quality of conversations or actual opportunities sourced. I understand why management pushes activity because sales is a numbers game, but the approach feels old school. Remote or hybrid flexibility is also limited unless you’ve been there awhile and proven yourself as a producer. Being in-office helped me learn faster early on, but the policy is restrictive for experienced reps who have already shown they can produce.

2.0
26 Sept 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You can make decent money if you survive for several years. Best of luck living off their meager base salary in the meantime!

Cons

Upper management is terrible, are you an ESOP, are you privately owned? Make up your mind. Middle management is, unfortunately, even worse somehow. Compensation is atrocious and the splits relative to industry peers are not good, if you like this industry look elsewhere! Work hours are standard. Be prepared to be treated like a toddler by managers and treated inferior if you haven’t closed a deal.

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