Tech FSE
A Technical Field Sales Executive is someone who combines technical expertise with sales skills to promote and sell complex products—often in sectors like engineering, manufacturing, IT, or scientific equipment.
Here’s what the role typically involves:
Visiting clients on-site to understand their needs and demonstrate how your product or service solves their problems.
Explaining technical features in a way that’s clear to both technical and non-technical stakeholders.
Negotiating deals, preparing proposals, and closing sales.
Providing feedback to product development teams based on customer input and market trends.
Offering post-sales support, including installation advice or troubleshooting.
It’s a great fit for someone who enjoys being out in the field, talking to people, and translating complex tech into real-world value. If you’ve got a background in engineering or science and a knack for persuasion, this role could be a sweet spot.
Mapperley is a residential and commercial area of north-eastern Nottingham, England. The area is bounded by Sherwood to the north-west, Thorneywood to the south and Gedling to the east.
At various periods the terms 'Mapperley' and 'Mapperley Plains' have been applied to lands, on either side of Woodborough Road (B684), from a point at the junction of Mapperley Road, north-east for a distance of some 3+3⁄4 miles (6.0 km), to that point where the road forks towards Woodborough village. The stretch of Woodborough Road from Mapperley Road to Porchester Road is called 'Mapperley Plains' on Jackson's map of 1851–66, for example.[1][2] This section considers the history of the suburb within the present day city boundary.
The origins of the city of Nottingham suburb called Mapperley seem to be found in the fourteenth century. Writing in the 1670s about lands in the lordship of Basford (i.e. west of present-day Woodborough Road) which were called cornerswong, Dr Robert Thoroton, notes:
In the time of Richard the second (reigned 1377-99), Thomas Mapurley was a considerable man at Nottingham…. He, or his posterity, became possessed of the chiefest part of these grounds, which was the occasion of them being called Maperley's Closes; and since there being a cottage-house or two, and some odd barns erected, it goes for a small Hamlet called Mapurley.[3]