There is a meaningful difference between founding a company in a sector you’ve studied and founding one after years of running teams within it. In September 2020, a group of door-to-door sales veterans launched Grit Marketing out of Lindon, Utah. John Taylor, who had previously served as Vice President of Sales at Greenix and earned a personal Golden Door award as an elite individual representative, became CEO. Garth Massey, who spent four years as a divisional manager and sales manager at Greenix, became President. Both men knew the door-to-door pest control industry in detail: its seasonal structure, its training challenges, its retention problems, and the cultural factors that determined whether a young rep developed into a sustained producer or quit after a single difficult stretch. The company’s founding principles, built around the belief that hard work and the right environment can produce meaningful personal and professional change, were shaped by that accumulated experience rather than by an abstract theory of how the industry ought to work.
John Taylor’s background in door-to-door pest control sales predates Grit Marketing by nearly a decade. His career in the industry included time as both an elite individual producer and a senior sales leader, with his role as VP of Sales at Greenix serving as the position where he refined his approach to building and managing teams before launching his own venture. Garth Massey’s trajectory was parallel: four years at Greenix as a divisional and sales manager, with responsibility for recruiting and training sales teams of more than 20 individuals, organizing seminars, and managing payroll. The company’s public profile reflects an organization that emerged from genuine operational experience rather than a pivot from an unrelated field. This distinction matters because the problems that compromise most door-to-door organizations, inadequate training, misaligned compensation, weak culture, and the inability to retain talent past a single season, are problems the founders had already spent years attempting to solve on behalf of someone else. Launching their own company meant attempting to solve those same problems on their own terms, with the authority to make different decisions.
One of the clearest expressions of the founders’ priorities is the investment in training infrastructure relative to the age of the company. The internal training platform, Grit University, launched early in the company’s life and has since been rebuilt into a new curriculum that, according to public podcast references from the leadership team, required substantial development work before it was released. The Landing Pad podcast, co-hosted by Garth Massey and Easton Bunker, launched alongside the company and has now documented more than 110 episodes of elite sales coaching, made publicly available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Both the podcast and the training platform predicted the company’s growth rather than following from it. The company’s published content library reflects a consistent editorial philosophy: document what elite performance looks like, make it accessible to anyone within the organization, and use the same content as both a development resource for existing reps and a credibility signal for potential recruits. Training-first is a values statement, but it’s also an operational choice with measurable consequences for retention and output, and the founders made it before they had any reason to do so other than conviction.
External validation is a useful check on self-reported culture, and Grit Marketing’s external record is substantive. D2DCon, the door-to-door industry’s annual conference and awards body, has recognized both the organization and its CEO individually. John Taylor is listed in D2DCon’s Industry Hall of Fame. The company received the Top Company Growth recognition at D2DCon’s industry awards. Multiple reps have been inducted into the Golden Door Hall of Fame, D2DCon’s public record of individual performers who have exceeded $500,000 in a single selling season. What it takes to build the kind of leadership culture that produces this track record is a question the founders have addressed repeatedly in public interviews and podcast appearances. Their commitment to training infrastructure before growth infrastructure, and to documenting performance publicly rather than keeping it internal, has produced an organization with a verifiable track record across multiple external platforms.
In a third-party survey published by D2D Millionaire, a door-to-door industry publication, Josh Nilsen, co-founder and Chief Experience Officer, described the company’s operating philosophy in direct terms: at other companies, leaders are typically put first, but at this organization the people come first. That framing is reflected in the Glassdoor data available for the company, specifically a culture and values score of 4.5 out of 5 across 37 reviews, with recurring mentions of transparency, leadership quality, and genuine investment in rep development. The compensation structure, which is performance-based rather than salary, creates a structural accountability for the quality of the development environment. At Grit Marketing, the people-first philosophy is also a business model requirement. Reps who don’t develop don’t earn, and reps who don’t earn don’t come back for a second season. The alignment between stated values and business incentives is rarer than it sounds, and it’s one of the more durable things the founders built into the structure of the organization from the beginning.
There is also a generational dimension to what the company has built that’s worth noting. Most of the reps it recruits are in their early to mid-twenties: the same demographic told repeatedly that the entry-level job market is broken, that effort and outcome are poorly correlated, and that the path to meaningful earnings takes longer and is less predictable than it used to be. The offer here is structurally different from the opaque, deferred-reward model that characterizes most entry-level employment: income reflects output, development is the organization’s stated priority, and the evidence of what’s possible is publicly available before anyone commits to anything. Whether or not that offer suits every person who considers it, those terms are visible and verifiable. That transparency is partly why the company has grown, and partly why its best performers tend to advocate for it as vocally as they do. It’s also why the podcast series has become something reps listen to before they ever join, not after: the content gives anyone an accurate picture of the environment, the people, and the standard that’s expected, well before they make a decision.
In five years, Grit Marketing grew from a startup launched during the disruption of 2020 into one of the more recognizable names in D2D pest control sales. The founders arrived with deep industry experience, built training infrastructure before it was needed at scale, and created a performance record now visible on third-party award databases, employer review platforms, and a public podcast past its 110th episode. The case study is useful not because it is unusual, but because it illustrates what tends to happen when the people who build an organization understand the problem they are solving before they begin. They understood it in detail. What they built reflects that clarity.










