On the Precipice | Zen & the Art of Cannabinoid Sales: Summitt Labs Seeks a Higher Plane

Most companies have a vice president of sales. Summitt Labs has Brett Pommerenck, who goes by a different title.

“Whenever somebody sees ‘Sales Guru’ on my card, they ask how you become one,” he says. “I tell them that you spend your life in sales, and you go to Nepal to climb the Himalayas to meet the real gurus. You get the wisdom from them, then you bring it back down and apply it to your life.”

It’s not just a funny story. After college, Pommerenck hiked Asia’s grueling Annapurna Circuit—all 180 miles and 18,000 feet. The trip stayed with him. But just as important to his education was the journey that came after, when he carved a career path across the Southeast selling everything from cars to pharmaceuticals to industrial chemicals.

Today, he’s traded in his mountain climbing gear for a rental car. In between client meetings and ride-alongs with retail partners, he visits nearly 25 trade shows a year. 

“I actually consider my job as more of a consultant,” he says. “I try to help our partners grow, because I feel that as a company, we can only grow if our partners grow. If we’re just selling a product to them and expecting them to pay for it, we’re not helping them grow. It’s not just sales. It’s compliance. It’s education. It’s training. There’s much more to it than just selling somebody a product and walking away.”

“I look at how would I want to be treated? And I treat people that way,” he adds. “I want somebody to shoot me straight, be honest with me, and help me grow. I don’t like people who lie to me. So what I found is, the people you deal with in this industry—you have to align with the right people. I don’t do business with everybody. But the people I do business with, they’re like family.”

Scaling the Summitt

Summitt Labs launched its first product line, Organic Kore, on September 15, 2018. Since then, it’s developed into a full-scale alternative wellness operation with a suite of charismatic products ranging from the kratom-boosted Good Mood elixir to the intense offerings of Pür THC-P.

The company’s latest standout is the smart disposable Lost Geek Clearview, which features a 3-D curved screen interface and delivers 50,000 puffs per unit.

For those inside the industry, however, Summitt’s most recognizable product isn’t something found in stores. If Pommerenck looks familiar, it’s likely because of the burlap sacks he hands out at trade shows.

“It’s actually canvas, but it’s brown and it looks like burlap,” he says. “If we were just selling those, we’d be millionaires ten times over.”

His booth’s other distinctive feature is its seating area. The ability to take a load off is one of the two promises Pommerenck makes to his clients. 

“We guarantee you can always come by and have a seat on our couch when you’re tired at a trade show,” he says. 

The View from the Top

Summitt’s success stems, in part, from its fully integrated operation. Everything that carries the Summitt logo has been designed, manufactured, and marketed by the company’s in-house team. 

The integration ensures high-quality products, but it also brings high-octane headaches. Pommerenck’s second guarantee is that every Summitt product adheres to the law—all the laws. In this industry, that means constantly adjusting to the whims of lawmakers. 

“The challenging part for us as a manufacturer and as a company that distributes products is that when we do things right, 90% of the industry is still doing it wrong,” Pommerenck says. “So we have to figure out how to do things right and also have the product at a price point that allows our customers to make a good profit. 

“I’ve never been in an industry where the life of a product is essentially six months, and then the next greatest thing comes out right after it—making the old thing obsolete in people’s eyes, even when there’s nothing wrong with it,” he adds. 

Call it the paradox of the counterculture industry: businesses must keep moving forward just to stay in the same place. 

“The companies that set themselves apart are the ones that have the infrastructure, which means having the legal, having the compliance, and having their supply lines all vertically aligned. All those things come into factor as the industry changes, because you never know what tomorrow’s gonna hold,” he says. “But you have to have a positive mental attitude and a no-nonsense attitude. If not, you’re gonna get swallowed up and then you’re not gonna be here tomorrow.”

A similar paradox accompanies the role of sales guru. 

“Some people just think that I travel all the time and spend a lot of time in big cities and eating a lot of fancy dinners, but there’s a lot of hard work that goes in there too,” Pommerenck says. “With every week of trade show activity, there’s at least two to three weeks of prep that goes into it.”

“I had a sales meeting on Monday, and I shared a little infographic. It shows what people think we do, which is to smile, shake hands, get people to buy, convince people to say yes. But in reality, I’m teaching people how to make decisions, connecting dots faster than anyone, navigating politics and the legal landscape without a map, asking questions no one else will, making change feel safe, and simplifying what other people overcomplicate.”

That’s the kind of wisdom you find at the top of a mountain. 

Recent Articles

Dr. Macias first fell in love with science while studying at Howard University, where she completed her undergraduate studies and later earned her PhD in cellular and molecular biology. While at Howard, she became especially interested in cancer research due to personal ties. Growing up in a Creole family and predominantly Black community in Louisiana, Dr. Macias watched many women around her battle breast cancer, so at Howard, she decided to focus her research on the BRCA1 gene.
It’s almost amazing that the same institutions that brought us the 2008 financial crisis have a problem with selling glass pipes. Almost. The truth is that an industry's past sins are only held against it when the money isn’t right. Big banks were willing to risk cratering the U.S. housing market because the profits were too good to ignore. But the cannabis industry rolls a different kind of paper, so instead of a slap on the wrist, it gets a surcharge.
Smokeshop and counterculture enthusiasts enjoy discovery as part of the experience. Customers enjoy browsing. When they walk into a shop, they don't simply grab a product and leave. They look for something new. This is the main reason flyers and posters still work. Smokeshops and dispensaries are highly visual environments. You want to see bold artwork, psychedelic graphics, and street-style posters that naturally capture attention.
The use of cannabis in professional sports has always been a controversial subject. While some are firm believers that all substances should be banned from professional sports altogether, most people aren’t thinking about cannabis when they’re discussing performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs). In fact, there have been countless cannabis users in the world of professional sports throughout the years; some of whom are more open about their love for the plant than others.
North Carolina might save us all. A new state bill may be the industry’s best option to save itself from demise when new federal cannabinoid bans take effect in November. And it could use your support.
Hemp is often considered for the things that it is not. It is not intoxicating, it is not illegal, and it is not marijuana. However, now we are seeing a focus back to what it can be. The plant is moving into the level of wine and chocolate and becoming a movement and a culture.
It’s been several months since President Donald Trump signed an executive order to reschedule cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III within the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). On paper, the recent executive order, entitled “Increasing Medical Marijuana and Cannabidiol Research,” is a huge step in the right direction for cannabis smokers across the country.
For years, we’ve been told that this industry is the Wild West: a place where the only law amounts to whatever the guy with the gun says. But over the last 12 months, state governments have passed a spate of new regulations that promise to swap the relative lawlessness of poor enforcement of vague rules with real law and order.