OPINION
Plаintiffs-Appellants Michael Christopher and Frank Buchanan appeal the judgment of the district court that they are not entitled to overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 201 et seq. Plaintiffs were employed as Pharmaceutical Sales Representatives (PSRs) for Defendant-Appellee SmithKline Beecham Corporation d/b/a GlaxoSmithKline (Glaxo). Glaxo classified Plaintiffs as “outside salesmen” — a legal designation that exempts an employee from the FLSA’s overtime-pay requirement. Plaintiffs’ suit challenges Glaxo’s classification and seeks back pay.
The district court granted summary judgment to Glaxo. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. Pharmaceutical Sales Representatives
Glaxo is in the business of developing, producing, marketing, and selling pharmaceutical products. Christopher and Buchanan began working as PSRs for Glaxo in 2003. Glaxo terminated Christopher in May 2007. Buchanan’s career at Glaxo ended when he accepted a PSR position at another pharmaceutical company.
Since the enactment of the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, Pub.L. No. 59-384, 34 Stat. 768, federal law has, to varying degrees, regulatеd and influenced the sale of pharmaceuticals. 1 In 1938, the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, Pub.L. 75-717, 52 Stat. 1040 (codified as amended at 21 U.S.C. §§ 301 et seq.), clothed the Food and Drug Administration with broad regulatory authority over, inter alia, drug manufacturers. 2 The Durham-Humphrey Amendment of 1951 established the first comprehensive scheme governing the sale of prescription pharmaceuticals to the public. See Pub.L. No. 82-215, 65 Stat. 648 (1951) (codified at 21 U.S.C. § 353(b)). Importantly, for our purposes, Durham-Humphrey formalized the now well-established distinction between prescription and over-the-counter drugs. 3 The Controlled Substances Act of 1970, Pub.L. 91-513, 84 Stat. 1260, continues the prescription/nonprescription dichotomy, and prohibits dispensing the former without the authorization of a “practitioner, other than a pharmacist, to an ultimate user.” 21 U.S.C. § 829(b)-(d). Currently, all pharmaceuticals requiring a physician’s prescription are branded “Rx only.” 21 U.S.C. § 353(b)(4)(A).
We analyze this case within the framework of how Glaxo sells its “Rx only” products to an “ultimate user.” A key, undisputed fact underlying our analysis is that the ultimate user — the patient — cannot purchase a prescription drug without first obtаining a physician’s authorization.
Because Glaxo is proscribed from selling Rx-only products directly to the public, it sells its prescription pharmaceuticals to distributors or retail pharmacies, which then dispense those products to the ultimate user, as authorized by a licensed physician’s prescription. In this restrictive sales environment, Glaxo employs *386 PSRs to make “calls” on physicians to encourage them to prescribe Glaxo products. On calls, PSRs typically present physicians with a variety of information about Glaxo products, provide product samples, and attempt to convince the physicians to prescribe Glaxo products, when medically appropriate, over competitor products. PSRs also try to build business relationships with physicians, respond to their concerns, and recruit them to attend Glaxo-organized dinners and conventions. Each PSR is responsible for a particular “drug bag” of medications he or she tries to induce physicians to prescribe. As perceived by the Plaintiffs, the primary duty of а PSR is to communicate features and benefits of Glaxo products to physicians. In Buchanan’s words, he tried to “convince prescribers that the benefits of [Glaxo’s] products warranted them prescribing that product to the appropriate patient.”
PSRs usually work outside of a Glaxo office and spend much of their time traveling to the offices of, and working with, physicians within their assigned geographic territories. Plaintiffs visited between eight and ten physicians each day, usually between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Plaintiffs claim that they worked between ten and twenty hours each week outside of normal business hours, for which they received no overtime wages. When not making calls on physicians, Plaintiffs studied Glaxo products and relevant disease states, prepared new presentation modules, answered phone calls, checked email, generated reports, and attended events on evenings and weekends.
Before a PSR makes his or her daily calls, Glaxo provides him or her with detailed reports about the physicians he or she will visit. These reports include information about a physician’s prescribing habits and drug preferences, the market volume of Glaxo products prescribed by the physician versus the volume of competitor products, and the volume of prescriptions filled in a particular region. Glaxo also provides each PSR with a budget to use for speaker programs and to engage socially with physicians.
Glaxo prepares and provides information about its products — called “Core Messages” — for PSRs to present to physicians during calls. Core Messages include information about product benefits and risks, dosage instructions, and the types of patients for whom Glaxo recommends each product. Glaxo expects PSRs to use the Core Messages and then “[d]evelop and deliver informative sales presentations based on customer needs.”
PSRs do not carry any prescriptions with them for direct sale; rather, Glaxo provides PSRs with small amounts of sample products to distribute to physicians. PSRs do not contact patients or market anything tо them. To the contrary, in compliance with federal law, PSRs cannot sell the samples, take orders for any medication, or negotiate drug prices or contracts with either physicians or patients.
Glaxo recruits applicants who have prior sales experience for its PSR positions. When Glaxo hires new PSRs, it provides them with more than one month of training that focuses on making presentations, learning about Glaxo products, and building interpersonal skills. PSRs are taught how to ask for a commitment from a physician to prescribe Glaxo products if the physician believes the medication is appropriate.
Since 2001, Glaxo has instructed PSRs on various methods of completing a call. When Plaintiffs were hired, they received training in Glaxo’s “Assertive Selling Always Professional (ASAP)” model. They were also trained to follow Glaxo’s “Winning Practices” program. ASAP and Winning Practices are similarly structured *387 and emphasize that a PSR should: (1) analyze and understand what is happening in an assigned region; (2) work with the team to drive results; (3) master professional knowledge to understand clinical management of patients; (4) prepare for calls; (5) “Sell Through Customer-Focused Dialogue”; (6) obtain the strongest commitment possible from a healthcare professional at the end of the call; and (7) provide added value to the customer relationship.
In 2004, Glaxo started a new program called “When? Why? How?” which distilled the old model into three questions PSRs should use to bond the targeted physician to the Glaxo brand: “(1) When should I use this product? (2) Why should I use this product? (3) How should I use this product?” PSRs strive to ensure that their targeted physicians have the answers to all three questions before PSRs leave the physicians’ offices.
Plaintiffs received two types of pay— salary and incentive-based compensation. Incentive-based compensation is paid if Glaxo’s market share for a particular product increases in a PSR’s territory, sales volume for a product increases, sales revenue increases, or the dose volume increases. Glaxo aims to have a PSR’s total compensation be apprоximately 75% salary and 25% incentive compensation. 4 However, the dollar value of incentive-based compensation is uncapped.
The process of providing information to physicians is referred to within the pharmaceutical industry as “detailing,” and PSRs have traditionally been known by the moniker “detail men” or “detailers.” Plaintiffs’ job functions during their tenures at Glaxo varied little from those of their predecessors of fifty or sixty years ago. 5 Moreover, there is homogeneity *388 within the industry — PSRs carry out essentially the same business functions regardless of which drug manufacturers they represent. 6
The pharmaceutical industry self-regulates PSRs and their contacts with physicians by way of a voluntary industry-wide code of conduct — the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) Code. The PhRMA Code does not speak of selling, but, rather, provides that “[interactions [with health care professionals] should be focused on informing [them] about products, providing scientific and educational information, and supporting medical research and education.” The PhRMA Code refers to PSRs as “industry representatives” and states that “[informational presentations and discussions by industry representatives speaking on behalf of a company provide valuable scientific and educational benefits.” The PhRMA Code also regulates the provision of meals and gifts to physicians and professes an industry commitment to independent medical decisionmaking.
II. Proceedings in the District Court
This litigation commenced in August 2008, when Plaintiffs filed the Complaint challenging Glaxo’s practice of requiring overtime work without paying additional compensation as a violation of 29 U.S.C. §§ 207(a)(1), 216(b). The parties cross-moved for summary judgment, and Plaintiffs moved to certify a conditional class. Glaxo contended that Plaintiffs were exempt under the “outside salesman” provision in FLSA or, alternatively, under the “administrative” exemption. 29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1).
In granting Glaxo’s motion for summary judgment, the district court addressed only the outside sales exemption and held that PSRs “unmistakably fit within the terms and spirit of the exemption.”
Christopher v. SmithKlein Beecham Corp.,
No. 08 Civ. 1498(FJM),
Thereafter, Plaintiffs moved to alter or amend the judgment based on the district court’s failure to consider an
amicus
brief filed by the Secretary (Secretary) of the Department of Labor (DOL) in a FLSA appeal then pending before the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit,
In re Novartis Wage & Hour Litig.,
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We review a district cоurt’s interpretation of the FLSA and its grant of summary judgment de novo.
Gieg v. DDR, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
I. The FLSA Outside Sales Exemption
The FLSA imposes minimum labor standards on employers to promote “the health, efficiency, and general well-being of workers.” 29 U.S.C. § 202(a);
Nigg v. U.S. Postal Serv.,
To meet those goals and expand employment opportunities across the economy, the FLSA inсludes a baseline “overtime payment requirement” that employers must pay employees “a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed” for hours worked in excess of forty per week. 29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1). There are numerous exceptions to this general rule.
See
29 U.S.C. § 213. These exemptions to the overtime-pay requirement vary widely from “white-collar” executive, administrative, and professional exemptions to those for babysitters. 29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1), (15). Relevant here is one part of the “white-collar” exemption for persons employed “in the capacity of outside salesman.” 29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1);
Vínole v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.,
any employee employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity ... or in the capacity of outside salesman (as such terms are defined and delimited from time to time by regulations of the Secretary [of Labor])....
29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1).
As the statute indicates, a proper interpretation of the FLSA is necessarily guided by the regulations issued by the Secretary of Labor — “[t]he FLSA grants the Secretary broad authority to ‘define and delimit’ the scope of the exemption for executive, administrative, and professional
*390
employees.”
Auer,
The Secretary defines an “outside salesman” as any employee:
(1) Whose primary duty is: (i) making sales within the meaning of section 3(k) of the Act; or (ii) obtaining orders or contracts for services or for the use of facilities for which a consideration will be paid by the client or customer; and
(2) Who is primarily and regularly engaged away from the employer’s place or places of business in performing such primary duty.
29 C.F.R. § 541.500(a). An employee’s “primary duty” is “the principal, main, major, or most important duty that the employee performs.” 29 C.F.R. § 541.700. The outside sales regulation provides:
In determining the primary duty of an outside sales employee, work performed incidental to and in conjunction with the employee’s own outside sales or solicitations, including incidental deliveries and collections, shall be regarded as exempt outside sales work. Other work that furthers the employee’s sales efforts also shall be regarded as exempt work including, for example, writing sales reports, updating or revising the employee’s sales or display catalogue, planning itineraries and attending sales conferences.
29 C.F.R. § 541.500(b).
The Secretary’s outside sales regulation references Section 3(k) of the Act. 29 C.F.R. § 541.500(a). Section 3(k) prоvides that “ ‘[s]ale’ or ‘sell’ includes any sale, exchange, contract to sell, consignment for sale, shipment for sale, or other disposition.” 29 U.S.C. § 203(k). The Secretary’s regulations provide:
Sales within the meaning of section 3(k) of the Act include the transfer of title to tangible property, and in certain cases, of tangible and valuable evidences of intangible property. Section 3(k) of the Act states that “sale” or “sell” includes any sale, exchange, contract to sell, consignment for sale, shipment for sale, or other disposition.
29 C.F.R. § 541.501(b).
In the regulations, the Secretary draws a distinction between sales work and promoting:
Promotion work is one type of activity often performed by persons who make sales, which may or may not be exempt outside sales work, depending upon the circumstances under which it is performed. Promotional work that is actually performed incidental to and in conjunction with an employee’s own outside sales or solicitations is exempt work. On the other hand, promotional work that is incidental to sales mаde, or to be made, by someone else is not exempt outside sales work.
29 C.F.R. § 541.503(a). To illustrate the concept of promoting sales, as opposed to *391 selling, the Secretary’s regulations provides two examples — a manufacturer’s rep-, resentative and a company representative who visits chain stores:
(b) A manufacturer’s representative, for example, may perform various types of promotional activities such as putting up displays and posters, removing damaged or spoiled stock from the merchant’s shelves or rearranging the merchandise .... Promotion activities directed toward consummation of the employee’s own sales are exempt. Promotional activities designed to stimulate sales that will be made by someone else are not exempt outside sales work----
(c) Another example is a company representative who visits chain stores, arranges the merchandise on shelves, replenishes stock by replacing old with new merchandise, sets up displays and consults with the store mаnager when inventory runs low, but does not obtain a commitment for additional purchases. The arrangement of merchandise on the shelves or the replenishing of stock is not exempt work unless it is incidental to and in conjunction with the employee’s own outside sales. Because the employee in this instance does not consummate the sale nor direct efforts toward the consummation of a sale, the work is not exempt outside sales work.
29 C.F.R. § 541.508(b)-(c).
In a FLSA overtime-wage case, the question of how an employee spends his or her workday is one of fact, while the question of whether his or her activities exclude him or her from the overtime-pay requirement is one of law.
See Icicle Seafoods v. Worthington,
We construe the outside sales exemption consistent with other Section 13(a) exemptions under thе FLSA. The employer always has the burden of showing the exemption applies to its employee.
Bratt,
II. Whether Deference to the Secretary’s Position is Appropriate
The Secretary’s appearance as
amicus
supporting Plaintiffs requires us to determine what, if any, deference we must accord to her view that PSRs do not meet the primary duties test for the outside sales exemption. The Secretary also advocated this construction of the regulations before the Second Circuit in
Novartis.
A. Administrative Deference in the FLSA
When a question arises as to the meaning of the FLSA or the Secretary’s regulations, we apply traditional rules of construction and, where required, administrative deference.
See, e.g., Webster v. Pub. Sch. Emp. of Wash., Inc.,
B. In re Novartis Wage & Hour Litigation
In
Novartis,
the Second Circuit held that PSRs did not meet the requirements of the outside sales exemption. As it has done here, the DOL took the position that “when an employee promotes to a physician a pharmaceutical that may thereafter be purchased by a patient from a pharmacy ... the employee does not in any sense make the sale.”
Novartis,
The
Novartis
court also quoted the Preamble’s elaboration of the primary-duty standard:
“Employees have a primary duty of making sales if they ‘obtain a commitment to buy’ from the customer
and are credited with the sale.”
The Second Circuit determined that the Secretary’s regulations “do far more than merely parrot the language of the FLSA.”
Novartis,
[Wjhere the employee promotes a pharmaceutical product to a physician but can transfer to the physician nothing more than free samples and cannot lawfully transfer ownership of any quantity of the drug in exchange for anything of value, cannot lawfully take an order for its purchase, and cannot lawfully even obtain from the physician a binding commitment to prescribe it, we conclude that it is not plainly erroneous to conclude that the employee has not in any sense, within the meaning of the statute or the regulations, made a sale.
Id. at 154.
C. Deference Owed in this Case
Our view of the level of deference we owe to the Secretary in this matter is best captured by the Supreme Court’s instruction in
Gonzales v. Oregon:
“An agency does not acquire special authority to interpret its own words when, instead of using its expertise and experience to formulate a regulation, it has elected merely to paraphrase the statutory language.”
According to the Secretary’s regulations, a salesman is someone who either “mak[es] sales within the meaning of section 3(k) of the Act” or someone who “obtain[s] orders or contracts.” 29 C.F.R. 541.500(a)(1). Since there is no dispute that PSRs do not obtain orders for anything, only the “sales” element is relevant here. To define “sales within the meaning of section 3(k),” we look to 29 C.F.R. § 541.501(b), which provides that “[s]ales within the meaning of section 3(k) of the Act include the transfer of title to tangible property, and in certain cases, of tangible and valuable evidences of intangible property.” Section 3(k) of the Act states that “ ‘[s]ale’ or ‘sell’ includes any sale, exchange, contract to sell, consignment for sale, shipment for sale, or other disposition.” 29 U.S.C. § 208(k). Thus, the Secretary has given us two meanings with which to set the boundaries of the sales exemption. First, in 29 C.F.R. § 541.501(b), the Secretary provides an open-ended definition that sales, unsurprisingly, “include the transfer of title to tangible property.” In the next sentence, the Secretary cross-references back to the language of Section 3(k) of the Act — -the very language purportedly being defined. Accordingly, the Secretary’s regulations define “sale” or “sell” by statutory renvoi — that is, a “sale” means a “sale.” This clarifies nothing about the meaning of Section 3(k); it merely incorporates the very undefined, very un-delimited term the Secretary seeks to clarify. A definition dependent almost entirely on Congress’s seventy-two-year old statutory language is not an example of the DOL employing its “expertise” to elucidate meaning to which we owe
Auer
deference.
See N. Cal. River Watch,
In
Gonzales v. Oregon,
the Supreme Court confronted an analogous situation when it rejected the Attorney General’s regulatory attempt to frustrate the implementation of Oregon’s Death with Dignity Act. In that case, Oregon statutory law exempted licensed physicians from liability when they prescribed medication to hasten death for terminally ill individuals.
In Auer, the underlying regulations gave specificity to a statutory scheme the Secretary was charged with enforcing and reflected the considerable experience and expertise the [DOL] had acquired over time. ... Here, on the other hand, the underlying regulation does little more than restate the terms of the statute itself. The language the Interpretive Rule addresses comes from Congress, not the Attorney General, and the near equivalence of the statute *395 and regulation belies the Government’s argument for Auer deference.
Id.
at 256-57,
The failure to add specificity to the statutory scheme that troubled the Gonzales Court, indeed the “parroting” of statutory language, is present in the Secretary’s outside sales regulations. Rather than setting forth a particular test for “sale” or instructing employers to look for indicia of sales, the Secretary’s regulations direct employers, employees, and this court back to the language of the FLSA. Given the admonition in Gonzales, we are unable to accord Auer deference to a regulation written in this manner.
Thus, when we look to the Secretary’s brief for her application of the rеgulations, we see only a
reinterpretation
of Section 3(k). Rather than applying the regulation to the facts presented, the Secretary has used her appearance as
amicus
to draft a new interpretation of the FLSA’s language. Were we to accept the Secretary’s offer, and give controlling deference even where there exists no meaningful regulatory language to interpret, we would unduly expand
Auer’s
applicability to interpretations of statutes expressed for the first time in case-by-case
amicus
filings.
See N. Cal. River Watch,
III. “Sales” and “Selling” in the Pharmaceutical Industry
Absent an agency-determined result, it is the province of the court to construe the relevant statutes and regulations.
N. Cal. River Watch,
Plaintiffs’ contention that they do not “sell” to doctors ignores the structure and realities of the heavily regulated pharmaceutical industry. It is undisputed that federal law prohibits pharmaceutical manufacturers from directly selling prescription medications to patients. Plaintiffs suggest that despite being hired for their sales experience, being trained in sales methods, encouraging physicians to prescribe their products, and receiving commission-based compensation tied to sales, their job cannot “in some sense” be called selling. This view ignores the reality of the nature of the work of detailers, as it has been carried out for decades. Plaintiffs’ argument also fails to account for the fact that the relevant “purchasers” in the pharmaceutical industry, and the appropriate foci of our inquiry, are not the end-users of the drug but, rather, the prescribing physicians whom they importune frеquently.
See, e.g., Baum v. AstraZeneca LP,
When a PSR visits a doctor, he or she attempts to obtain the absolute maximum commitment from his or her “buyer” — a non-binding commitment from the physician to prescribe the PSR’s assigned product when medically appropriate. In most industries, there are no firm legal barriers that prohibit the
actual physical
exchange of the goods offered for sale. Because such barriers do exist in this industry, the fact that commitments are non-binding is irrelevant; the record reveals that binding or non-binding, a physician’s commitment to a PSR is nevertheless a meaningful exchange because pharmaceutical manufacturers value these commitments enough to reward a PSR with increased commissions when a physician increases his or her use of a drug in the PSR’s bag.
See, e.g., Baum,
Moreover, the industry has agreed upon and abides by the PhRMA Code to regu
*397
late the marketing of medicine to healthcare professionals — just as any consumer-products maker might develop rules to limit the express warranties its sales force might offer to a customer. Such industry practice and prevailing customs should inform our disposition.
Cf. Reiseck v. Universal Commc’ns of Miami, Inc.,
Under Plaintiffs’ view, PSRs are not salespeople, despite the fact that more than 90,000 pharmaceutical representatives make daily calls on physicians for the purpose of driving greater sales.
See IMS Health,
To further explain our common sense understanding of why PSRs make sales, we find the paradigm “outside salesman” case
Jewel Tea Co. v. William
s—instructive.
Jewel Tea
involved a FLSA overtime-wage suit brought by three employees of a tea, coffee, and sundry goods manufacturer and distributor.
The Jewel Tea plaintiffs brought suit to collect unpaid overtime, asserting they did not fall within the “outside sales” exemption, primarily employing the argument that they were “delivery men.” Id. at 208. In its decision denying plaintiffs overtime pay, the Tenth Circuit penned the oft- *398 quoted justification for the outside sales exemption:
The reasons for excluding an outside salesman are fairly apparent. Such salesman, to a great extent, works individually. There are no restrictions respecting the time he shall work and he can earn as much or as little, within the range of his ability, as his ambition dictates. In lieu of overtime, he ordinarily receives commissions as extra compensation. He works away from his employer’s place of business, is not subject to the personal supervision of his employer, and his employer has no way of knowing the number of hours he works per day. To apply hourly standards primarily devised for an employee on a fixed hourly wage is incompatible with the individual character of the work of an outside salesman.
Id. at 207-08.
Reviewing the undisputed facts here, we consider the rationale for applying the outside sales exemption to PSRs to be as “apparent” as it was in
Jewel Tea.
Of course, this case does not involve door-to-door consumer-product sales. But, the FLSA is not an industry-specific statute. As the Second Circuit recognized in
Reiseck,
not all FLSA claims will involve the “archetypal businesses envisaged by the FLSA,”
The primary duty of a PSR is not promoting Glaxo’s products in general or schooling physicians in drug development. These are but preliminary steps toward the end goal of causing a particular doctor to commit to prescribing more of the particular drugs in the PSR’s drug bag. Without this commitment and the concomitant increase in prescriptions, or drug volume, or market share — i.e. without more sales — the PSR would not receive his or her commission salary and could soon find himself or herself unemployed. While not all steps in the PSR’s daily activities constitute “selling,” that fact does not render the totality of those activities non-exempt promotion; “work performed incidental to and in conjunction with the employee’s own outside sales or solicitations ... shall be regarded as exempt outside sales work ... [and] ... other work that furthers the employee’s sales efforts also shall be regarded as exempt work.” 29 C.F.R. § 541.500(b).
The Secretary’s distinction between selling and promoting is only meaningful if the employee does not engage in
any
activities that constitute “selling” under the Act. This much is seen from the plain language of the regulations, which gives the example of promotional work as “a company representative who visits chain stores, arranges the merchandise on shelves, replenishes stock by replacing old with new merchandise, sets up displays and consults with the store manager when inventory runs low, but
does not obtain a commitment for additional purchases.”
29 C.F.R. § 541.503(c) (emphasis added). PSRs do far more than collect general
*399
data or provide consultations; indeed they ask for, and sometimes obtain, a commitment by the doctor to prescribe Glaxo drugs, and whether the doctor keeps that commitment is verified and traced using aggregated pharmacy data Glaxo collects.
See IMS Health,
In Reiseck, the Second Circuit highlighted an important distinction between selling and promoting, noting that the latter is directed to the public at large, as opposed to a particular client:
Consider a clothing store. The individual who assists customers in finding their size of clothing or who completes the transaction at the cash register is a salesperson under the FLSA, while the individual who designs advertisements for the store or decides when to reduce prices to attract customers is an administrative employee for the purposes of the FLSA.
Reiseck,
We also find that the Secretary’s acquiescence in the sales practices of the drug industry for over seventy years further buttresses our decision. The outsidе sales exemption has existed since 1938. Detail men have practiced their craft over that same period. Generally, they have been considered salespeople. 9 Until the Secretary’s appearance in Novartis, the DOL did not challenge the conventional wisdom that detailing is the functional equivalent of selling pharmaceutical products. Indeed, the DOL has recognized as much in its Dictionary of Occupation Titles, which provides the following definition for pharmaceutical detailers:
Promotes use of and sells ethical drugs and other pharmaceutical products to physicians, [dentists], hospitals, and retail and wholesale drug establishments, *400 utilizing knowledge of medical practices, drugs, and medicines: Calls on customers, informs customer of new drugs, and explains characteristics and clinical studies conducted with drug. Discusses dosage, use, and effect of new drugs and medicinal preparations. Gives samples of new drugs to customer. Promotes and sells other drugs and medicines manufactured by company. May sell and take orders for pharmaceutical supply items from persons contactеd.
D.O.L. Dictionary of Occupational Titles § 262.157-010 (4th ed. 1991) (emphases added). Likewise, although it emerged in a different context, we find Judge Posner’s observation in
Yi v. Sterling Collision Centers, Inc.,
In view of many similarities between PSRs and salespeople in other fields, pharmaceutical industry norms, and the acquiescence of the Secretary over the last seventy-plus years, we cannot accord even minimal
Skidmore
deference to the position expressed in the
amicus
brief. Under
Skidmore,
“[t]he fair measure of deference to an agency administering its own statute has been understood to vary with circumstances, and courts have looked to the degree of the agency’s care, its consistency, formality, and relative expertness, and to the persuasiveness of the agency’s position.”
United States v. Mead Corp.,
Telephones, television, shopping malls, the Internet and general societal progress have largely relegated the prоfessional pitchman embodied in Jewel Tea to the history books. But selling continues, and, as in prior eras, a salesperson learns the nuances of a product and those of his or her potential clientele, tailors a scripted message based on intuition about the customer, asks for the customer to consider her need for the product, and then receives a commission when the customer’s positive impression ultimately results in a purchase.
For the past seventy-plus years, selling in the pharmaceutical industry has followed this process. PSRs are driven by their own ambition and rewarded with commissions when their efforts generate new sales. They receive their commissions in lieu of overtime and enjoy a *401 largely autonomous work-life outside of an office. The pharmaceutical industry’s representatives — detail men and women— share many more similarities than differences with their colleagues in other sales fields, and we hold that they are exempt from the FLSA overtime-pay requirement.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s summary judgment for Defendant-Appellee SmithKline Beecham Corporation.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Cf. Francis B. Palumbo & C. Daniel Mullins, The Development of Direct-to-Consumer Prescription Drug Advertising Regulation, 57 Food & Drug L.J. 423, 424-27 (2002).
. See Palumbo & Mullins, supra, at 425 & n. 17.
. See Palumbo & Mullins, supra, at 426.
. In 2004, Christopher received $72,576 gross pay, of which $29,993 was incentive compensation (41% of gross); in 2005, he received $67,243, of which $21,231 was incentive (32% of gross); and in 2006, he received $77,552, of which $28,249 was incentive (37% of gross).
In 2004, Buchanan received $70,740 gross pay, of which $19,232 was incentive compensation (27% of gross); in 2005, he received $74,358, of which $27,743 was incentive (32% of gross); in 2006, he received $84,932, of which $32,519 was incentive (38% of gross); and in 2007, he received $75,776, of which $19,957 was incentive (26% of gross).
.
See
Thomas L. Hafemeister, et ano.,
Beware Those Bearing Gifts: Physician's Fiduciary Duty to Avoid Pharmaceutical Marketing,
57 U. Kan. L.Rev. 491, 493-94 (2009) (“Detailing is the term used to denote the practice of pharmaceutical representatives visiting the offices of physicians or otherwise contacting physicians to promote their company's drugs and/or medical devices.”). The pharmaceutical-representative/detailist position has deep roots in the industry, dating back until at least the 1930s.
See
Lars Noah,
Death of a Salesman: To What Extent Can the FDA Regulate the Promotional Statements of Pharmaceutical Sales Representatives,
47 Food & Drug L.J. 309, 311 (1992) ("During the 1930s, ... [mjarketing efforts by salesmen therefore focused almost exclusively on retail pharmacies.”). Indeed, we trace the first mention of detail men in the federal case reports to 1940.
See United States v. Fifty-Nine Tubes, More or Less, of Lutein Tablets,
.
See e.g., IMS Health, Inc. v. Mills,
. As explained infra, we likewise find unpersuasive the Secretary's interpretation of the FLSA provisions, thus vitiating any Skidmore deference. See Section III.
. See Steven I. Locke, The Fair Labor Standards Acts Exemptions and the Pharmaceuticals Industry: Are Sales Representatives Entitled to Overtime?, 13 Barry L.Rev. 1, 25 (2009) ("Applying these [common-usage] definitions, it is logical to conclude that the term 'other disposition,’ as it is used to define a 'sale' under the Act, includes a physician’s decision to write a prescription for a particular medication.”).
.
See N. Cal. Pharm.,
