Foot in the door

Origin of: Foot in the door

Foot in the door

To have a foot in the door means that one has an introduction or a beginning that will lead on to greater things. The expression is American in origin and dates in this figurative sense from the late 19th/early 20th century. It no doubt derives from pushy door-to-door salesmen who would literally put a foot in a prospective customer’s door to prevent it from closing.