How do you coach reps to compete in a competitive deal?
Direct Answer
To coach a rep to compete in a competitive deal, stop coaching the deal and start coaching the competitive instinct: teach the rep to find out who else is in the deal, map the buyer's decision criteria, and then reframe those criteria around where your product is provably stronger.
The core move is trap-setting questions — questions whose answers point to your differentiation and quietly expose the competitor's weakness — paired with a sharp battlecard the rep has actually rehearsed out loud. As the manager, your job in 2027 is to pull the call recording (Gong or Chorus), confirm whether the rep even knows who they're up against, and run a role-play where they handle the exact objection the incumbent will plant.
Coach the skill of differentiation and reframing, not just the next email. Reps who win competitive deals are not louder; they are better at shaping the buyer's criteria before the competitor does.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
When a rep is losing competitive deals, the instinct is to jump in and save the opportunity. Resist that. Most competitive losses trace back to one of four root causes, and the coaching move is completely different for each. Diagnose skill vs. Will vs. Knowledge vs. System before you say a word.
- Skill gap: The rep knows the competitor exists but cannot reframe value. They feature-dump, match the competitor point-for-point, and let the buyer score a spreadsheet. This is the most coachable cause.
- Knowledge gap: The rep does not know the competitor's pricing, weaknesses, or land-and-expand motion. They have never read the battlecard or it does not exist. Fixable fast with enablement.
- Will gap: The rep avoids the competitive conversation because conflict is uncomfortable, so they never ask "who else are you looking at?" This is a confidence and mindset problem.
- System gap: The rep keeps drawing deals where the incumbent has a structural lock-in (existing contract, embedded integration, executive sponsor). No amount of coaching fixes a deal that was unwinnable at entry — that is a qualification and territory problem.
Run this tree before every competitive deal review. If you skip it, you will coach a knowledge problem with a pep talk, or coach a system problem with a role-play, and the deal still dies.
The Coaching Conversation
Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) so the rep owns the plan instead of taking dictation from you. The scripts below are verbatim — copy them into your next 1:1. Note that you are asking, not telling; a rep who articulates the play remembers it on the call.
Goal. Anchor on the outcome, not the activity.
"Walk me through this deal. If we win it, what was the one reason the buyer chose us over the other option? Say it the way they'd say it to their boss."
If the rep cannot answer that in one sentence, you have found the problem: they have no differentiation thesis.
Reality. Get the competitive picture on the table.
"Who else are they evaluating, and where are they in those conversations? What's the incumbent's strongest argument against us right now — the thing that, if the buyer believes it, we lose?"
Then the trap-setting setup:
"What question could you ask the buyer that would make them realize the competitor can't do something they actually need? Give me three."
This is where you teach trap-setting questions. A trap-setting question sounds like genuine discovery but is designed so the honest answer surfaces a gap only you fill. Example for a rep selling a platform against a point tool: *"When you've used single-purpose tools before, how much engineering time went into stitching them into your stack?"* The buyer's own answer builds the case against the competitor.
Options. Make the rep generate the plays.
"Given what the incumbent does well, how do you change the criteria the buyer is using to decide? What are the two things we do that they literally cannot match, and how do you get those onto the buyer's scorecard?"
Will. Lock the commitment and the date.
"What are you going to do before our next 1:1, and when exactly is the next buyer touch where you'll test it? I'll listen to the recording afterward."
End every competitive coaching conversation with the rep restating the differentiation thesis and the trap-setting questions out loud. If they can't say it to you, they can't say it to a CFO.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Competitive skill is built on a loop, not a single heroic deal review. Run this weekly, and use a 30/60/90 arc for a rep who is consistently weak in competitive situations.
- Days 1–30: Knowledge. Rep masters the top three competitor battlecards, can recite each competitor's two biggest weaknesses, and tags every competitive deal in Salesforce so you can track win rate by competitor.
- Days 31–60: Skill. Weekly call reviews in Gong focused only on competitive moments; one role-play per week on the hardest objection; rep writes and uses three trap-setting questions per competitive deal.
- Days 61–90: Independence. Rep leads their own competitive deal reviews, brings the battlecard updates, and coaches a peer. You shift from driving to spot-checking.
The loop closes when battlecard updates flow back from real deals. Reps who feed the battlecard learn faster because they are now teachers, not students.
Drills & Role-Play
Skill is built by reps practicing on you, not on the buyer. Run these every week.
- The 90-second differentiation drill. Rep has 90 seconds to explain why a buyer picks them over the named competitor — no slides. Score it against the battlecard. Repeat until it is crisp and customer-language, not feature jargon.
- Objection volleyball. You play the buyer parroting the competitor's strongest line ("Vendor X is cheaper and we already use them"). Rep responds. You escalate. Run five volleys. This is where will gaps surface — a rep who deflects instead of reframing needs reps, literally.
- Trap-setting question workshop. Each rep brings three trap-setting questions for a live deal. The team pressure-tests them: does the honest answer actually favor us? Discard the ones that don't.
- Call review scorecard. Pull a recorded competitive call in Chorus or Gong and score it on four behaviors: identified the competitor, asked at least one trap-setting question, reframed at least one buyer criterion, and named our differentiation in the buyer's words. Four out of four is the bar.
What to Measure
Quota is a lagging indicator and useless for in-flight coaching. Track leading indicators that prove the behavior is changing:
- Competitive win rate by competitor (in Salesforce) — the scoreboard that matters.
- Competitor identified before stage 3 — are reps even finding out who they're up against early enough to act?
- Trap-setting questions asked per competitive call (audited via Gong) — direct evidence of the skill in use.
- Criteria-reframe rate — how often the buyer's stated decision criteria shift in our favor between first and last call.
- Time-to-differentiation — how early in the cycle the rep establishes the unique value.
If competitive win rate is flat but trap-setting frequency is climbing, you are on the right track; behavior changes before the number does.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. You save this one deal by getting on the call yourself, and the rep learns nothing for the next one. Coach the rep so the next ten are better.
- Rescuing the rep. Telling them exactly what to say feels efficient and creates dependence. Make them generate the play with GROW questions.
- Trashing the competitor. Teaching reps to badmouth the competition makes them look insecure. Coach reframing and trap-setting, never mudslinging.
- No follow-through. A great deal review with no recording pulled afterward is theater. Close the loop or skip the session.
- Coaching everyone the same. A knowledge gap and a will gap need opposite interventions. Diagnose first.
- Ignoring the system gap. Pushing harder on an unwinnable, incumbent-locked deal burns the rep's confidence. Sometimes the honest coaching is "qualify out and find a better fight."
FAQ
How do I coach a rep when I don't know the competitor well myself? Build the battlecard together as the coaching exercise. Have the rep research the competitor's pricing, two weaknesses, and typical objections, then present it back to you. You learn it with them, and the rep owns the knowledge instead of waiting for enablement to hand it down.
What's the single highest-leverage competitive skill to coach first? Trap-setting questions. They convert passive feature comparison into active criteria-shaping, and the buyer does the persuading. A rep who asks three good trap-setting questions per deal will out-compete a rep with a better demo.
How do I coach a rep who freezes when the buyer says "we're also looking at Competitor X"? This is usually a will gap. Run objection volleyball role-plays until the response is automatic. Give them one calm verbatim line — *"That's a solid option; what matters most in how you decide between us?"* — so they have something to say while they think.
Should reps ever walk away from a competitive deal? Yes. When the diagnosis lands on a system gap — entrenched incumbent, locked contract, hostile champion — the coaching move is to qualify out using MEDDICC and redeploy the rep's time. Coaching cannot fix a deal that was unwinnable at entry.
How often should I review competitive deals with a rep? Weekly during a 30/60/90 ramp, then biweekly once the behaviors are independent. Always tie the review to a real call recording so you are coaching observed behavior, not the rep's memory of the call.
How do I keep battlecards from going stale? Make updating them part of the cadence. Every competitive deal — win or loss — feeds one fact back into the battlecard. Reps who contribute trust the card and actually use it.
Bottom Line
Coaching competitive deals is coaching a repeatable skill, not rescuing one opportunity. Diagnose whether you are facing a skill, will, knowledge, or system gap; then use GROW to make the rep own a plan built on trap-setting questions, a rehearsed battlecard, and a clear differentiation reframe.
Pull the recording, run the role-play, measure the leading indicators — and let the behavior change before the number does.
Sources
- Gong Labs: What Wins Competitive Deals
- HBR: The New Sales Imperative
- RAIN Group: Sales Coaching Research and Tips
- Challenger: Reframe and Teach for Differentiation
- Sandler: Coaching Salespeople to Win
- Winning by Design: Sales Coaching Frameworks
- Salesforce Blog: Sales Coaching Best Practices
- MEDDICC: Qualifying and Competing in Complex Deals
*Sales coaching for competitive deals — how to coach reps to compete in a competitive deal, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, competitive deal review, trap-setting questions and battlecards, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
