How do you coach reps to set their own development goals?
Direct Answer
You coach reps to set their own development goals by refusing to hand them the goals at all — instead you run a structured GROW conversation that pulls the goal out of the rep, then make them write it down as their own plan. The core move: shift from "here's what you need to work on" to "what's the one skill that would change your year, and how will you know you've got it?" Use SMART goals so the target is measurable, capture it in a rep-owned Individual Development Plan (IDP), and tie at least one goal to a skill — not just quota — so growth outlasts any single quarter.
Ownership is the whole point: a goal the manager assigns gets compliance; a goal the rep authors gets effort. This matters more in 2027, when AI handles more of the rote selling and the durable edge is a rep who can self-direct their own improvement.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
When a rep can't or won't set their own development goals, it's almost never laziness. Diagnose the real cause before you push a plan, because each cause needs a different coaching move.
- Skill gap (they don't know how): The rep has never been taught to set a goal that isn't a quota number. They conflate "develop myself" with "hit my number," so every goal they offer is an outcome, not a behavior.
- Will gap (they don't see why): The rep is coasting, burned out, or doesn't believe development changes their comp or career. They'll nod and produce nothing.
- Knowledge gap (they can't self-assess): The rep genuinely doesn't know where they're weak. Without call data or a scorecard, they're guessing in the dark.
- System gap (the environment punishes it): Your culture rewards only closed-won, 1:1s are deal-status interrogations, or there's no time carved out. The rep would set goals if the system made room for it.
The diagnosis changes everything. A knowledge gap rep needs the mirror (their own Gong call scores) before any goal conversation. A will gap rep needs the goal connected to something they actually want. Coaching all four the same way is the fastest path to a plan nobody follows.
The Coaching Conversation
Run this in a dedicated 1:1 — not tacked onto a deal review. Tell the rep ahead of time: "Next week's 1:1 is about you, not your deals. Come thinking about where you want to be a year from now." Then use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will). Your job is to ask and shut up; the rep does 70% of the talking.
Goal — pull it out, don't push it in. Open with ownership language:
"Forget the number for a second. If you could be noticeably better at one part of selling by the end of this quarter, what would actually change your year?"
If they default to quota ("I want to hit 120%"), redirect to the behavior underneath it:
"Love the ambition. Quota's the scoreboard, not the swing. What skill, if you nailed it, would make 120% almost automatic? Discovery? Multithreading? Negotiation?"
Reality — make them self-assess with evidence. This is where you bring the mirror:
"Let's look at your last five calls in Gong. Where do you lose control of the conversation? What does the data say you're avoiding?"
"On a scale of one to ten, where are you on running multithreaded discovery? What would a ten look like — and what's the gap?"
Options — let them generate the path. Resist the urge to prescribe:
"What are two or three ways you could close that gap? Role-play, shadowing Maria's calls, a discovery framework like MEDDIC, reading the SPIN section?"
"Which of those would you actually do, realistically, given your week?"
Will — lock in commitment as a written, rep-owned plan. This is the step most managers skip:
"Okay — say it back to me as a SMART goal. Specific, measurable, by when?"
A good answer sounds like: *"By the end of the quarter, I'll book a second stakeholder on 60% of new opps, up from 30% now, and I'll review one discovery call a week in Gong against the scorecard."* Then:
"Write that in your IDP today and send it to me. It's your plan — I'm just here to hold the standard. What's the first rep you'll run this week?"
Notice every prompt hands the pen to the rep. You frame, they author. That's the difference between a development goal and a directive.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Goals die without a cadence. Make development a standing rhythm, not an annual review event. A simple, durable structure:
- Week 1 (set): Run the GROW conversation. Rep writes the IDP with one skill goal and one outcome goal, both SMART.
- Weeks 2–4 (practice): One drill or call review per week tied to the goal. Five-minute check at the top of each 1:1: "What did you try, what happened?"
- Day 30 (measure): Look at the leading indicator together. Adjust the goal if reality shifted.
- Day 60 (reinforce): Rep self-grades against the scorecard; you confirm or challenge.
- Day 90 (close the loop): Did the behavior change stick? Bank the win publicly, set the next goal. The rep proposes it first.
The loop is the product. A rep who has gone around it twice starts arriving at the 1:1 with their own next goal already drafted — which is exactly the self-direction you were coaching toward.
Drills & Role-Play
Goal-setting is itself a skill you can drill. Specific reps that build the muscle:
- The "swing, not scoreboard" sort: Hand the rep ten sticky notes — five outcomes (hit quota, close the Acme deal) and five behaviors (improve objection handling, multithread earlier). Make them sort and explain which they can actually control. This breaks the quota-equals-goal reflex.
- Self-scored call review: Rep grades their own Gong or Chorus call against a discovery scorecard before you say a word. Then you compare scores. Gaps in self-assessment reveal the knowledge gap fast.
- Goal-writing role-play: You play the rep deflecting to quota; the rep plays the manager pulling out a real skill goal. Reversing roles teaches them what a good development goal sounds like.
- The "future-self" interview: Rep writes a one-paragraph description of the seller they want to be in 12 months, then reverse-engineers this quarter's goal from it. Winning by Design and RAIN Group both use versions of this backward-planning drill.
- Peer IDP swap: Two reps share their IDPs and pressure-test each other's goals for SMART-ness. Peer accountability outperforms manager nagging.
What to Measure
Measure the leading indicators that prove the coaching is changing behavior — not just the lagging quota number that proves nothing about cause.
- Goal authorship rate: What percent of the goal language came from the rep vs. You? If you're writing the goals, you don't have ownership yet.
- IDP completion and currency: Does every rep have a current IDP with a real review date? Stale plans signal a dead cadence.
- Behavior-change indicators: The specific metric inside the goal — multithread rate, discovery-call score, talk-to-listen ratio in Gong, follow-up speed. Track the behavior, not the bonus.
- Self-assessment accuracy: Does the rep's self-score match yours over time? Converging scores mean they've learned to see their own gaps — the foundation of self-directed goals.
- Goal-to-action latency: How fast does a written goal turn into a logged rep or call review? Long latency is a will or system problem surfacing.
- Lagging confirmation (later): Ramp time, win rate, quota attainment — used to validate the leading indicators worked, never as the only signal.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Assigning the goal and calling it coaching. A goal you hand down gets compliance, not ownership. If you said it first, it's your goal.
- Letting quota be the only goal. Quota is an outcome of skills. A development goal must name a behavior the rep controls.
- Skipping the Reality step. Without call data or a scorecard, the rep guesses at their weakness and sets the wrong goal. Bring the mirror.
- No follow-through. Setting a goal in January and revisiting it in December guarantees failure. The cadence is the coaching.
- Rescuing instead of developing. Jumping in to fix the rep's deal teaches dependence. Coach the skill so they fix the next one alone.
- Coaching everyone identically. Your top rep needs a stretch goal; your struggling rep needs a foundational one. And when the real issue is a wrong-fit hire or a comp problem, more goal-setting won't fix it — that's a different conversation, sometimes a PIP, not coaching.
FAQ
How is a development goal different from a quota target? A quota target is an outcome the rep only partly controls — it depends on territory, market, and luck. A development goal names a specific skill or behavior the rep fully controls, like "increase multithread rate" or "raise discovery-call scores in Gong." You coach to the behavior; the quota follows.
What if the rep can't think of any goal beyond hitting their number? That's a knowledge gap, not stubbornness. Show them their own data first — five recent calls, their pipeline conversion by stage — and ask what the data says they're avoiding. Reps almost always name a real gap once they see the mirror.
Should I let a rep set an "easy" goal? Briefly, yes — early wins build belief that development is worth the effort. But pair the easy goal with the SMART test so it stays measurable, and at the 30-day check, stretch it. Ownership first, ambition second.
How many development goals should a rep have at once? One skill goal and one outcome goal. More than two splits focus and nothing changes. The IDP can hold a backlog, but only two are active in any cycle.
What if the rep sets goals but never acts on them? Re-diagnose. If they believe it doesn't affect comp or career, you have a will gap — connect the goal to a stake they care about. If they have no time, you have a system gap — protect coaching time and fix the cadence. Don't just nag harder.
Does AI change how we coach goal-setting in 2027? Yes. AI call-coaching tools like Gong and Chorus now auto-surface a rep's behavior patterns, so the Reality step is faster and more honest. That frees the manager to spend the 1:1 on the human part — pulling the goal out of the rep and holding the standard.
Bottom Line
The one move that matters: stop assigning development goals and start extracting them. Run a GROW conversation, bring the rep's own data to the Reality step, make them write a SMART goal into a rep-owned IDP, and put a 30/60/90 cadence around it. A goal the rep authors is a goal the rep works.
Sources
- The GROW Model of Coaching (Performance Consultants)
- How to Coach Salespeople — Gong Labs Research
- The Sales Manager's Guide to Coaching (RAIN Group)
- How the Best Sales Leaders Coach (Harvard Business Review)
- Setting SMART Goals (MindTools)
- Individual Development Plans for Sales Teams (Sales Hacker)
- The Science of Sales Coaching (CSO Insights / Korn Ferry)
- Coaching Frameworks for Revenue Teams (Winning by Design)
*Sales coaching for rep development goals — how to coach reps to set their own development goals, sales manager coaching guide, rep-owned IDP framework, GROW model goal-setting, and a development-goal coaching playbook for 2027.*
