How do you coach a sales rep in a slump?
Direct Answer
Coach a rep in a slump by first diagnosing the root cause—skill, will, knowledge, or system—using a structured decision tree, then applying a targeted intervention based on the GROW model. The core coaching move is to shift from blame to curiosity: instead of asking "Why aren't you hitting quota?", ask "What's blocking you?" and co-create a 30-day plan with specific practice, measurement, and accountability.
A slump is not a character flaw; it's a signal that something in the rep's approach, environment, or mindset has broken. Your job as a manager is to fix the system, not the person.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Reps fall into slumps for four primary reasons, and mixing them up is the most common coaching mistake. If you treat a will issue (low motivation) with a skill drill (more role-play), you'll frustrate both of you. The diagnostic decision tree below helps you isolate the cause in a 15-minute conversation.
Key diagnostic questions to ask in your 1:1:
- "Show me your last 10 calls in Gong/Chorus. What pattern do you see?" (skill vs. Knowledge)
- "Rate your energy this month from 1-10. What would make it a 9?" (will)
- "Walk me through your last five lost deals. Was it price, timing, or competition?" (knowledge)
- "How many leads did you get this week? How many were qualified?" (system)
A 2027 reality: with AI call-coaching tools (Gong, Chorus) and hybrid teams, you can now spot slumps earlier by tracking talk-to-listen ratios, objection handling scores, and meeting booking rates. Use these as leading indicators, not lagging ones.
The Coaching Conversation — GROW Model Scripts
Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) for every slump conversation. Below are verbatim scripts for each quadrant. Never skip the Reality step—most managers jump straight to Options, which feels like a lecture.
Goal (First 5 minutes)
Manager: "Let's define what success looks like in 30 days. Not quota—what's the one behavior change that would make the biggest difference? For example, 'I want to book 4 discovery meetings per week' or 'I want to close 2 deals.' What's yours?"
Rep: "I want to hit 100% of my number this quarter."
Manager: "That's the outcome. I'm asking about the input—the daily behavior that's within your control. What's one thing you can do every day that would move the needle?"
Reality (Next 10 minutes — hardest part)
Manager: "Let's look at the data together. Open your Salesforce pipeline. I see you've had 20 calls this week but only 2 meetings. What's happening in those calls? Be specific—what's the first objection you hear?"
Rep: "They always say 'not interested' in the first 30 seconds."
Manager: "Okay. Let me pull up your last 5 calls in Gong. I'll play the first minute of each. Listen for your opening—what do you hear? (Plays clips) Now, what would you change?"
Options (Next 10 minutes)
Manager: "Based on what we just heard, you have three options:
- Rewrite your opening script to ask a question instead of pitching.
- Practice the new script with me for 15 minutes right now.
- Shadow a top performer on their first 5 calls tomorrow.
Which one feels most impactful? Pick one."
Will (Last 5 minutes — commitment)
Manager: "On a scale of 1-10, how committed are you to doing option 2 (practice the new script) this week?"
Rep: "Maybe a 7."
Manager: "What would make it a 10? What's the blocker?" (Addresses the gap. Then: "I'll hold you accountable. We'll review your next 5 calls on Thursday. If you don't do it, I'll ask you to explain why. Fair?")
Rep: "Fair."
The Coaching Plan & Cadence
A slump requires a structured cadence, not a one-off conversation. The loop below ensures you observe, diagnose, coach, practice, measure, and repeat—every week for 30 days.
Weekly cadence template:
- Monday: Observe 5 call recordings (15 min). Note patterns.
- Tuesday: 30-minute 1:1 using GROW. Focus on one behavior.
- Wednesday: 15-minute role-play drill (see below).
- Thursday: Check-in: "How did the new script work? Send me one recording."
- Friday: Measure: Did the leading indicator move? (e.g., meeting booking rate up from 10% to 15%?)
For 2027 hybrid teams: Use asynchronous coaching. Record a Loom of your feedback on a call recording, then ask the rep to record a practice response. No need to be in the same room.
Drills & Role-Play
Drills must be specific and repeatable. Avoid "let's practice cold calling"—that's too vague. Use these three:
Drill 1: The 30-Second Opening Rewrite (Knowledge/Skill)
Script for manager: "I'll play a prospect's voicemail. You have 30 seconds to write a new opening that asks a question. Go."
Example: Prospect says "I'm not interested." Rep rewrites to: "I get that. Quick question—what's the one thing keeping you up at night about [topic]?" Practice 5 times.
Drill 2: Objection 3-Step (Skill)
Script for manager: "I'll give you an objection. You respond with: 1) Validate, 2) Ask a question, 3) Bridge to value. Let's do 'Your price is too high.'"
Rep: "I hear you. (1) Price is a big factor. (2) What are you comparing it to? (3) Let me show you how we saved [Company X] 20% in the first year."
Drill 3: Discovery Deep Dive (Knowledge)
Script for manager: "You have 5 minutes to ask me (as a buyer) questions. Your goal is to uncover three pains. I'll say 'no' to the first two. Go."
Rep: "What's your biggest challenge with [tool]?" (Buyer: "Nothing.") "What would happen if you didn't solve it?" (Buyer: "Not sure.") "Who else is involved in the decision?" (Buyer: "My CFO.")
Manager: "Good—you got the CFO. But you missed the pain. Try again: 'What's the cost of doing nothing?'"
What to Measure
Stop measuring only lagging indicators (revenue, quota). For a slump, track leading indicators that predict recovery:
| Metric | Target | How to Track |
|---|---|---|
| Meetings booked per week | 4 (up from 2) | Salesforce report |
| Call-to-meeting conversion rate | 15% (up from 8%) | Gong/Chorus |
| Talk-to-listen ratio | 40/60 (down from 70/30) | Gong AI |
| Objection handling score | 80% (up from 50%) | Chorus scorecard |
| Pipeline velocity (days) | 30 days (down from 45) | Clari |
Manager script for weekly review: "Let's look at your leading indicators. Your meeting bookings are up to 3 this week—that's progress. But your talk-to-listen ratio is still 65/35. Let's drill on that tomorrow."
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Waiting too long. A slump doesn't fix itself. If a rep misses quota for 2 months, intervene in week 6, not month 3.
- Assuming it's a will issue. Most slumps are skill or knowledge. Check the data before you label the rep as "lazy."
- Coaching without data. "You need to be better" is useless. Use Gong clips, Salesforce reports, and call scores.
- Focusing on outcomes, not inputs. "Close more deals" is not coaching. "Book 4 meetings this week" is.
- Not practicing. Telling a rep what to do is not coaching. Practicing it in a role-play is.
- Ignoring system issues. If leads are bad or CRM data is wrong, no amount of coaching will fix it. Work with ops.
FAQ
How long should a slump coaching cycle last? 30 days is the standard. If you see no improvement in leading indicators (meetings booked, conversion rates) after 3 weeks, escalate to a performance improvement plan. A slump is a 30-day project, not a 6-month problem.
What if the rep is resistant to coaching? Ask: "On a scale of 1-10, how open are you to trying this new approach?" If they say 5 or below, ask "What would make it an 8?" If they still resist, it's a will issue—move to a performance plan with clear consequences. Never force coaching on someone who doesn't want it.
Should I use AI tools to detect slumps? Yes. In 2027, tools like Gong and Chorus can flag a rep whose talk-to-listen ratio spikes above 70% or whose meeting booking rate drops 20% in a week. Set up alerts so you know before the rep does.
How do I coach a remote/hybrid rep in a slump? Use asynchronous coaching: record a Loom of your feedback on a call recording, then ask the rep to record a practice response. Schedule a 15-minute video check-in every other day. The cadence is the same, just virtual.
What if the slump is caused by personal issues (burnout, health)? Refer the rep to your EAP (Employee Assistance Program) first. Do not try to be a therapist. Your role is to adjust workload and expectations, not to diagnose personal problems.
Say: "I'm concerned about you. Let's take quota off the table for two weeks. Focus on rest.
Then we'll rebuild."
Can a slump be caused by a bad territory or product? Yes. If the rep's pipeline is empty because of poor lead routing or a competitive disadvantage, coaching won't fix it. Work with RevOps to audit the territory. This is a system issue, not a rep issue.
Bottom Line
A slump is a signal, not a sentence. Diagnose the root cause (skill, will, knowledge, or system) using the decision tree, then apply GROW-based coaching with a 30-day cadence of practice and measurement. In 2027, use AI tools to spot slumps early and coach asynchronously for hybrid teams.
The best managers treat slumps as process problems, not personality flaws.
Sources
- Gong Labs: The Science of Coaching Reps in a Slump
- HBR: How to Coach a Struggling Sales Rep
- RAIN Group: Sales Coaching That Works
- Sandler: The GROW Model for Sales Coaching
- Challenger/Gartner: Coaching the Rep in a Slump
- Sales Hacker: 5 Steps to Fix a Sales Slump
- Winning by Design: Diagnosing Sales Rep Performance
- CSO Insights: Sales Coaching Best Practices
*Sales coaching for a rep in a slump — how to coach a struggling sales rep, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
