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How do you coach a rep who keeps missing quota?

Kory White, Chief Revenue OfficerCurated by Chief Revenue Officer Kory White · CRO Syndicate · 📄 1-Page Resume
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Direct Answer

You coach a rep who keeps missing quota by first diagnosing whether the root cause is a skill gap, a will gap, a knowledge gap, or a system gap — and then applying a targeted intervention. The core coaching move is to shift from "telling them what to do" to using the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) in a structured 1:1 to force the rep to own the diagnosis and the solution.

If you skip the diagnosis, you will waste cycles on the wrong fix — for example, drilling discovery when the real problem is a lack of pipeline activity.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach

Most managers jump straight to "more training" or "more calls" when a rep misses quota. That is a mistake. You must first isolate the specific failure pattern by looking at the data across three dimensions: activity data (calls, emails, meetings booked), pipeline data (deal velocity, stage conversion, win rate), and call recording data (conversation quality, objection handling, discovery depth).

The most common root causes fall into four buckets:

Use this decision tree to diagnose the gap:

flowchart TD A[Rep missed quota] --> B{Check activity data} B -->|Below target| C{Check call recordings} B -->|At or above target| D{Check pipeline data} C -->|Weak execution| E[Skill gap] C -->|Good execution| F[Will gap - low volume] D -->|Low conversion| G{Check conversation quality} D -->|Good conversion| H{Check lead quality / territory} G -->|Weak discovery or objection handling| I[Skill gap - specific stage] G -->|Strong conversations| J[Knowledge gap - product / competitor] H -->|Bad leads| K[System gap - routing / scoring] H -->|Good leads| L[Will gap - follow-through]

Key insight: A rep who makes 150 calls but books only 2 meetings has a call quality problem (skill or knowledge). A rep who makes 40 calls and books 1 meeting has a volume problem (will or system). Never treat them the same.

The Coaching Conversation — GROW Model Scripts

Once you have a hypothesis, run a structured 1:1 using the GROW model. Do not lecture. Ask questions that force the rep to self-diagnose. Here are verbatim scripts for each stage:

Goal

Manager: "Let's start with the end in mind. What is your quota this quarter, and what number are you personally committed to hitting by the end of this month? Not the company number — your number."

Rep: "I'm supposed to hit $150k, but I'm at $40k with two weeks left."

Manager: "Okay. If we could wave a magic wand, what would you want to be at by the end of this month? Be realistic."

Rep: "$80k would feel like a win."

Manager: "Great. So our goal for this conversation is to build a plan to close $40k in the next two weeks. Agreed?"

Reality

Manager: "Take me through your current pipeline. Don't look at Salesforce — tell me from memory who your top five open deals are, what stage they're in, and what the next step is."

Rep: "Um... I have a deal with Acme that's in negotiation, but I haven't heard back in a week. And there's Beta Corp, but they said they're not buying until Q3."

Manager: "I hear you. Let's look at your activity for the last week. How many discovery calls did you make? How many follow-ups?"

Rep: "I made about 15 calls and sent 20 emails."

Manager: "The plan calls for 40 calls and 60 emails. What's getting in the way?"

Rep: "I've been spending a lot of time on admin work — updating Salesforce, building proposals for deals that aren't ready."

Manager: "I see. So the reality is that your activity is half of target, and your pipeline is thin. Is that fair?"

Options

Manager: "Let's brainstorm three things you could do differently this week to get to 40 calls and start moving those stalled deals. No judgment — just options."

Rep: "I could block two hours every morning for outbound only. I could also send a specific email to the Acme contact asking for a decision. And I could ask my champion at Beta Corp if there's any budget they can free up before Q3."

Manager: "Those are all solid. Which one do you think would have the biggest impact?"

Rep: "The outbound block. If I don't have new meetings, nothing else matters."

Will

Manager: "On a scale of 1 to 10, how committed are you to blocking two hours every morning for outbound this week?"

Rep: "Seven."

Manager: "What would it take to get that to a nine?"

Rep: "If you check in with me at 10 AM each day and ask how many calls I've made."

Manager: "Done. I'll send you a Slack reminder. And what's the first action you'll take when you leave this meeting?"

Rep: "I'll block the time in my calendar right now."

Manager: "Perfect. Let's meet again Friday at 3 PM to review the numbers."

The Coaching Plan & Cadence

Coaching is not a single conversation. It is a repeating cycle of observe, diagnose, coach, practice, measure, and repeat. Here is the cadence:

flowchart LR A[Observe: Review activity data + call recordings] --> B[Diagnose: Skill vs Will vs Knowledge vs System] B --> C[Coach: GROW 1:1 + set specific action] C --> D[Practice: Role-play or drill the skill gap] D --> E[Measure: Track activity + pipeline + conversion] E -->|Gap closed?| F[Repeat with new focus] E -->|Gap persists?| A

Weekly cadence for a struggling rep:

Tools to use: Gong or Chorus for call recording review. Salesforce or HubSpot for pipeline and activity dashboards. Outreach or Salesloft for cadence compliance.

Drills & Role-Play

Do not just talk about the gap — drill it. Here are three high-impact drills:

Drill 1: The 5-Question Discovery Drill (Skill Gap)

Setup: You play the buyer. The rep must ask at least 5 open-ended discovery questions before pitching. Script: "You have 5 minutes.

Ask me questions to understand my pain. I will not let you pitch until you ask at least 5 questions. Go." What to look for: Are they asking "What's your biggest challenge?" or are they asking "Tell me about a time when that challenge cost you money?"

Drill 2: The Objection Reframe (Knowledge Gap)

Setup: You give a common objection (e.g., "We're happy with our current vendor"). Script: "Your job is to reframe that objection using the Challenger model: teach, tailor, take control. Say it back to me in your own words." What to look for: Do they immediately push back, or do they validate and then pivot with a commercial insight?

Drill 3: The Pipeline Review Drill (Will Gap)

Setup: The rep brings their pipeline report. Script: "Pick one deal that has been stuck for more than 30 days. What is the one action you can take this week to either move it forward or kill it? If you can't name an action, kill it now." What to look for: Do they avoid the hard conversation, or do they commit to a specific action?

What to Measure

Stop measuring only quota attainment. Measure leading indicators that predict quota. For a struggling rep, track these weekly:

Use a coaching scorecard in Salesforce or a simple spreadsheet. Every week, the rep rates themselves on a 1-5 scale for each metric, and you compare your rating. The gap between your scores is the coaching opportunity.

Common Mistakes Managers Make

FAQ

How long should I coach a rep before deciding to PIP them? You should see measurable improvement in leading indicators (activity, conversion, call quality) within 4 to 6 weeks of consistent weekly coaching. If after 6 weeks the rep shows no improvement in any metric, escalate to a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP).

If the rep improves but still misses quota, extend coaching for another quarter.

What if the rep is talented but just lazy? A will gap is the hardest to fix. Use the GROW model to surface their personal motivation. If they cannot commit to a 9 or 10 on the Will scale for two consecutive weeks, you have a fit problem, not a coaching problem. Document it and move to PIP.

Should I listen to every call of a struggling rep? No. Listen to 2–3 calls per week — one good, one bad, one average. Use Gong or Chorus to auto-flag calls with specific keywords (e.g., "price," "competitor," "budget"). Focus your listening on the stage where they fail most often (e.g., discovery or closing).

How do I coach a rep who is in denial about their performance? Use data, not opinion. Pull a report showing their activity vs. Target and their conversion rate vs.

Team average. Ask: "What do you see in this data that surprises you?" If they still deny, ask: "What would it take for you to believe this is a problem?" If they cannot answer, you have a culture or hiring issue.

What if the rep's territory is objectively bad? That is a system gap. Before coaching the rep, audit the territory: lead volume, lead quality, account size, and competitor presence. If the territory is 30% smaller than the average, adjust the quota. If the lead quality is poor, fix the demand gen process. Coaching cannot fix a broken territory.

How do I coach a remote or hybrid rep in 2027? Use async coaching: record your feedback as a Loom video attached to their call recording. Use Slack for daily check-ins. Hold the weekly 1:1 on video. Use a tool like Clari to track leading indicators in real time. The cadence is the same, but the medium shifts to video and async.

Bottom Line

You coach a rep who keeps missing quota by diagnosing the root cause (skill, will, knowledge, or system), applying the GROW model in structured 1:1s, and running a weekly cadence of observe, coach, practice, and measure. If you skip the diagnosis, you will waste time on the wrong fix.

If you skip the accountability, the rep will not change. The goal is not to fix the rep in one conversation — it is to build a repeatable coaching system that turns data into action.

Sources

*Sales coaching for missing quota — how to coach a rep who misses quota, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*

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