How do you coach a new SDR through their first 30 days?
Direct Answer
Coach a new SDR through their first 30 days by front-loading structure over autonomy: a written ramp plan with weekly milestones, daily live-call or recorded-call reviews using a simple scorecard, and one focused skill per week instead of "get good at everything at once." The single move that matters most is scheduled, recurring 1:1 call reviews — sit with them (or pull their Gong/Chorus recordings) and coach one specific behavior per session using the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will).
New reps don't fail in week one from lack of effort; they fail in week three from un-corrected bad habits that hardened because nobody listened to their calls. In 2027, with AI call-coaching tools surfacing talk-ratio, objection-handling, and next-step data automatically, your job as the manager is to turn that data into a weekly conversation — not to let the dashboard replace the human read.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
A new SDR who's struggling at day 20 almost never has a single problem. Before you coach, separate the four root causes, because each one has a different fix:
- Knowledge gap — they don't know the product, the ICP, the personas, or the pain. The fix is enablement and certification, not motivation.
- Skill gap — they know what to do but can't yet execute the opener, the discovery question, or the objection turn. The fix is drills and role-play.
- Will / confidence gap — they're avoiding the phone, padding their "research time," or going quiet after rejection. The fix is co-selling, small wins, and a candid 1:1.
- System / territory problem — bad data, a broken sequence in Outreach or Salesloft, a thin list, or a misrouted Salesforce territory. The fix is on you and RevOps, not the rep.
Misdiagnosis is the most expensive mistake. If you motivate a rep who actually has a knowledge gap, you make them confidently wrong. If you "train" a rep who's really sitting on a dead list, you destroy their trust. Listen to three of their calls and read their activity in the CRM before you decide what kind of conversation to have.
The Coaching Conversation
Run your day-15 and day-25 1:1s on the GROW model. It keeps you from lecturing and forces the rep to own the next step. Here are the verbatim questions — copy them into your 1:1 doc.
Goal — set the frame:
- "By the end of your first 30 days, what does 'on track' look like to you?"
- "This week, I want us to get really good at one thing. What feels hardest right now?"
Reality — get honest, no flinching:
- "Walk me through your last cold call. What did you say in the first ten seconds?"
- "When the prospect said 'we already use a competitor,' what did you do — and what do you wish you'd done?"
- "How many connects did you have yesterday, and of those, how many turned into a real conversation?"
Options — make them generate the answers, don't hand them over:
- "What are two different ways you could open that call so it doesn't sound like a script?"
- "If you could only ask one discovery question on the next call, what would it be and why?"
Will — lock the commitment:
- "What's the one change you'll make on every call this week, and how will I know you did it?"
- "How can I help — do you want me to listen live, or review three recordings on Friday?"
A note on tone: with a brand-new rep, resist the urge to fill silence with answers. The whole point of GROW is that the rep talks 70% of the time. When they say "I don't know what I'd do differently," your line is, "That's fine — let's listen to the call together and find it." Then open the Gong recording and pause it at the moment it went sideways.
Coaching against a real recording beats coaching against memory every single time.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence — The First 30 Days
Don't improvise the ramp. Give the rep a written 30-day plan with one theme per week so they're never trying to fix everything at once.
Week 1 — Foundation (knowledge). Product certification, ICP and persona deep-dive, shadow two senior reps live, and learn the tools (Salesforce hygiene, Outreach sequence basics). Outcome: the rep can articulate the value prop and top three pains in their own words. No quota expectation; the goal is competence.
Week 2 — Activity and the opener (skill, narrow). The rep starts dialing with a low, achievable activity floor (e.g., 40 dials / 15 connects a day). Daily 15-minute call review focused only on the first 20 seconds of the call. Outcome: a confident, non-robotic opener and a clean reason for calling.
Week 3 — Discovery and objections (skill, deeper). Now layer in discovery questions and the two most common objections. Two role-plays this week, plus three recorded-call reviews. Outcome: the rep can run a real two-way conversation and turn one objection without panicking.
Week 4 — Booking the meeting and ownership (will + skill). Tighten the close — the actual ask for the meeting and the confirmed next step. Shift the cadence from daily to every-other-day reviews to build independence. Outcome: the rep is consistently booking qualified meetings and self-correcting between sessions.
The loop below is the engine that runs under all four weeks. Every coaching cycle is the same shape; only the skill in focus changes.
Drills & Role-Play
Reps build skill through reps, not through advice. Run these weekly:
- The 20-second opener drill. Rep delivers their cold opener ten times in a row, you play a different cold persona each time (busy, skeptical, "we're all set"). Score for clarity, not perfection.
- Objection ping-pong. You fire the five most common objections rapid-fire; the rep has to acknowledge-then-redirect each in under fifteen seconds. The goal is a calm reflex, not a perfect rebuttal.
- Recorded-call teardown. Each Friday, the rep picks one of their own calls they're proud of and one they're not. Review both against a simple scorecard (opener / reason for call / discovery / objection handling / clear next step). Self-scoring first, then your read.
- Live-listen and whisper. For a brand-new rep, sit beside them (or use Salesloft/Outreach live-listen) for a dialing block and debrief immediately after each call while it's fresh.
- Steal-the-best. Have the rep listen to one library call from a top SDR and write down three things they'll copy. Modeling beats abstract feedback.
Keep one scorecard consistent across all reviews so the rep sees a stable target. Changing the rubric every week is how new reps end up feeling like the goalposts keep moving.
What to Measure
Quota and booked meetings are lagging indicators — by the time they're red, the first 30 days are already gone. Coach to the leading indicators instead:
- Activity consistency — dials, connects, and emails hitting the agreed floor every day (not in one heroic Thursday).
- Connect-to-conversation rate — of the people they reach, how many become a real two-way talk. This is the cleanest early read on opener and discovery skill.
- Conversation-to-meeting rate — the closing-the-loop skill, the week-four focus.
- Behavior change on the target skill — did the one thing you coached this week actually show up on this week's calls? AI tools like Gong or Chorus make this measurable: talk-ratio, question rate, monologue length, and next-step capture.
- Ramp curve vs. Plan — are they ahead of, on, or behind the written 30-day milestones? A rep slightly behind on activity but climbing on conversation rate is healthier than the reverse.
The honest test: if you can't point to a specific number that moved because of a specific coaching session, you weren't coaching — you were chatting.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Rescuing instead of coaching. Jumping on the rep's calls to "save" deals teaches dependence. Co-sell to model, then hand the next one back.
- Coaching everything at once. A new rep can hold one skill at a time. Five pieces of feedback after one call is zero usable feedback.
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. "Send them this email" fixes today; "here's how to handle that objection" fixes the next hundred calls.
- No follow-through. Coaching a behavior on Monday and never checking whether it appeared on Friday's calls trains the rep to ignore you.
- Treating every rep the same. A confidence problem and a knowledge problem look identical on the dashboard and need opposite conversations. Diagnose first.
- Letting the AI dashboard do the coaching. Gong can tell you the talk-ratio was 80%; it can't sit with a nervous 22-year-old and rebuild their confidence. Use the data, deliver the coaching yourself.
FAQ
How much time should I spend coaching a new SDR in their first 30 days? Plan on 3–5 hours a week of direct coaching — daily 15-minute call reviews in weeks 1–2, plus a weekly 45-minute 1:1 and two role-plays. It's the highest-ROI time you'll spend all quarter; under-investing now creates a six-month problem.
Should I coach against live calls or recorded calls? Both. Live-listen (or whisper) early to catch and correct in the moment, then shift to recorded reviews in Gong or Chorus so the rep learns to self-assess. Recordings also let you both watch the exact moment a call broke instead of arguing about memory.
What if the rep is hitting activity but booking nothing? That's a skill gap, almost always at the opener or the discovery question — not a motivation problem. Listen to three calls, find where the conversation dies, and drill that one moment. Don't pile on more activity targets; that just produces more bad calls.
When is it not a coaching problem? When the data is bad, the list is thin, the Salesforce territory is misrouted, or the sequence is broken — that's a system fix, not a coaching fix. And if a rep shows no coachability after honest, repeated feedback, that's a hiring/fit conversation, not endless coaching.
How do I coach a new SDR who's afraid of the phone? Shrink the task and stack small wins. Start with a tiny dialing block beside you, celebrate the first real connect, and use the GROW question "What's one thing that went right on that call?" to rebuild confidence before you correct anything. Co-sell the first few, then hand them back.
Should I use AI coaching tools for a brand-new rep in 2027? Yes for the data, no as a replacement. Tools like Gong, Chorus, and Outreach surface talk-ratio, objection handling, and next-step capture automatically — use them to choose what to coach. But the actual conversation that changes behavior still has to come from you.
Bottom Line
The one move that makes or breaks a new SDR's first 30 days is recurring, specific call reviews — listen to real calls, coach one behavior at a time with the GROW model, and follow through to confirm the change showed up. Give them a written week-by-week ramp so they're never overwhelmed, measure leading indicators instead of waiting on quota, and diagnose skill vs.
Will vs. Knowledge vs. System before you open your mouth.
Coach the rep, not the dashboard.
Sources
- Gong Labs: What the best SDRs do differently (call analytics research)
- Harvard Business Review: The Best Sales Managers Don't Chase Deals — They Coach
- RAIN Group: Sales Coaching Best Practices and Research
- Sales Hacker: The Ultimate SDR Onboarding and Ramp Guide
- Sandler Training: Coaching with the GROW Model
- Salesforce Blog: How to Onboard and Ramp New Sales Reps Faster
- Winning by Design: Sales Coaching Frameworks and Playbooks
*Sales coaching for new SDR ramp — how to coach a new SDR through their first 30 days, sales manager coaching guide, SDR onboarding and ramp framework, rep coaching scripts, and a first-30-days coaching playbook for 2027.*
