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How do you run a cold-call coaching session with live dials?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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Direct Answer

Run a cold-call coaching session by making live dials the workout, not the test: block a focused power hour, have reps dial real prospects while you listen on the same call (or pull the recording 60 seconds later in Gong), and coach one skill per session — opener, objection handling, or the ask for the meeting.

Open with a target ("we're rehearsing the first 15 seconds"), let the rep dial, debrief each connect in 90 seconds with a single correction, then have them apply it on the very next dial. The move that separates a real coaching session from a glorified call blitz is the immediate, narrow, reps-driven debrief loop after each live connect — observe the actual behavior, name one change, watch them do it again before the energy fades.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach

Before you book the session, figure out what is actually broken, because "they're bad at cold calls" is four different problems wearing one coat. A rep can be missing skill (doesn't know how to handle "send me an email"), will (knows how but avoids dialing), knowledge (can't articulate the value prop for this segment), or fighting a system/territory problem (bad list, wrong personas, broken dialer).

Live-dial coaching only fixes the first two efficiently. If the list is garbage or the territory is picked over, no amount of opener practice moves the number — that's a RevOps fix, not a coaching fix.

flowchart TD A[Symptom: cold calls not converting to meetings] --> B{Is the rep actually dialing the target volume?} B -->|No| C{Do they know HOW to run a call?} C -->|Yes| D[WILL problem: call reluctance, fear of rejection - coach mindset + power hour] C -->|No| E[SKILL problem: live-dial role-play + script] B -->|Yes, dialing enough| F{Connecting but getting brushed off?} F -->|Yes| G{Same objection every time?} G -->|Yes| H[KNOWLEDGE/SKILL: objection drill on that one thing] G -->|No| I{Right personas + accurate data?} I -->|No| J[SYSTEM problem: fix list/territory - not a coaching fix] I -->|Yes| K[SKILL: opener + relevance, live-dial coaching] F -->|Not even connecting| L{Calling the right times + right numbers?} L -->|No| M[SYSTEM: cadence/data fix in Outreach or Salesloft] L -->|Yes| N[Pure volume + persistence: power hour discipline]

Spend five minutes in Gong or your dialer reports before the session. Pull the rep's connect rate, talk-time ratio, and where the call dies. Walk in knowing the answer to "is this skill or will?" so the session has a target instead of being a vague "let's make some calls together."

The Coaching Conversation

Use the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will — to frame the live-dial session so the rep owns the change instead of just absorbing your feedback. The whole point is that they leave self-correcting. Here are the verbatim words.

Goal — set the one skill (60 seconds before dialing):

"Today we're not trying to book ten meetings. We're rehearsing one thing: the first 15 seconds so the prospect doesn't hang up. By the end of this hour I want you to land your opener cleanly five times. Deal?"

Reality — let them dial and observe, then debrief each connect (90 seconds):

"Okay, what did you hear happen on that call? ... Right — they cut you off at 'I'm reaching out because.' What do you think they were thinking in that moment? ... Agreed, it sounded like a pitch.

Here's the one change for the next dial: lead with the reason you called *them specifically*. Try: 'Hi Sam, I'll be quick — I'm calling because you just posted three SDR roles, which usually means pipeline pressure. Did I catch you at an okay time?'"

Options — pull the fix from them, don't hand it over:

"Before I give you mine — what are two ways you could have handled that 'we already have a vendor' brush-off? ... Good, that's one. Here's a second: agree and pivot — 'Totally expected, most folks I call do. The reason teams still take my call is...' Which one feels more like you?"

Will — lock the commitment for the next dial:

"So on this next call, what are you going to do differently in the opener? ... Perfect. Dial it. I'm listening."

Notice the rhythm: they dial, you ask what *they* observed, you isolate one correction, they commit to it out loud, they apply it immediately. Resist the urge to monologue. The rep should be talking more than you in every debrief, and every correction should be tested on the next live connect while it's fresh.

The Coaching Plan / Cadence

One heroic session does nothing. Build a repeating loop so the skill sticks. A practical weekly cadence for a manager running cold-call coaching across a team:

Across a new rep's first 30/60/90: days 1–30 are pure opener + dial-volume confidence; days 31–60 shift to objection handling and the meeting ask; days 61–90 move to multi-touch cadence quality and personalization at scale.

flowchart LR A[Observe live dials / pull Gong recording] --> B[Diagnose one skill gap] B --> C[Coach: GROW debrief, one correction] C --> D[Practice: apply on next live dial + role-play] D --> E[Measure: connect rate, opener-to-pitch, meetings set] E --> F{Skill improving?} F -->|Yes| G[Promote to next skill] F -->|No| B G --> A

Drills & Role-Play

Live dials are the game; drills are the practice that make the game easier. Run these:

What to Measure

Quota is a lagging indicator and it tells you nothing in week one. Track leading indicators that prove the coaching is changing behavior:

Pull these from Salesforce, Outreach, and Gong weekly and put the trend in front of the rep. Behavior change shows up in connect-to-conversation before it ever shows up in booked meetings — celebrate the leading-metric movement so reps stay bought in during the lag.

Common Mistakes Managers Make

FAQ

How long should a live-dial coaching session be? For 1:1 live coaching, 15–20 minutes with one rep on one skill beats a sprawling hour. For a team power hour, 60 minutes of synchronized dialing creates the volume of connects you need. The debrief after each connect should be about 90 seconds — long enough for one correction, short enough to keep dialing.

Should I coach live on the call or review the recording afterward? Both, for different things. Listening live (muted, on the same line) lets you debrief while the rep still remembers exactly what they felt. Reviewing the Gong or Chorus recording later is better for spotting patterns across many calls and for async teardowns where reps coach each other.

Use live for in-the-moment skill building, recordings for trend coaching.

What if the rep freezes or refuses to dial in front of me? That's a will/anxiety signal, not laziness. Lower the stakes: start with role-play, then have them dial while you sit silently, then debrief only after the call ends. Stack small wins.

If reluctance persists for weeks despite a supportive approach, it may be a fit problem worth an honest conversation.

How do I coach cold calling on a hybrid or fully remote team in 2027? Run the blitz over a video bridge with the leaderboard shared on screen so the energy survives the distance. Use Gong or Salesloft AI call summaries to scale review across more reps than you can sit with live, and protect a recurring synchronous power hour so remote reps still feel the team momentum.

What's the one skill I should coach first? The first 15 seconds. Everything downstream — objections, the ask, the meeting — only matters if the prospect stays on the line. Fix the opener and relevance before anything else; it has the highest leverage on connect-to-conversation rate.

How do I know coaching is working and not just luck? Watch the leading indicators — specifically connect-to-conversation rate — over a rolling two to three weeks. If the skill you drilled is moving its matching metric, the coaching is working even before booked-meeting volume catches up.

If the leading metric is flat after focused reps, re-diagnose; you may be coaching the wrong cause.

Bottom Line

The whole game is the tight debrief loop on live connects: set one skill, let the rep dial real prospects, debrief each connect in 90 seconds with a single GROW-framed correction, and make them apply it on the very next call. Diagnose skill vs. Will vs.

System before you book the session, measure the leading indicator, and repeat the loop weekly. One skill, one correction, immediate application — that's how a cold-call coaching session actually changes behavior.

Sources

*Sales coaching for cold-call live-dial sessions — how to coach cold calling, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, power hour and call-blitz playbook, and a cold-call coaching playbook for 2027.*

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