How do you coach a rep to give a demo that closes?
Direct Answer
You coach a rep to give a closing demo by stopping them from demoing features and forcing them to demo discovered pain. The core move is the tell-show-tell structure from demo2win by Peter Cohan: tell the buyer what you're about to show and why it matters to *them*, show it in 90 seconds against the exact problem they named in discovery, then tell them what just changed for their business.
As the manager, you don't fix the demo for the rep — you watch a recorded demo (in Gong or Chorus), diagnose whether the gap is skill, will, knowledge, or a broken discovery hand-off, then run a focused coaching conversation and role-play loop. The closing happens *during* the demo through trial closes, not in a separate "next steps" slide at the end.
This guide gives you the verbatim scripts, the diagnosis tree, and the weekly cadence to make it stick.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
A demo that doesn't close is a symptom, not a root cause. Before you coach, find out *why* the rep's demo is flat. There are four real causes, and each one needs a different response. Coaching the wrong cause wastes everyone's time.
- Skill — the rep knows the product and is motivated, but doesn't know how to structure a demo, tie features to pain, or run a trial close. This is the one coaching fixes fastest.
- Will — the rep is going through the motions, won't prep, treats the demo as a feature tour because it's easier. Coaching here is about ownership, not technique.
- Knowledge — the rep doesn't actually understand the product deeply enough to demo confidently, or doesn't understand the buyer's industry. Fix with enablement, not 1:1 coaching.
- System / hand-off — the demo fails because discovery failed. The rep walks in without a single named pain, so there's nothing to demo *against*. This is the most common and most misdiagnosed cause. No demo skill survives bad discovery.
Run this tree before your 1:1. If the answer is the bottom-right box, more demo coaching won't help — you may be looking at a fit, comp, or territory issue that needs a different conversation, not another role-play.
The Coaching Conversation
Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) so the rep diagnoses their own demo instead of being lectured. Pull up the recording first. Never coach from memory — coach from the tape. Here are the verbatim scripts.
Goal — set the frame:
"I pulled the Acme demo from Tuesday. Before we watch it, what was your goal for that call — what did you want the buyer to do next?"
If they say "show them the product," that's your first finding. Reframe it: *"The goal of a demo is to get a commitment, not to inform. Let's watch with that lens."*
Reality — let the tape do the work:
"At 4:12 you opened the reporting dashboard. What pain from discovery were you connecting that to?"
Stay quiet. Most reps will admit they were demoing because the feature is cool, not because the buyer named that pain. Then:
"In discovery, Dana told you their CRO can't get a clean forecast in under three days. Where in the demo did you show *that* getting solved?"
Options — get them to generate the fix:
"If you ran this again, how would you open the dashboard so Dana feels it's about her forecast problem, not our feature?"
Coach them toward tell-show-tell: *"Dana, you said the forecast takes three days and you still don't trust it (tell). Here's the same forecast in one view, refreshed live (show). That's three days back every week and a number you can take to the board (tell)."*
Then add the trial close they skipped:
"Right after you show it, you ask: *'Dana, if your team had this on Monday, how would that change your week?'* — that's a trial close. You're testing temperature before you ask for the deal."
Will — lock the commitment:
"What's the one thing you'll change on the Beacon demo Thursday? Send me the recording and I'll watch the first ten minutes."
Notice you never gave the answer outright — you used their own deal to surface it. Reps own what they discover; they forget what they're told.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
One conversation doesn't build a skill. Run a tight weekly loop and a 30/60/90 arc.
- Days 1–30: Watch one of the rep's recorded demos per week. Co-build a one-page demo plan (pains → features → trial closes) *before* every demo. Role-play the open and one trial close live in your 1:1.
- Days 31–60: Rep self-scores their own recordings against a demo scorecard before you review. You spot-check. Introduce live trial closes as a non-negotiable; track how many they run per demo.
- Days 61–90: Rep runs a demo for a peer to teach the skill (teaching cements it). Shift from "did you tie to pain" to "did the demo advance the deal." Measure win-rate lift on demoed deals.
The loop is weekly during ramp, then biweekly once the demo-to-next-step rate stabilizes. The discipline is reviewing the tape every cycle — that's where coaching gains compound.
Drills & Role-Play
Build the skill in reps, not lectures.
- The 90-second pain demo: Give the rep a real discovered pain and have them demo one feature against it in 90 seconds using tell-show-tell. Run it three times until tight.
- Cold trial-close drill: You play the buyer. Mid-demo you go quiet or skeptical. The rep must land a trial close — *"How does this compare to how you do it today?"* — and read your reaction.
- Call-review scorecard: Score recorded demos on five lines — pain tied to feature, story over feature tour, trial closes run, buyer talk-time, clear next step. Have the rep score it first, then compare.
- The "so what" gauntlet: Every time the rep states a feature, you respond "so what?" until they reach the business outcome. Builds the instinct to lead with value.
- Off-script confidence: Throw an unexpected question mid-demo ("can it do X?") and coach the recover-and-redirect: *"Great question — let me show you how that connects to the forecast issue you raised."*
What to Measure
Quota is a lagging indicator. Coach to leading indicators that prove the demo behavior is changing:
- Demo-to-next-step conversion — % of demos that produce a scheduled, committed next step. The single best demo-quality signal.
- Trial closes per demo — pull from Gong/Chorus; a closing demo has 3–5, a feature tour has zero.
- Buyer talk-time ratio — Gong Labs research shows top performers keep buyers talking; a monologue demo is a losing demo.
- Pain-to-feature mapping — does every feature shown trace to a named discovery pain? Score it.
- Win-rate on demoed deals and sales-cycle length — the 60/90-day lagging proof the leading indicators are working.
Track these per rep on a simple scorecard so the rep sees their own trend, not just yours.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Rescuing the rep mid-deal. Jumping on the demo yourself closes one deal and teaches the rep nothing. Coach the skill, don't run the play for them.
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. "Send Dana a recap" fixes Tuesday; "here's how you tie features to pain" fixes every future demo.
- No follow-through. A brilliant 1:1 with no recording review next week is theater. Close the loop or don't open it.
- Coaching everyone the same. A skill gap and a will gap look identical on the surface and need opposite conversations — diagnose first.
- Coaching from memory. "Your demos feel flat" is unactionable. Always coach from the tape with a timestamp.
- Confusing a coaching problem with a fit problem. If the diagnosis tree lands on comp, territory, or wrong-fit hire, more role-play is avoidance, not coaching.
FAQ
How do I coach a rep who insists on demoing every feature? Show them the buyer talk-time on the recording. Feature tours are monologues; closing demos are conversations. Then run the "so what" gauntlet until they feel how exhausting a feature list is for the buyer, and replace it with two or three pains demoed deep via tell-show-tell.
What if the demo is bad because discovery was bad? Then you have a discovery problem masquerading as a demo problem — the most common misdiagnosis. Coach discovery first (MEDDIC or SPIN questioning) so the rep walks into the demo with two or three named, quantified pains. No demo skill survives empty discovery.
How many demos should I review per week per rep? One per rep during ramp or active coaching, reviewed deeply — not five reviewed shallowly. Use Gong or Chorus so you can review on your schedule and drop timestamped comments the rep can rewatch.
When is it not a coaching problem? When the diagnosis tree lands on knowledge (fix with enablement and SE shadowing), or on fit, comp, or territory. A rep who can demo beautifully in role-play but won't prep for live calls has a will or fit issue, and that's a different, honest conversation — sometimes a performance plan, not more coaching.
Should the rep or the SE drive the demo? The rep should own the narrative and the trial closes; the SE owns the technical depth. Coach the rep to direct the demo, not hand it off. If the SE runs the whole thing, the rep never builds the closing muscle.
How do I get a rep to run trial closes without sounding pushy? Reframe trial closes as temperature checks, not asks: *"How would this change your week?"* feels like curiosity. Drill it in role-play until it's reflexive, and have them count their own trial closes on the next recording.
Bottom Line
The one move: make the rep demo discovered pain, not features, using tell-show-tell with trial closes baked in — and coach it from the recording, not from memory. Diagnose skill vs. Will vs.
Knowledge vs. Broken discovery before you say a word, then run the weekly observe-diagnose-coach-practice-measure loop until the demo-to-next-step rate climbs. Coach the skill, never rescue the deal.
Sources
- The Demo That Closes — demo2win / Great Demo!
- Gong Labs: What the best demos have in common
- HBR: The Right Way to Lead a Sales Demo
- RAIN Group: Sales Coaching Best Practices
- Sales Hacker: How to Run a Product Demo That Sells
- Winning by Design: The SaaS Sales Method Demo Framework
- Sandler: Coaching Salespeople to Higher Performance
- Chorus.ai: Coaching demos with conversation intelligence
*Sales coaching for closing demos — how to coach a rep to give a demo that closes, sales manager demo coaching guide, tell-show-tell demo framework, trial-close coaching, and a rep demo coaching playbook for 2027.*
