How do you coach reps to stop doing feature-dump demos?
Direct Answer
You stop feature-dump demos by coaching the discovery-to-demo link, not the demo itself. Reps over-show product when they under-qualify pain, so the core move is to make every screen they reveal earn its place by tying it to a problem the buyer already named. Hold a weekly call-review where the rep replays their demo and you ask one question after each feature: "Whose pain does that solve, and where did they tell you that?" Then drill the "tell, show, tell" pattern — name the pain, show only the one thing that fixes it, confirm impact — until it becomes muscle memory.
This is a skill-and-confidence problem far more often than a knowledge problem, and in 2027 it matters more than ever because buying committees sit through dozens of demos and tune out anything that does not map to their stated priorities.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Feature-dumping is a symptom, not the disease. Before you build a coaching plan, route the behavior to its real cause so you do not waste a 1:1 fixing the wrong thing. Sort the rep across four buckets: skill, will, knowledge, and system.
A skill gap looks like a rep who knows the product cold but cannot connect a capability to a buyer's words — they default to the click-through tour because it is the path of least resistance. A will gap is the rep who is anxious or insecure and uses features as a security blanket; showing more feels safer than risking a hard qualifying question.
A knowledge gap is rare here but real: the rep does not actually understand which features matter to which persona, so they show everything and hope something lands. A system problem is the sneaky one — your sales motion, deck, or sandbox is built as a 40-screen guided tour, so the rep is feature-dumping because the company told them to.
The biggest tell is whether the rep ran real discovery first. Pull the call recording in Gong or Chorus and check the talk-ratio and the question count before the screen-share started. A rep who talked 70% of the demo and asked two questions has a discovery problem masquerading as a demo problem.
Fix discovery and half the feature-dumping disappears on its own.
The Coaching Conversation
Run this as a 25-minute 1:1 built on the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will. Do not open by telling the rep their demo was bad; open by letting them hear it. Play 90 seconds of their own recording where they stacked three features with no pain attached, then go.
Goal — set the target together. Ask: "When this demo goes perfectly, what does the buyer say at the end?" Most reps answer "they're impressed." Push: "Impressed enough to do what?" Get them to the real goal — the buyer saying "that solves the exact problem I described."
Reality — make them self-diagnose. Play the clip and ask: "How much of that demo mapped to something they actually told you they cared about?" Stay quiet. Then: "Of the seven screens you showed, which two did they lean in on?" This is where the rep realizes they were showing, not selling.
Options — co-create the better pattern. Teach "tell, show, tell" out loud: "Name the pain in their words, show the one thing that fixes it, then confirm — 'is that the kind of thing you meant?'" Ask: "If you could only show three screens in this deal, which three, and why those?" Make them defend each one against a named pain.
Will — lock the commitment. Close with: "What's the one thing you'll change in your next demo, and how will I know you did it?" Get a specific commitment — "I'll do a 60-second discovery recap before I share my screen, and I'll cut the reporting dashboard unless they ask." Write it down. That sentence is what you inspect next week.
A second usable line when a rep resists: "You're not earning the deal by showing more — you're earning it by showing you understood. What did you understand about their world?"
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
One conversation will not rewire a habit. Run a 30/60/90 loop and inspect weekly.
Days 1–30 — diagnose and pattern-install. Two call reviews per week. Co-build a one-page persona-to-capability map (which three features matter to the economic buyer vs. The end user vs. IT). Have the rep script a "discovery recap" they say before every screen-share.
Days 31–60 — practice under pressure. Move from reviewing demos to rehearsing them. Role-play a skeptical buyer who interrupts. Introduce a demo scorecard. The rep should now self-flag their own feature-dumps in reviews before you do.
Days 61–90 — measure and fade. Drop to one review per week, but track the leading indicators below. The goal is the rep doing tell-show-tell without you in the room. If the behavior holds for three weeks, you fade the cadence and move the rep to peer-coaching.
Drills & Role-Play
- The three-screen drill. Hand the rep a real opportunity and say they may show only three screens. They must justify each against a quote from discovery. This kills the tour reflex faster than anything.
- Pain-first role-play. You play a CFO who interrupts after the second feature with "Why are you showing me this?" The rep must immediately reconnect to a stated pain or pivot back to discovery. Run it three times until the pivot is smooth.
- Demo scorecard call review. Score recorded demos on: discovery recap present, talk-ratio under 55%, every feature tied to a named pain, one clear "is that what you meant?" confirmation, and a booked next step. Use Gong or Chorus to pull the clips and the talk-ratio automatically.
- The "so what" gauntlet. For every feature the rep names, you reply "so what?" until they reach the business outcome. If they cannot get there in two steps, that feature does not belong in the demo.
- Mute-the-product drill. Have the rep deliver the whole value story with the screen-share off. If they can sell it without the product, they will use the product to prove, not to fill silence.
What to Measure
Quota is a lagging signal and it moves too slowly to coach against. Track leading indicators that prove the behavior changed:
- Demo-to-next-step conversion — the percentage of demos that produce a committed next action. This is the truest signal that demos are landing.
- Features-per-demo and feature-to-pain ratio — count features shown and how many tied to a stated pain. You want fewer features, higher attachment.
- Discovery question count and talk-ratio before the screen-share, pulled from Gong, Chorus, or Clari. Talk-ratio drifting under 55% is a healthy sign.
- Multi-threading after the demo — a relevant demo earns introductions to other committee members; a feature-dump dead-ends with one champion.
- Self-flag rate in reviews — how often the rep catches their own dump before you do. When this rises, the skill is internalizing.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. Telling the rep what to show in *this* demo fixes one deal and teaches nothing. Coach the pattern so the next ten demos improve.
- Rescuing instead of asking. If you narrate the fix, the rep nods and forgets. Make them self-diagnose off their own recording — insight they generate sticks.
- No follow-through. A great 1:1 with no inspection next week trains the rep that your coaching is optional. Inspect the one commitment, every time.
- Coaching everyone identically. A confidence-driven dumper needs safe role-play; a knowledge-driven dumper needs a persona map. Same script for both wastes the session.
- Ignoring the system. If your standard deck is a 40-screen tour, the rep is obeying, not failing. Fix the demo script before you blame the rep.
- Confusing volume with value. A manager who praises "thorough" demos is rewarding the exact behavior they want to kill.
FAQ
How do I coach a rep who insists buyers want to see everything? Test it with data. Pull two of their recordings and show the drop-off — buyers disengage after the second unrequested feature. Then run the three-screen drill so they feel a tighter demo land.
Belief changes when they watch a focused demo book a next step their old approach would have lost.
Is feature-dumping a discovery problem or a demo problem? Almost always discovery. A rep who deeply qualified pain has no reason to show everything — they know the two screens that matter. If demos run long and unfocused, audit the discovery call first. Fix qualification and the demo tightens by itself.
How long before this behavior actually changes? Plan on a 30/60/90 arc. You usually see the discovery recap and tighter screen counts within three to four weeks of weekly reviews. Full internalization — the rep doing it without you — takes the back half of the quarter. Inconsistent inspection stretches it to never.
What if the rep is great at demos but still loses? Then the problem moved downstream — likely qualification of the economic buyer or weak multi-threading. Use a framework like MEDDIC or Command of the Message to check whether the deal had a real champion and metrics, and shift your coaching there.
A polished demo to the wrong person still loses.
When is feature-dumping a coaching problem versus a hiring problem? If the rep cannot map a single capability to a buyer's words after a full quarter of structured coaching, you may have a wrong-fit hire or a will problem that coaching will not solve. At that point it is a performance conversation and possibly a PIP, not more role-play.
Be honest about the line.
Should I use AI call-coaching tools for this? Yes, as a force multiplier, not a replacement. Tools like Gong and Chorus auto-flag talk-ratio and feature density so you walk into the 1:1 with evidence instead of impressions. The human still does the GROW conversation and the role-play — AI surfaces the moments, you build the skill.
Bottom Line
Feature-dump demos are a discovery and confidence problem wearing a demo costume. Coach the link between pain and screen — make every feature earn its place against something the buyer said — using a GROW 1:1, the tell-show-tell pattern, and weekly call reviews you actually inspect. Fewer screens, higher attachment, more next steps.
Sources
- Gong Labs — What separates top demos from average ones
- Harvard Business Review — The Best Salespeople Do What the Best Coaches Would Do
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching Research and Best Practices
- Sales Hacker — How to Run a Product Demo That Closes
- Winning by Design — Discovery and Demo Frameworks
- The GROW Model — Performance Consultants
- MEDDIC Academy — Qualifying and Demo Discipline
- Challenger — Teaching the Buyer in the Demo
*Sales coaching for feature-dump demos — how to coach reps to stop feature-dumping, sales manager coaching guide, demo coaching framework, discovery-to-demo rep coaching, and a sales demo coaching playbook for 2027.*
