How do you coach reps to run a great executive presentation?
Direct Answer
Coach reps to run a great executive presentation by making them earn the room before they open the deck: the move is to drill them on leading with the business outcome and ROI, not the product. Most reps default to feature tours because that's what they're comfortable with; executives buy outcomes, risk reduction, and a credible business case.
Train your rep to open with the customer's own words on the problem, state the financial impact, and reserve product detail for proof — then make them practice the first 90 seconds until they're tight. In 2027, with buying committees averaging 6–10 stakeholders and longer cycles, the rep who can speak the C-suite's language wins the room; the one who demos at executives loses it.
Your job as the manager is to diagnose why the rep is defaulting to features, run a focused coaching conversation, and rehearse the open in role-play before the real meeting.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Before you fix anything, find the real cause. A rep who bombs in front of executives usually has one of four problems, and the coaching is different for each:
- Skill gap — they don't know how to build or tell a business case; they've only ever sold to users and champions.
- Will / confidence gap — they're intimidated by the room and retreat to the safe ground of features because product knowledge feels like armor.
- Knowledge gap — they don't actually understand the customer's business, the metrics the CFO cares about, or the cost of inaction.
- System / qualification gap — the meeting was set up wrong (no agenda, wrong attendees, no executive sponsor), so even a perfect pitch can't land.
If it's a system problem, more presentation coaching won't help — fix the meeting setup first. Use this decision tree to route the symptom to the real cause.
Run this in your 1:1 before you assume the rep "just needs reps." A skill gap and a will gap look identical on the surface and need opposite coaching.
The Coaching Conversation
Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) so the rep does the thinking instead of you handing them a script to memorize. Here is the verbatim 1:1 you run after a weak executive meeting — or before an upcoming one. Bold lines are the exact questions to ask.
Goal: "When you walk out of that boardroom, what do you want the VP of Operations to do next?" Push past "have a good meeting." You want a specific commitment: approve a pilot, sponsor the business case internally, set the next milestone. If the rep can't name the ask, that's your first finding.
Reality: "Walk me through how you opened the last executive meeting — give me your literal first three sentences." Listen for whether they opened with the customer's problem or with "Thanks for having me, let me tell you about our platform." Then: **"What does this executive measure?
What's the number on their dashboard that this deal moves?"** If they can't answer, you've found a knowledge gap.
Options: Now teach, but as a question. "If you only had two minutes and the CFO had to leave, what would you say?" This forces them to compress to outcome and ROI. Then coach the structure directly:
"Try this open: *'Last time we spoke, your team told me reps are spending eleven hours a week on manual CRM updates and you're missing forecast by 18%. If we cut that admin time in half and tighten forecast accuracy, that's roughly $1.4M in recovered capacity this year. I want to show you exactly how, and then get your read on whether this is worth a pilot.
Fair?'*"
That open does four things executives respond to: it uses their words, quantifies the pain, states the ROI, and ends with a low-friction ask. Have the rep rewrite it in their own deal's numbers, out loud, right now.
Will: "What will you change in your open for the meeting on Thursday, and when will you rehearse it with me?" Lock a rehearsal slot. Coaching without a commitment to practice is just a conversation. The phrase to leave them with: "Lead with the outcome, earn the demo."
A second reusable script for handling the inevitable executive interruption — "Just get to the point, what does this cost?": "Great question — the investment is $X, and here's the return that makes it pay for itself by Q3. Want the one-slide business case or the detail?" Train reps to answer the price question with the ROI in the same breath, never to dodge it.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
One conversation doesn't build executive presence. Run a 30/60/90 cadence so the skill compounds:
- Days 1–30: Diagnose and fix the open. Every executive-meeting prep includes a recorded role-play of the first 90 seconds. The rep cannot get to the deck until the open is tight.
- Days 31–60: Build the business-case muscle. The rep builds a one-page ROI / business case for every Stage-3+ deal and defends it to you. Introduce handling executive objections live.
- Days 61–90: Independence. The rep self-scores their own recorded executive calls against the scorecard before your 1:1, and you spot-check. You're coaching the exceptions, not every call.
The loop you repeat each week:
Pull recordings from Gong or Chorus so you're coaching what actually happened, not the rep's memory of it. In 2027, AI call-coaching tools in Gong and Salesloft auto-flag whether the rep led with value or features and how much they talked versus listened — use those signals to pick which calls to review, but do the actual coaching yourself.
Drills & Role-Play
Skill is built by reps, not lectures. Run these:
- The 90-second open drill. Rep delivers the opening to a real upcoming executive meeting. You play a distracted CFO who interrupts at 20 seconds with "Why am I in this meeting?" Re-run until they recover and reframe to outcome.
- The CXO objection round. Fire the top five executive objections in random order: "We don't have budget," "We're happy with what we have," "Send me a deck," "What's the ROI," "We tried something like this." Score on whether they answer with business value, not features.
- The one-slide business case defense. Rep presents a single ROI slide and you attack the assumptions like a skeptical CFO would. This builds the business case rigor that CXO selling demands.
- Call review against the scorecard. Pull a real recording from Gong, mute it, and have the rep predict where they lost the executive's attention before you watch together.
A simple presentation scorecard (1–3 each): opened with customer's problem; quantified impact; stated clear ROI; made a specific ask; controlled airtime (talk-to-listen under 50/50); handled the price question with value. Score every rehearsal so progress is visible.
What to Measure
Don't wait for quota to tell you if coaching worked — that's a lagging indicator that arrives a quarter too late. Track leading indicators of behavior change:
- Outcome-led opens: percentage of executive calls where the rep led with the customer problem and quantified impact (gradeable from Gong/Chorus transcripts).
- Business cases built: count of Stage-3+ deals with a real one-page ROI before the executive meeting.
- Talk-to-listen ratio in executive calls — falling toward 45/55 means they're discovering, not pitching.
- Multi-threading: number of executive-level stakeholders engaged per opportunity, which MEDDIC scores as the Economic Buyer.
- Executive meeting → next-step conversion: percentage of executive presentations that produce a concrete committed next step.
- Stage-to-stage win-rate after executive meetings, watched over a rolling 90 days.
When the leading indicators move, win-rate and deal size follow. Report the behavior metrics in your 1:1s, not just the number.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the deck, not the rep. Editing slides fixes one meeting; coaching the skill fixes every meeting. Resist the urge to rebuild the PowerPoint for them.
- Rescuing the rep in the room. If you take over when an executive pushes back, the rep never builds the muscle. Prep them to handle it and let them.
- Coaching everyone the same. A confident rep with a knowledge gap and a timid rep with a skill gap need opposite approaches. Diagnose first.
- No follow-through. A great 1:1 with no scheduled rehearsal and no scorecard is wasted. Lock the practice slot.
- Mistaking a qualification problem for a presentation problem. If the wrong people are in the room with no agenda, no pitch survives. Fix the setup.
- Letting the rep skip the ask. Executives expect a clear recommendation. A presentation with no specific next step trained into it will stall.
FAQ
How do I coach a rep who freezes in front of senior executives? That's usually a will/confidence gap, not a skill gap. Over-prepare the first 90 seconds so they have a tight, rehearsed open to fall back on, and run the 90-second drill with interruptions until the room feels routine.
Confidence comes from reps, not pep talks — get them in front of friendly executives early.
Should the rep send the deck before the executive meeting? Usually no — send a one-page business case or executive summary instead. A full deck invites the executive to skim and pre-judge, and it removes the rep's reason to be in the room. Coach them to bring the detail and lead the conversation.
How much product should an executive presentation include? As little as needed to make the outcome credible. Lead with the business case and ROI; use product only as proof that the outcome is real. If your rep spends more than a third of the meeting in the demo, they've reverted to feature-selling.
How do I know if it's a coaching problem or a wrong-fit hire? Coach the specific skill for 60–90 days with measurable role-play. If the leading indicators don't move despite real practice and clear feedback, it may be a fit or motivation issue that needs a performance plan, not more coaching. Be honest about the difference.
What framework should reps use to structure an executive presentation? A simple arc works: their problem (in their words) → the quantified cost of inaction → the outcome and ROI → proof → the ask. Pair it with MEDDIC to confirm you've identified the Economic Buyer and their metrics before the meeting.
Bottom Line
The one move that matters: train reps to lead with the customer's outcome and ROI, and earn the demo instead of opening with it. Diagnose whether the rep's struggle is skill, will, knowledge, or a broken meeting setup, then rehearse the first 90 seconds until it's tight. Measure outcome-led opens and next-step conversion, not just quota, and you'll see executive presentations turn from feature tours into deals.
Sources
- HBR: How to Present to Senior Executives
- Gong Labs: What the best sales reps do differently on calls
- RAIN Group: Selling to the C-Suite
- MEDDIC Academy: The Economic Buyer
- Sales Hacker: How to Run a Great Sales Presentation
- Winning by Design: The Business Case Framework
- Challenger / Gartner: Commercial Insight and the buying committee
*Sales coaching for executive presentations — how to coach reps to sell to the C-suite, lead with outcomes and ROI, build a business case, and a sales manager coaching playbook for great executive presentations in 2027.*
