Pulse ← Library
Pulse Coaching

How do you coach a rep to handle 'we're happy with our current vendor'?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
👍 Yup or 👎 Nope — vote this up its category:
📅 Published · Updated

Direct Answer

Coach the rep to treat "we're happy with our current vendor" as a reflex, not a verdict. The core move is displacement selling: stop trying to win the deal on the first call and instead earn the right to a comparison by making the buyer slightly *less* certain their status quo is good enough.

Train the rep to (1) agree and disarm, (2) ask a future-facing or cost-of-inaction question that exposes a gap the incumbent isn't solving, and (3) ask for a low-commitment next step — not a switch. As the manager, your job in 2027 is to diagnose *why* the rep folds (skill, will, knowledge, or system), then drill the exact 60-second sequence until it's muscle memory.

The rep doesn't have a vendor problem; they have a status-quo bias problem, and that is coachable.

How do you coach a rep to handle 'we're happy with our current vendor'?

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach

Before you script a single response, find the real cause. Reps fold on the incumbent objection for four very different reasons, and each needs a different intervention. Coaching skill when the problem is *will* (the rep is afraid to push) just makes both of you frustrated.

Pull the call recording in Gong or Chorus and listen to the 30 seconds after the objection. If the rep goes silent or pivots to price, it's usually skill. If they had the right words but said them limply, it's will. Route yourself with the tree below.

flowchart TD A[Rep loses deal to we're happy with current vendor] --> B{Does the rep know a clean disarm + probe sequence?} B -->|No| C[SKILL gap: teach the 60-sec sequence, drill it] B -->|Yes| D{Did they say it but back off under pressure?} D -->|Yes| E[WILL gap: build belief + role-play conflict] D -->|No| F{Can they name a specific gap the incumbent leaves open?} F -->|No| G[KNOWLEDGE gap: competitive battlecard + industry context] F -->|Yes| H{Is the account a real fit and reachable persona?} H -->|No| I[SYSTEM problem: fix targeting/territory, not the rep] H -->|Yes| J[Coach to a low-commitment next step, not a switch]

The Coaching Conversation

Run this 1:1 using the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will. Resist the urge to hand the rep your answer; ask first, then co-build the script. Here are the verbatim manager questions and the exact rep-facing language to install.

Goal. Open by anchoring on the rep's own outcome: *"When you hear 'we're happy with our current vendor,' what do you want to have happen in the next 60 seconds of that call?"* Let them answer. Most reps say "keep the conversation alive" — good, that's the goal, not "win the deal today."

Reality. Play the recording. Ask: *"Walk me through what you were thinking right after they said it. What stopped you from going further?"* This surfaces skill vs. Will instantly. Don't lecture over the tape — let them hear themselves retreat.

Options. Now teach the sequence. Give the rep these verbatim responses to the incumbent objection and have them say each one out loud:

Will. Close the 1:1 by locking commitment: *"Which of these will you use on your next three live calls, and which one feels hardest?"* Whatever they name as hardest is your next role-play target. Have them commit to a number, not a vague "I'll try."

The Coaching Plan / Cadence

One conversation won't rewire a reflex. Run a tight 30/60/90 loop and review progress in your weekly 1:1.

flowchart LR A[Observe call recording] --> B[Diagnose skill/will/knowledge/system] B --> C[Coach the sequence in 1:1] C --> D[Role-play under pressure] D --> E[Rep runs it live] E --> F[Measure next-step rate + objection frequency] F --> A

Drills & Role-Play

Skill is built by reps, not by advice. Run these every week:

What to Measure

Watch leading indicators, not just closed-won. Quota tells you what already happened; these tell you whether the coaching is taking.

Common Mistakes Managers Make

FAQ

How do you coach a rep who keeps discounting the moment they hear "we're happy with our current vendor"? Discounting is a tell that the rep can't articulate value, so they reach for price. Pull the battlecard, drill the gap-probe question, and explicitly forbid price talk in the first response during role-play.

Make them earn the comparison on value before money enters.

Is "we're happy with our current vendor" a real objection or a brush-off? Usually a brush-off — a polite reflex powered by status-quo bias to end the conversation. Coach the rep to test it with the future-pace question rather than accepting it as a final answer.

Should the rep ever just walk away from a happy incumbent account? Yes, when it's a genuine system problem: a locked multi-year contract with no event on the horizon, or the wrong persona. Coach the rep to log it, set a trigger-based follow-up, and reallocate time to reachable accounts rather than forcing a dead one.

How long until coaching on this objection shows results? Expect skill (the sequence) in 2–4 weeks of weekly drills, and durable behavior change by the end of a 30/60/90 cycle. Next-step conversion after the objection moves first; win-rate lags a full quarter.

What if the rep doesn't believe our product is better than the incumbent? That's a will/belief gap, not a script gap. No amount of role-play fixes conviction. Build belief with proof — customer switch stories, a competitive teardown, and a side-by-side where the rep finds the gap themselves rather than being told.

How is displacement selling different from just attacking the competitor? Attacking the incumbent triggers the buyer to defend their own decision and dig in. Displacement selling agrees with the buyer first, then uses questions to let *them* surface the gap, so the doubt is self-generated and far stickier.

Bottom Line

The rep doesn't lose to the vendor; they lose to the buyer's status-quo bias and their own reflex to retreat. Diagnose skill vs. Will vs.

Knowledge vs. System, then drill one tight sequence — agree, probe for the gap, ask for a comparison instead of a switch — until it's automatic. Measure the next-step rate after the objection, and the wins follow.

Sources

*Sales coaching for handling "we're happy with our current vendor" — how to coach reps through the incumbent objection, displacement selling and status-quo bias drills, a sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*

Keep reading
Was this helpful?  
⌬ Apply this in PULSE
Pulse CheckScore reps on the metrics that matterGross Profit CalculatorModel margin per deal, per rep, per territory
Related in the library
More from the library
sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep through a performance improvement plan?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach active listening to a sales rep?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you onboard and coach a fully remote new hire?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you follow up on coaching so it actually changes behavior?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you use conversation-intelligence data to coach a team?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep to control the room in a group demo?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps on multithreading into target accounts?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a sales team through a major change like a new product?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep with great results but low activity?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep on a stalled six-figure deal?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you certify sales skills before reps face real buyers?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps to handle 'just send me some information'?