How do you run a pipeline review that isn't just status updates?
Direct Answer
A pipeline review stops being a status update the moment you stop asking "where is this deal?" and start asking "what would have to be true for this deal to close, and what are you doing this week to make it true?" The core move is to coach the next action, not the CRM stage.
Run it as a deal-coaching session, not a roll-call: pick the 3-5 deals that matter, pressure-test the evidence behind each forecast using a qualification framework like MEDDIC, and leave every rep with a committed next-best-action and a date. The manager's job in the room is to make reps think, not to recite numbers everyone can already read in Salesforce.
If you find yourself reading the dashboard out loud, you are running a status update, and you should stop.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Most pipeline reviews degrade into status updates for a predictable reason: it is the path of least resistance for both sides. The rep narrates the CRM, the manager nods, nobody is exposed, and an hour disappears. Before you redesign the meeting, diagnose *why* yours is broken, because the fix differs by root cause — skill, will, knowledge, or system.
A skill gap looks like reps who genuinely do not know how to qualify, so they describe activity ("I sent the proposal") instead of evidence ("the economic buyer confirmed budget"). A will problem looks like reps who happy-ear every deal because an honest pipeline is a scary pipeline.
A knowledge gap is a manager who has not defined what "qualified" means, so there is no shared bar to coach against. A system problem is structural: the meeting has 14 people and 60 deals, so there is physically no time to coach anything — it can only ever be a status sweep.
Run this diagnosis before your next review. If the answer is system or knowledge, no clever questioning technique will save you — you have to fix scope and definitions first.
The Coaching Conversation
The shift from status to coaching lives in the questions you ask. Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) to keep yourself from solving the deal for the rep. Your goal is to make the rep do the thinking out loud. Below are verbatim questions to use in the room — copy these into your 1:1 notes.
Open by reframing the room. Say: *"We're not doing a status update today. I can read the CRM. Bring me the three deals you most want to win this quarter and the one you're least sure about. We're going to figure out what moves them."*
Goal — make them commit to an outcome. Ask: *"What do you actually believe will happen with this deal, and by when?"* Then the killer follow-up: *"What's your confidence on a 1-to-10, and what would make it a 9?"* The gap between their number and a 9 is your coaching agenda.
Reality — pressure-test the evidence, not the story. Use MEDDIC as your checklist and ask the questions that expose air in the forecast:
- *"Who is the economic buyer, and when did *you* — not your champion — last speak with them?"*
- *"What's the metric they'll use to measure success, in their words?"*
- *"Walk me through their decision process. Who else signs, and what's the legal/procurement step you haven't hit yet?"*
- *"If your champion left tomorrow, is this deal dead? If yes, you have a single point of failure — what's the plan?"*
When a rep says "they love it," do not accept it. Say: *"Love is not a buying signal. What did they *do* that proves it — a meeting they set, a stakeholder they pulled in, a date they gave you?"*
Options — let them generate the next move first. Resist solving it. Ask: *"What are two things you could do this week to advance it?"* and *"If I gave you one extra hour with this account, where would you spend it?"* Only after they have proposed something do you add your idea — and frame it as a question: *"What would happen if you asked the economic buyer for a mutual close plan directly?"*
Will — lock the commitment. Close every deal with: *"So what's the single next action, and when will it be done?"* Write it down. Next week, the meeting opens with that commitment, not a fresh status tour. That accountability loop is what converts a review into coaching.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
A pipeline review is one beat in a weekly rhythm, not a standalone event. The meeting only works if it is fed by call reviews and 1:1s and followed by accountability. Treat it as a loop.
Weekly cadence that holds up:
- Before the meeting: reps update the CRM and self-score their top deals on MEDDIC; manager reviews one Gong or Chorus call recording per rep so coaching is grounded in what actually happened, not the rep's retelling.
- The review itself (45 min, small group or 1:1): 3-5 deals max, deal-coaching not roll-call, every deal exits with a committed next-best-action.
- After the meeting: the next action goes in the CRM with an owner and date; manager spot-checks two of them mid-week.
- Monthly: zoom out to inspect pipeline coverage, conversion by stage, and which coaching themes keep recurring across reps.
For a new manager inheriting a status-update culture, run a 30/60/90: first 30 days, shrink scope to top deals and ban dashboard-reading; next 30, install MEDDIC self-scoring and call reviews; final 30, push accountability so reps run their own deal-coaching and you only inspect the exceptions.
Drills & Role-Play
Coaching questions only stick if reps practice the answers somewhere safe. Build these reps in.
- Call-review scorecards. Pull one recorded discovery or negotiation call per rep from Gong or Salesloft. Score it together against a simple rubric: Did they confirm the metric? Did they reach the economic buyer? Did they advance to a concrete next step? Reps learn the bar by watching themselves miss it.
- The "9 or it's a 1" drill. Have a rep present a deal at confidence 7. Make them argue both sides: the case for a 9 and the case for a 2. This breaks happy-ears and surfaces the real risks faster than any question you could ask.
- Champion-to-economic-buyer role-play. You play the champion who "will pass it up the chain." The rep has to practice the multi-thread ask: *"I'd love to make sure your CFO sees this the way you do — could we get 20 minutes with them together?"*
- Forecast challenge round. Once a month, reps defend their commit deals to a peer, not the manager. Peer pressure-testing is honest and removes the manager-pleasing dynamic.
What to Measure
Quota is a lagging indicator. If you only measure attainment, you find out you have a problem a quarter too late. Track leading indicators that prove the coaching is changing behavior:
- Stage-to-stage conversion rate — is qualification improving, or are reps still pushing weak deals forward?
- Next-action completion rate — what percentage of committed next-best-actions actually happened by the date? This is the single best signal that your review converted to coaching.
- Economic-buyer engagement — share of commit deals where the rep has personally met the economic buyer (a classic MEDDIC gap).
- Single-threaded deal count — deals resting on one contact; coaching should drive this down.
- Forecast accuracy — the spread between rep-called confidence and actual outcomes, tightening over time.
- Slippage rate — deals that move close dates more than once; chronic slippage means the review is not surfacing reality.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Reading the CRM out loud. If everyone can see the screen, narrating it adds nothing. Inspect async; coach live.
- Coaching the deal instead of the skill. Telling a rep exactly what to do wins one deal and teaches nothing. Ask questions so they learn the pattern and win the next ten on their own.
- Rescuing the rep. Jumping in to call the economic buyer yourself feels helpful and quietly tells the rep they cannot do it. Coach the ask; let them make it.
- No follow-through. A brilliant next-best-action with no accountability is a wish. If you do not open next week's meeting with last week's commitment, the loop is broken.
- Coaching everyone the same. A ramping SDR and a senior AE need different reviews. One-size pipeline reviews under-coach your strong reps and overwhelm your new ones.
- Confusing inspection with coaching. Inspection tells you the state of the pipeline; coaching changes it. You need both, but do not pretend the first is the second.
FAQ
How long should a pipeline review be? For a deal-coaching review, cap it at 45 minutes and 3-5 deals. Anything longer almost always means you have slipped back into status-update mode, sweeping every deal instead of coaching the ones that matter. Do broad coverage async in the CRM; reserve the meeting for the deals where your questions can actually change the outcome.
Should pipeline reviews be 1:1 or group? Both, for different jobs. Run honest, exposing deal-coaching in 1:1s where a rep can admit a deal is weak without losing face. Use small-group reviews to spread tactics — when one rep multi-threads a deal well, the room learns it.
Avoid large all-hands reviews; they force status updates because there is no time to coach anyone.
How do I stop reps from sandbagging or happy-earing the forecast? Make honesty cheaper than inflation. Reward the rep who pulls a dead deal early instead of punishing them, and use the "9 or it's a 1" drill plus MEDDIC evidence checks so confidence has to be defended, not asserted.
When reps see that an honest pipeline gets help and an inflated one gets exposed, the behavior corrects itself.
What's the difference between a pipeline review and a forecast call? A forecast call answers "what will we close?" — it is inspection for the number. A pipeline review answers "what will we *do* to close it?" — it is coaching for the behavior. Keep them separate; blending them turns coaching into negotiation over the commit number.
How do I run this with a hybrid or remote team in 2027? Lean on AI call-coaching tools like Gong or Chorus so the review is grounded in recorded reality rather than memory, and shorten the live meeting to the coaching itself. Async pre-work (CRM updates, self-scoring, one flagged call) does the inspection; the live time — even remote — is spent only on the questions that move deals.
My reps just give status anyway. How do I break the habit? Change the opening line and the first question. Ban dashboard narration out loud, and open with "what's your confidence on a 1-to-10 and what would make it a 9?" The question physically cannot be answered with a status update, so it forces the room into coaching from minute one.
Bottom Line
The one move that converts a status update into a real pipeline review is coaching the next action instead of the current stage. Pick a few deals that matter, pressure-test the evidence with MEDDIC and GROW questions, and send every rep out with a committed next-best-action you will inspect next week.
Read the CRM on your own time; spend the meeting making reps think.
Sources
- Gong Labs: What the best sales managers do differently
- Harvard Business Review: The Best Sales Reps Do Less and Sell More
- RAIN Group: Sales Coaching Research and Best Practices
- MEDDIC Academy: The MEDDIC Sales Qualification Methodology
- Sales Hacker: How to Run a Pipeline Review That Actually Works
- Sandler: Coaching vs. Managing Salespeople
- Winning by Design: The Science of Sales Coaching
*Sales coaching for pipeline reviews — how to coach pipeline reviews that aren't status updates, sales manager coaching guide, deal-coaching framework, rep coaching playbook, and a pipeline review coaching playbook for 2027.*
