How do you run a call-review session that reps don't dread?
Direct Answer
Run a call-review session reps don't dread by reviewing wins, not just losses, opening with the rep's own self-score before you say a word, and leading strengths-first so the room feels safe enough to be honest. The core move is to make the session a group skill-building ritual (one or two calls, a tight scorecard, everyone learning a transferable move) instead of a public autopsy of one rep's worst moment.
Run it weekly, 45 minutes, with a rotating rep on the hot seat who picks the call — and protect psychological safety ruthlessly, because the second a review feels like a tribunal, your best reps go quiet and your weak reps hide their calls. In 2027, with Gong and Chorus auto-surfacing call moments, the manager's job is no longer to find clips; it's to run the conversation around them so people leave coached, not judged.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Reps dread call reviews for predictable, fixable reasons, and the fix is different for each. Treat "the team hates call review" as a symptom and find the root cause before you redesign the session.
The four common roots:
- Safety problem (will/environment): the review is used to embarrass people, so reps submit safe, boring calls or skip prep entirely. This is the most common and most damaging.
- Relevance problem (knowledge): reps don't see how a peer's call applies to their deals, so they tune out. The session has no transferable takeaway.
- Format problem (system): it's a 60-minute play-by-play of one full call, the manager talks 80% of the time, and there's no scorecard — so it's boring, not threatening.
- Follow-through problem (skill): people get feedback, nothing changes, and the same notes repeat for months, so reps conclude the session is theater.
Most "dread" is a safety problem wearing a format problem's clothes. Fix safety first; the rest gets easier.
The Coaching Conversation
These are the exact words to use. The goal is to flip the power dynamic so the rep evaluates themselves first and the room reinforces what worked before anyone touches what didn't. Lean on the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) to keep it forward-looking.
Open the session (set the frame):
"Quick reminder of the rules: we review wins as often as losses, the person who brought the call talks first, and we lead with what worked. Nobody's call is perfect — including the ones I bring. The only bad call is the one we don't learn from."
Hand the rep the wheel first (self-score):
"Before any of us weighs in — how would you score this call against our scorecard, and what's the one thing you'd do differently next time?"
Letting the rep self-assess does three things: it lowers defensiveness, it tells you whether they can see their own gaps, and it usually surfaces the very issue you were going to raise — now it's their idea, not your verdict.
Strengths-first, and make peers do it:
"Before we get to what to tweak — what's one specific thing [rep] did here that the rest of us should steal?"
Force named, specific praise ("the way she labeled the objection before answering it") not generic ("good rapport"). Specific praise is itself a teaching tool, and it buys the safety you need for the next part.
Then the growth edge — one thing, framed as a question (GROW: Reality + Options):
"If you ran this exact moment again at 2:14 where the buyer went quiet — what are two other things you could have tried?"
"What signal told you it was time to move to price? What would have told you to wait?"
Asking beats telling. When the rep generates the alternative, they own it. Only if they're stuck do you offer your version: "Here's one option — try a label: 'It sounds like budget is the real question here.' Then go quiet."
Close with commitment (GROW: Will):
"What's the one move you're going to practice on your next three calls, and how will we know it landed?"
Write it down where the team can see it. Next week, the recheck is non-negotiable — that's how you kill the "this is theater" belief.
When you must review a loss: run a win-review on the loss — "What did we do well even though we lost?" — then exactly one growth edge. Never stack three criticisms on a rep who already lost the deal.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence — The Session Format
A repeatable 45-minute weekly group call review is the backbone. Keep it the same every week so reps know exactly what to expect (predictability is part of safety).
The format:
- Minute 0–3 — Frame. Restate the rules (wins too, strengths-first, self-score first).
- Minute 3–15 — Clip 1 (the hot-seat rep's choice). Play one 3–5 minute moment, not the whole call. Rep self-scores, then strengths-first, then one growth edge.
- Minute 15–27 — Clip 2 (a win the manager surfaces from Gong). Reinforce a transferable move the whole team can use.
- Minute 27–38 — Live role-play. Two reps run the moment again with the new move.
- Minute 38–45 — Commitments + recheck from last week. Each rep names the one skill they're practicing; revisit last week's commitments.
Rotate the hot seat so it's never the same two people, and let reps pick their own clip — choice is dignity. Pull clips with Gong or Chorus so you spend the week's prep budget on the conversation, not the hunt.
Drills & Role-Play
The review only sticks if reps *practice* the move in the room, not just hear it.
- The replay drill: after a clip, two reps re-run the exact 60-second moment with the new technique. Manager plays the buyer. Do it twice so the second run shows improvement.
- The self-score scorecard: a 5-line card every rep fills before peers speak — Opening, Discovery depth, Did they earn the next step, Objection handling, Talk-to-listen ratio. Keep it to five lines so it gets used.
- Win-pattern hunt: once a month, review three *won* calls back-to-back and name the repeatable pattern. Reps leave with a move to copy, not a wound to nurse.
- Objection gauntlet: pull the three objections that surfaced in this week's clips and run rapid-fire role-play on them for five minutes.
- Talk-time check: use the Gong talk-ratio on the clip; if the rep talked 70%, the drill is "ask three more questions before you pitch."
What to Measure
Lagging quota tells you nothing about whether the session works. Track leading indicators of behavior change:
- Attendance and voluntary clip submission — when reps start *volunteering* their real calls, safety is working. This is the single best signal.
- Talk-to-listen ratio trending toward 45/55 on reviewed reps (Gong benchmark for top performers is roughly 46% rep talk-time).
- Discovery-question count per call rising after a discovery-focused session.
- Next-step secured rate — % of calls that end with a committed next meeting.
- Skill recurrence — does the same growth-edge note repeat for a rep month over month? If yes, the coaching isn't landing.
- Win-rate on coached skill — track conversion at the specific stage you've been coaching, not just overall.
- Rep-reported usefulness — a 30-second pulse after the session: "Did you leave with something you'll use this week?"
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Public autopsy. Reviewing only losses, only your weakest rep, in front of everyone. It guarantees dread and teaches people to hide their real calls.
- Manager monologue. Talking 80% of the time. If you're the smartest voice in every clip, reps stop thinking. Ask first, tell last.
- No scorecard, no structure. A wandering 60-minute play-by-play is boring and unsafe at once. Tight format, two clips, one card.
- Stacking criticism. Three pieces of feedback per rep is venting, not coaching. One growth edge per clip.
- No follow-through. Giving feedback and never rechecking it. The recheck is what makes the room believe the session is real.
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. "Send them this email" closes one deal; "here's how to handle a stall" closes fifty. Coach the transferable move.
FAQ
How often should we run call reviews? Weekly is the sweet spot for most teams — frequent enough to build a ritual and rhythm, short enough (45 minutes) to protect. Pair the weekly group session with monthly 1:1 deep-dives on each rep's own calls. Daily is too much; monthly lets the habit die.
Group review or 1:1 — which is better? Both, for different jobs. The group call review builds shared standards and lets reps learn from peers cheaply, but it must feel safe. The 1:1 is where you go deep on an individual's growth edge and have the harder conversations.
Never use the group session for a tough individual message — that's a 1:1.
How do I get reps to submit their real calls, not safe ones? Submit your own messy call first and review it on yourself. Review wins so the session isn't pure pain. And visibly protect anyone who brings a hard call — thank them, never pile on. When the social cost of a bad call drops to zero, the safe-call problem disappears.
What if one rep gets defensive every time? Take it to a 1:1, not the group floor. Start with their self-score; defensiveness usually means they feel judged, not coached. If after honest, private, repeated coaching nothing changes and it's a will problem rather than a skill gap, that's a performance conversation — and possibly a PIP — not more group review.
Should AI tools like Gong run the review for us? Use Gong and Chorus to find clips, track talk-ratios, and flag moments — that's their strength. But the coaching conversation is human. AI surfaces the *what*; the manager runs the *why* and the *what next*, and protects the psychological safety no tool can create.
How do I review a lost deal without crushing the rep? Run a win-review on the loss first — "what did we do well here?" — then exactly one thing to try next time. The rep already feels the loss; your job is to extract the lesson, not add the salt.
Bottom Line
The session reps don't dread is the one where they score themselves first, hear what they did well before what to fix, and see wins reviewed as often as losses — all inside a predictable, tight, safe format. Make it a group skill-building ritual with one transferable takeaway, protect psychological safety like it's the product, and recheck last week's commitment every single time.
Do that and reps will start *volunteering* their hardest calls — which is the whole game.
Sources
- Gong Labs — What separates top closers (talk-to-listen ratio research)
- Harvard Business Review — The Brutal Truth About Why Most Coaching Fails
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching Best Practices
- Sales Hacker — How to Run a Sales Call Review That Reps Actually Like
- Winning by Design — Coaching Framework for Sales Teams
- Chorus by ZoomInfo — Building a Call Coaching Culture
- Amy Edmondson / HBR — Psychological Safety and High-Performing Teams
- The GROW Model — coaching framework overview (MindTools)
*Sales coaching for call-review sessions — how to coach reps through call reviews, sales manager coaching guide, group call review framework, rep self-score and win-review playbook, and a psychological-safety coaching playbook for 2027.*
