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How do you coach reps to act on AI call-coaching feedback?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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Direct Answer

To coach reps to act on AI call-coaching feedback, separate the machine's job from yours: let tools like Gong AI, Chorus, and AI scorecards flag *what* happened on the call, then sit beside the rep and coach *why it matters and what to do differently*. In 2027, AI is the tireless observer, not the coach — it surfaces patterns (low talk-ratio, no next-step booked, monologuing through pricing) at scale, but reps only change when a human manager turns one flagged pattern into one concrete rep, runs a role-play, and checks the next three calls.

Pick one behavior per rep per cycle, co-watch the actual clip, agree on a single change, and verify it on the next live call. Reps ignore AI feedback when it arrives as a wall of red metrics with no human owning the change; they act on it when their manager makes it personal, small, and tracked.

How do you coach reps to act on AI call-coaching feedback?

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach

Reps don't act on AI feedback for four very different reasons, and the fix for each is different. Coaching the wrong cause is why "we bought Gong and nothing changed" is so common.

A common 2027 failure mode is over-reliance: managers forward the AI scorecard and assume the software coached the rep. It didn't. AI flags the behavior; the human coach drives the change. The diagnosis below routes you from the symptom ("rep isn't improving on the AI metric") to the real cause.

flowchart TD A[Rep not acting on AI call-coaching feedback] --> B{Does the rep<br/>understand WHY<br/>it matters?} B -->|No| C[Knowledge gap:<br/>teach the why with<br/>their own call clip] B -->|Yes| D{Can they execute<br/>the new behavior<br/>in role-play?} D -->|No| E[Skill gap:<br/>role-play + drills<br/>before next live call] D -->|Yes| F{Do they believe<br/>the AI feedback<br/>is valid?} F -->|No| G[Will/belief gap:<br/>prove it with won vs.<br/>lost call comparison] F -->|Yes| H{Are they buried<br/>under too many<br/>flags at once?} H -->|Yes| I[Overload:<br/>YOU pick ONE<br/>behavior this cycle] H -->|No| J[Performance issue:<br/>document, set deadline,<br/>consider PIP not coaching]

The Coaching Conversation

Use the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will — and anchor every step to a real clip from the rep's own Gong or Chorus library. Reps dismiss abstract metrics; they cannot dismiss the sound of their own voice. Open the 1:1 with the rep watching, not you lecturing.

Goal — set the focus before opening the dashboard:

"Before we look at the AI feedback, what's the one part of your calls you most want to get better at this month? I want us to pick a single thing and actually move it, not boil the ocean."

Reality — co-watch one clip and let the rep self-assess first:

"Gong flagged that on the Acme discovery call your talk-ratio was 68% and there was no next step booked. Let's watch the two minutes around pricing together. ... Okay — what do you notice? What would you do differently if you ran that moment again?"

Letting the rep diagnose first is the highest-leverage move in the room. If the rep names the gap, it's coaching; if you name it, it's criticism. When they spot it themselves, you skip the defensiveness entirely.

Options — generate the better behavior together, don't hand it over:

"What's one question you could have asked there that would've flipped the ratio and surfaced their timeline? ... I like that. Here's one more I use: 'What would have to be true for this to be a priority this quarter?' Which feels more like you?"

Will — lock a single, testable commitment:

"So the change is: on your next three discovery calls, you book the next step out loud before you hang up, and you keep your talk-ratio under 55% in discovery. I'll review those exact three calls in Gong on Friday and we'll watch the best one together. Deal?"

Notice what this script does NOT do: it doesn't dump every AI flag, it doesn't blame the tool, and it doesn't let the manager off the hook for follow-through. The AI gave the data point; the human turned it into one rep-owned commitment with a verification date.

The Coaching Plan / Cadence

Acting on AI feedback is a loop, not an event. Run it weekly per rep, and structure the first 90 days of any rollout so the team learns to trust the tool instead of resenting it.

30 days — build trust in the signal. Co-watch one AI-flagged clip per rep per week. No leaderboards yet. The goal is for every rep to believe the feedback is fair before you ever attach it to accountability.

60 days — one behavior per rep. Each rep owns a single flagged behavior (talk-ratio, next-step rate, discovery question count, monologue length). You verify it on real calls every Friday and log whether it moved.

90 days — rep-led review. Reps bring their *own* best and worst AI-scored call to the 1:1 and self-coach; you add the nuance the model misses (deal context, buyer mood, strategy). This is where the team stops needing you to police the dashboard.

flowchart LR A[AI observes call<br/>Gong / Chorus] --> B[Manager picks<br/>ONE flagged behavior] B --> C[Co-watch clip<br/>in 1:1] C --> D[Role-play the<br/>better behavior] D --> E[Rep commits to<br/>one change] E --> F[Verify on next<br/>3 live calls] F --> G[Measure movement<br/>vs. baseline] G --> A

The loop only works because a human owns steps B through E. Hand those to the software and you get a noisy dashboard nobody reads.

Drills & Role-Play

Behavior change happens in reps before the live call, never during it. Run these short, specific drills:

What to Measure

Track leading indicators of behavior change, not just quota, or you won't know the coaching worked until it's too late.

Hold lagging quota in your peripheral vision but coach to the leading behavior. A rep can't control whether a deal closes this month; they can control their talk-ratio on the next call.

Common Mistakes Managers Make

FAQ

How do I get a rep to stop ignoring AI feedback they think is wrong? Make them argue it. Have the rep pull the exact flagged moment and explain why the AI is mistaken. Often they're partly right — the model missed deal context — and acknowledging that buys credibility.

Just as often they hear themselves and concede. Either way they engage with the tool instead of dismissing it, which is the real goal.

Should reps watch their own calls or should I do it for them? Reps watch first and self-diagnose; you add what they miss. When the rep names the gap, it's ownership; when you name it, it's a verdict they'll resist. Co-watching the clip together in the 1:1 is the format that consistently changes behavior.

How many behaviors should a rep work on at once? One. AI tools surface dozens of signals, and that abundance is exactly why reps freeze. Pick a single behavior per rep per cycle, verify it on live calls, then move to the next. Sequential beats simultaneous every time.

Will AI eventually replace the sales manager's coaching? No. AI is the best call observer ever built, but it can't read a wavering rep's confidence, judge deal strategy, or earn the trust that makes someone change. In 2027 the model is the data layer; behavior change still runs through a human relationship.

How do I roll this out without the team feeling surveilled? Spend the first 30 days co-watching clips with zero accountability attached — pure development, no leaderboards. Let reps prove the feedback is fair to themselves before you ever tie it to numbers. Trust in the signal has to precede pressure on the signal.

What if a rep acts on the feedback but their numbers still don't move? Check whether you coached the right behavior. If talk-ratio improved but win-rate didn't, the real gap may be qualification or next-step discipline, not discovery. Re-run the diagnosis — and if the behavior is genuinely fixed and results still lag, look at fit, territory, or pricing before you coach harder.

Bottom Line

AI call-coaching only changes behavior when a human owns the change. Let Gong, Chorus, and your AI scorecards flag the pattern at scale, then do the irreplaceable part yourself: pick one behavior, co-watch the rep's own clip, role-play the fix, and verify it on the next three live calls. The tool is the observer; you are the coach.

Sources

*Sales coaching for AI call-coaching feedback — how to coach reps to act on Gong and Chorus AI feedback, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and an AI call-coaching playbook for 2027.*

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