How do you coach a rep who's overly focused on commission?
Direct Answer
You coach a commission-obsessed rep by separating the symptom from the cause, then reframing the chase: money pressure usually shows up as "commission breath" — the rep pushes for the close before the buyer is ready, and prospects can smell it. The core move is to make serving the buyer the path to the commission, not a detour from it: teach customer-first selling, tie every coaching conversation back to what the buyer is trying to accomplish, and prove with the rep's own pipeline data that short-term squeezing costs more deals than it wins.
Diagnose whether this is a skill, will, knowledge, or comp/system problem first, then run a structured GROW conversation, install a weekly cadence, and measure leading indicators — not just the quota number that's driving the panic. Do this and the rep keeps the hunger but loses the desperation; in 2027, when buying committees and longer cycles punish pushy reps harder than ever, that reframe is the whole game.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
A rep who's "overly focused on commission" is not one problem — it's four different problems wearing the same costume, and the coaching is wrong if you misread which one you have.
- Will / mindset. Some reps genuinely believe selling is a zero-sum extraction game. They were trained — by a prior manager, a bad comp plan, or a culture — to see the buyer as a wallet. This is the classic case the rest of this answer focuses on.
- Skill. Some reps aren't greedy; they're *anxious*. They don't know how to create value in discovery, so they skip to price and pressure because pushing is the only tool they have. The commission focus is a competence gap in disguise.
- Knowledge. A new rep who doesn't understand the product's real impact will default to "buy now, the deal expires Friday" because they can't articulate why the buyer should care. Teach the value story and the desperation drops.
- System / comp / territory. Sometimes the rep is right to panic. If the comp plan only pays on net-new logos this quarter, if the territory is thin, or if rent is due, the behavior is rational under a broken incentive. No amount of mindset coaching fixes a plan that literally rewards short-term squeezing. Fix the system, not the human.
Run the symptom through this tree before you open your mouth in the 1:1.
If you land on SYSTEM or wrong-fit hire, stop reading for a coaching script — that's a comp conversation or a performance plan, not a 1:1. The rest of this assumes you've diagnosed WILL/MINDSET (or a SKILL/KNOWLEDGE gap feeding it).
The Coaching Conversation
Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will). The job is not to lecture the rep about ethics — that backfires and makes them defensive. The job is to make them *feel* the cost of commission breath in their own numbers, then hand them a better tool. Here are the verbatim words.
Open without judgment (Goal):
"I want to talk about how a couple of your deals are going, because I think there's money on the table we're leaving behind. Before we get into it — what's your number this quarter, and how are you feeling about hitting it?"
Let them name the pressure. They'll usually admit the commission anxiety themselves. Then:
Name the pattern with data, not opinion (Reality):
"I listened to the Acme call on Gong. The buyer said 'we're still mapping our process' at the 12-minute mark, and you went to 'so if we get this signed by month-end I can hold the pricing.' Walk me through what you were thinking there."
Notice you're not saying *"you're too pushy."* You're showing the specific moment and asking. This is the heart of it. Then make the cost concrete:
"Here's what I keep seeing. When we push for the close before the buyer's ready, the buyer feels the commission breath — they can tell we need the deal more than they do — and the deal either stalls or they use it to grind us on price. Your win rate on deals where you discounted in the first two calls is 18%.
On deals where you didn't, it's 41%. The pushing is costing you commission, not earning it."
Reframe — this is the move (Options):
"I'm not asking you to care less about money. I'm asking you to flip the order. The reps clearing the most commission on this team are the ones who are genuinely obsessed with the buyer's outcome — they slow down, they qualify hard, they walk from bad fits.
Customer-first selling isn't the nice thing to do; it's the highest-paying thing to do. Serve the buyer well enough and the commission follows. What would change in the Acme deal if your only job for the next call was to figure out whether we can actually solve their problem?"
Get specific commitment (Will):
"So on your top three deals this week: no discount talk and no close talk until you can tell me, in one sentence, the business outcome the buyer is buying. Can you do that? What's going to be hard about it, and how do I help?"
The contrast that makes this land: short-term selling chases the signature this quarter; long-term selling builds the kind of trust and referrals that compound commission over a year. Say that out loud. Reps who only see the next check will chase it off a cliff.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
One conversation changes nothing. Install a loop. A simple 30/60/90 works:
- Days 1–30 — Awareness. Two Gong/Chorus call reviews per week tagged for "premature close / discount." Rep self-scores each call: *Did I push before the buyer was ready?* Weekly 1:1 reviews the pattern, not the deal outcome.
- Days 31–60 — Replacement. Replace the bad habit with a tool. Rep must complete a one-line buyer outcome statement in the CRM (Salesforce/HubSpot) before any deal can move to "negotiation." Role-play the slow-down move weekly.
- Days 61–90 — Reinforcement. Spot-check, celebrate the deals won *by serving*, and publicly tie a real commission check to a deal the rep slowed down on. Make the new behavior pay visibly.
The weekly loop underneath the 90 days looks like this.
Drills & Role-Play
- The "no-close" call. Role-play a discovery call where the rep is *forbidden* from mentioning price, timeline, or signing. Forces value and curiosity. Debrief: how did it feel to serve without selling?
- Commission-breath detector. Pull three of the rep's recorded calls. Have the rep flag every moment they pushed before the buyer signaled readiness. Self-awareness beats your feedback.
- Outcome-first scorecard. A simple rubric scored after each live call: (1) Did I name the buyer's outcome? (2) Did I qualify honestly? (3) Did I push prematurely? Track the trend.
- Walk-away rehearsal. Role-play disqualifying a bad-fit deal out loud. Reps fixated on commission physically cannot walk away; practicing it rewires the reflex and builds MEDDIC-style qualification discipline.
- Peer-call swap. Pair the rep with a top performer who sells customer-first and have them shadow two calls. Modeling from a peer who *out-earns* them is more persuasive than any manager speech.
What to Measure
Watch leading indicators, because the lagging number (quota) is exactly what's driving the bad behavior — so you can't use it as your coaching signal.
- Discovery-to-pitch ratio — is the rep spending more time understanding before presenting?
- Early-stage discount rate — % of deals where price/discount appears in the first two calls (should fall).
- Stage-to-stage conversion, especially discovery → qualified — proof the slow-down creates *better* pipeline.
- Win rate on non-discounted deals vs. Discounted — the number from the script.
- Behavior tags in Gong/Chorus — frequency of "premature close" language trending down.
- Average deal size and cycle health — customer-first reps usually grow deal size even as they stop discounting.
If leading indicators move and quota follows over a quarter, the coaching is working. If leading indicators don't move at all after 60 days, revisit the diagnosis — it may be a comp problem or a wrong-fit hire.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Moralizing instead of coaching. Telling a rep they're "greedy" guarantees defensiveness. Use their data and the win-rate math; let the numbers do the judging.
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. Saving the Acme deal this week teaches nothing. Coach the *pattern* of premature pushing so it transfers to every deal.
- Ignoring the comp plan. If your plan only pays on this quarter's net-new, you built the behavior you're complaining about. Audit the incentive before you blame the human.
- No follow-through. One inspiring 1:1 and then silence. Behavior change needs the weekly loop and visible reinforcement, or it snaps back in two weeks.
- Coaching everyone the same. An anxious new rep (knowledge gap) needs a different plan than a veteran who treats buyers as wallets (will gap). Match the coaching to the diagnosis.
- Rescuing the rep. Jumping onto their calls to close for them confirms that pushing works and that you'll bail them out. Let them practice the slow-down and feel it pay.
FAQ
How do I tell the difference between healthy ambition and a problem? Healthy ambition shows up *behind* the buyer's outcome — the rep is hungry but still qualifies hard and will walk from a bad fit. It becomes a problem when the rep pushes for the close before the buyer signals readiness, discounts early to force a signature, or steamrolls discovery.
The tell is timing: ambition serves first, then closes; the problem closes first and serves never.
What if the rep says "I'm just trying to hit my number — isn't that the job?" Agree, then redirect: "It is the job, and I want you to crush it. That's exactly why I'm telling you the pushing is *lowering* your number — your win rate on rushed deals is half your win rate on the ones you slow down on.
I'm protecting your commission, not your conscience." Make it about their money, not your ethics.
Is this a coaching problem or a comp problem? Often it's a comp problem disguised as a coaching problem. If the plan over-weights short-term, net-new, or single-quarter results, reps will rationally squeeze. Audit the incentive first. You cannot coach away a behavior your comp plan pays for.
How long should this take to fix? Plan for a 30/60/90 arc. You'll see leading indicators (early-discount rate, discovery time) move within 30–45 days if it's a will or skill gap. If nothing moves after 60 days of real coaching and a clean comp plan, treat it as a possible wrong-fit hire and move to a structured plan.
Can AI call coaching help with this in 2027? Yes. Tools like Gong, Chorus, and Clari now auto-flag premature-close language, monologue-heavy talk tracks, and early price mentions, so the rep gets near-real-time signal instead of waiting for a weekly review. Use the AI flags as the rep's self-scoring input — but the reframe conversation and the role-play still have to come from you.
What if reframing doesn't work? Then your diagnosis was probably wrong, or it's a values mismatch. Recheck whether it's actually a comp/territory problem. If the plan is clean, the data is clear, and the rep still won't put the buyer first after 60–90 days, you're likely looking at a wrong-fit hire, and the next step is a structured performance plan — not more coaching.
Bottom Line
Don't fight the rep's hunger for money — reroute it. Diagnose whether you're dealing with will, skill, knowledge, or a broken comp plan, then run a GROW conversation that uses the rep's own win-rate data to prove that commission breath kills deals and customer-first selling pays better.
Install a weekly observe-coach-practice-measure loop, track leading indicators instead of the quota that's causing the panic, and reinforce every deal won by serving. Keep the ambition, lose the desperation.
Sources
- The Science of Closing (Gong Labs)
- How Top Sellers Earn Trust (RAIN Group)
- Effective Sales Coaching (Harvard Business Review)
- The GROW Coaching Model Explained (MindTools)
- The Challenger Sale Research (Gartner)
- SaaS Sales Coaching Frameworks (Winning by Design)
- Sales Coaching Best Practices (Sales Hacker)
- Designing Sales Compensation That Drives the Right Behavior (SBI)
*Sales coaching for a commission-obsessed rep — how to coach a rep overly focused on commission, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, customer-first selling reframe, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
