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How do you coach a rep with high activity but low results?

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

When a rep is busy but not winning, treat it as a quality and conversion problem, not an effort problem — never reward volume that isn't converting. Pull the rep's funnel and call recordings, find the exact stage where motion turns into stall, and coach the one skill that fixes it: usually targeting, messaging, or discovery quality.

Run a structured 1:1 using the GROW model, set a 30/60/90 plan against a single conversion metric, and drill the broken skill in role-play until the rate moves. The trap to avoid: telling a hard worker to "do more" when the real fix is doing it better.

How do you coach a rep with high activity but low results?

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach

High activity with low results is almost never a will problem — this rep is already working. So before you coach, separate **skill vs. Knowledge vs.

System/territory**. A rep dialing 80 times a day with no meetings doesn't need motivation; they need a better list, a better opener, or a better question set. As a manager, your job is to find the specific leak, not to applaud the busyness.

Pull three things first: the rep's CRM funnel by stage (so you can see conversion quality at each transition), 5–10 recent call recordings from Gong or Chorus, and their account list against your ICP. Then ask where the drop-off lives. If they generate lots of conversations but no qualified pipeline, the problem is targeting or opener messaging.

If they create pipeline but it dies in discovery, it's a questioning and qualification gap — usually weak MEDDIC or SPIN-style discovery. If everything looks fine but deals stall late, it's closing and mutual-action-plan discipline.

The honest part: sometimes coaching won't fix it. If the territory is mined out, the comp plan rewards the wrong motion, or the rep is a wrong-fit hire, more drills just add noise. Name that early so you don't burn a quarter coaching a system problem.

flowchart TD A[Rep: high activity, low results] --> B{Lots of conversations created?} B -->|No| C{Right accounts targeted?} C -->|No| D[Targeting / ICP problem - fix list] C -->|Yes| E[Opener / messaging problem - fix script] B -->|Yes| F{Pipeline qualified?} F -->|No| G[Discovery & qualification gap - coach MEDDIC/SPIN] F -->|Yes| H{Deals advancing on time?} H -->|No| I[Closing / mutual-action-plan gap] H -->|Yes| J{Territory & comp healthy?} J -->|No| K[System problem - not a coaching fix] J -->|Yes| L[Pace problem - increase quality reps, hold the line]

The Coaching Conversation

Run this as a real 1:1, not a scolding. The opening move matters: validate the effort, then reframe to quality so the rep doesn't get defensive. Use the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will.

Open (validate, then reframe): "Your activity is genuinely strong — you're outworking most of the team. So I don't want you to do *more*. I want us to figure out why all that motion isn't converting, because busy isn't the same as effective. Let's look at the numbers together."

Goal: "By the end of this month, what does a healthy week look like for you — not in dials, but in *qualified meetings booked*?"

Reality: "Here's your funnel. You're booking 12 meetings a week, but only 1 in 8 turns into pipeline. The team average is 1 in 4. What do you think is happening between the meeting and the next step?" Let them answer first — don't supply it. Then: "Let's listen to two of last week's calls together."

While reviewing the recording, ask coaching questions, not verdicts: "If you ran that opening 30 seconds again, what would you change?" and "Where in that call did you lose them — and what question could have re-engaged them?" Self-discovery sticks; being told doesn't.

Options: "You've spotted that you pitch before you understand the problem. What are two things you could try on your next five calls to slow down and qualify first?" Co-create the fix so they own it.

Will: "Which one do you want to commit to this week, and how will we both know it worked? Let's pick one number — meeting-to-pipeline rate — and watch it." Close with: "I'm going to protect your time so you can do fewer, better calls. Your job is quality, not volume, for the next two weeks."

The whole point: you are not asking for more effort. You're redirecting existing effort toward the conversion that's broken.

The Coaching Plan / Cadence

One conversation won't move a habit. Set a 30/60/90 plan tied to a single leading metric so progress is visible.

Days 1–30 — Fix the leak. Cut activity targets by 20% on purpose to make room for quality. Twice-weekly 30-minute call reviews on Gong. One drill per week on the broken skill (targeting, opener, or discovery). Success metric: meeting-to-pipeline conversion moves toward team average.

Days 31–60 — Stabilize the skill. Move to weekly call reviews; rep self-scores first using a shared scorecard, then you compare. Reintroduce normal activity volume now that each rep is more productive. Success metric: conversion rate holds for three straight weeks.

Days 61–90 — Make it durable. Shift to deal coaching on live opportunities; the rep brings their own call clips and diagnoses them. You verify the habit survives without you watching. Success metric: pipeline created per activity, and win-rate trend.

flowchart LR A[Observe calls + funnel] --> B[Diagnose the leak] B --> C[Coach the one skill - GROW 1:1] C --> D[Practice in role-play / drills] D --> E[Rep applies on live calls] E --> F[Measure conversion + behavior] F --> A

Drills & Role-Play

Skill change comes from reps, not advice. Pick drills that match the diagnosed leak.

What to Measure

Lagging quota tells you the rep missed; it doesn't tell you if coaching is working. Track leading indicators that move first:

If conversion climbs while raw activity stays flat or drops, the coaching is working exactly as intended.

Common Mistakes Managers Make

FAQ

How do I tell a hard-working rep their results aren't good enough without crushing them? Lead with genuine respect for the effort, then make it a shared diagnosis: "Your work ethic isn't the question — let's find why it isn't converting." Anchoring on a number (conversion rate) instead of a judgment ("you're underperforming") keeps it objective and forward-looking.

Should I cut a busy rep's activity targets while coaching? Yes, temporarily. Lower the volume target 15–20% for the first 30 days so the rep has room to slow down and run higher-quality calls. Once the conversion rate is healthy, restore normal volume — now each activity is worth more.

What if the activity itself is inflated or low-quality? That's common. Audit what counts as "activity." If 80 dials are really 80 voicemails to wrong-fit accounts, the issue is targeting and the activity number is vanity. Tighten the definition to *qualified* conversations and the picture changes fast.

How long before I should expect results to move? Leading indicators (next-step rate, discovery depth, conversion) should shift within 30 days if you're coaching the right leak. Lagging results — won revenue — follow your sales cycle, so a 90-day cycle means real proof of revenue lift takes a full quarter.

When is high activity / low results not a coaching problem at all? When the territory is exhausted, the comp plan rewards the wrong motion, the ICP is wrong, or it's a wrong-fit hire. If you've coached the diagnosed skill for 60–90 days with honest follow-through and the rate won't move, escalate to a role or system conversation — possibly a performance plan — instead of more drills.

Bottom Line

The one move that matters: stop coaching effort and start coaching conversion. Find the exact stage where this rep's motion stops turning into pipeline, fix the single skill behind it — targeting, messaging, or discovery — and measure a leading conversion metric until it climbs. Busy is not the goal; effective is.

Sources

*Sales coaching for high activity low results — how to coach a busy rep who isn't converting, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework for conversion quality, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*

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