Pulse ← Library
Pulse Reviews and Analysis

How do you coach reps you never see in person?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
👍 Yup or 👎 Nope — vote this up its category:
📅 Published · Updated

Direct Answer

You coach reps you never see in person by building a deliberate visibility system that replaces hallway osmosis with recorded calls, async written feedback, and a non-negotiable 1:1 rhythm — then you spend your manager time on trust and skill, not status updates. The core move: make the work visible before you try to coach the person. Pull call recordings from Gong or Chorus, watch them before the 1:1, and bring one specific, time-stamped observation instead of a vague "how's it going." For a fully-distributed team in 2027, remote rapport is earned through consistency, not charisma — the rep who hears from you on the same day every week, with feedback that proves you actually watched their work, will trust you more than the rep you happen to sit next to in an office.

How do you coach reps you never see in person?

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach

When you can't see a rep, the temptation is to assume the worst (they're slacking) or the best (no news is good news). Both are guesses. The real problem with remote coaching is not effort — it's lost signal.

In an office you absorb a hundred micro-data-points: tone on a call, a frustrated sigh, who they ask for help. Distributed, all of that disappears unless you rebuild it on purpose.

Before you coach anything, separate the four root causes, because the fix is different for each:

flowchart TD A[Rep is underperforming and remote] --> B{Can I even see their work?} B -- No recordings or CRM hygiene --> C[Fix visibility FIRST: Gong/Chorus + CRM standard] B -- Yes, I can review calls --> D{Is the behavior present in the work?} D -- Skill gap in calls --> E[SKILL: drills, role-play, call review] D -- Activity is low/erratic --> F{Engaged and connected?} F -- Isolated/disengaged --> G[WILL: rebuild connection, async 1:1s, purpose] F -- Engaged but stuck --> H[KNOWLEDGE: product/ICP enablement] D -- Good behavior, bad results --> I{Pipeline and territory fair?} I -- Bad leads/routing --> J[SYSTEM: escalate, do not coach] I -- Fair --> K[Patience + targeted skill rep]

The single biggest mistake remote managers make is skipping step one — trying to coach a rep whose work they have never actually observed. You are coaching a CRM stage, not a human. Fix visibility first.

The Coaching Conversation

Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) — it travels perfectly over video because it's question-driven and forces the rep to talk more than you do, which is exactly what you want when you can't read body language easily. Here are verbatim scripts you can paste into your 1:1 doc.

Open with evidence, not vibes. Never start a remote 1:1 with "how's everything going?" — it produces "good, busy" and teaches you nothing.

"I watched your Gong recording of the Meridian discovery call from Tuesday — the one at the 11-minute mark where they asked about pricing. I want to dig into that moment with you. First, what was your read on how it went?"

Goal — make them name it.

"By the end of this 1:1, what's the one thing you want to walk away with? If we only fix one thing this week, what should it be?"

Reality — get their honest self-assessment before you give yours.

"Walk me through what actually happened on that Meridian call. When they pushed on price at minute 11, what were you thinking in that moment?"

Options — coach, don't tell. The remote manager's instinct is to just give the answer because it's faster on a busy video call. Resist it.

"If you could run that exact moment again, what are two things you'd try differently? ... Okay, of those two, which one do you think moves the deal?"

Will — lock the commitment in writing, because async means it has to survive the gap until next week.

"Great. So this week you'll run that re-frame on your next two discovery calls, and you'll drop both recordings in our shared Gong folder by Thursday. I'll watch them before our next 1:1 and we'll compare notes. Sound fair?"

Close every remote 1:1 with a connection beat — this is how you build remote rapport that an office gives you for free.

"Last thing — not work. How are *you* doing this week? Anything outside the deals I should know about?"

Bold the commitment, write it in the shared doc, and reference it next week. Following through on what was said last week is the fastest trust-builder on a distributed team.

The Coaching Plan / Cadence

Distributed coaching dies without a rhythm, because nothing on a remote team happens by accident. Lock a 30/60/90 for a new remote rep, and a steady weekly loop for everyone.

The repeating loop, never broken:

flowchart LR A[Observe: pull Gong/Chorus call] --> B[Diagnose: skill vs will vs system] B --> C[Coach: GROW 1:1 with timestamped evidence] C --> D[Practice: role-play + live reps] D --> E[Measure: leading indicators] E --> F[Async follow-up midweek] F --> A

The async follow-up between live 1:1s is the difference-maker for reps you never see. A 90-second Loom — "watched your call, loved the re-frame at minute 6, here's one tweak" — keeps the coaching alive across the seven-day gap and signals you're paying attention even when you're not on a call together.

Drills & Role-Play

You can't tap a remote rep on the shoulder, so make practice a scheduled, recorded ritual.

What to Measure

For remote teams, leading indicators matter more than ever because you can't eyeball effort. Track behavior change, not just quota:

The one metric that proves remote coaching is working: commitment-to-evidence follow-through. If the thing they said they'd do last week shows up in this week's recordings, your system works.

Common Mistakes Managers Make

FAQ

How do I build trust with a rep I've never met in person? Consistency beats charisma. Show up to the same 1:1 slot every week, watch their calls before each one, and follow through on every commitment you both make. Remote rapport is the compound interest of small, reliable touches — plus one genuine non-work question per call.

Do I need call-recording software to coach remote reps? Practically, yes. Gong, Chorus, or Salesloft recordings are the remote substitute for sitting next to someone. Without recorded calls you're coaching guesses. If budget is the blocker, start with reps recording themselves on video and sharing clips.

How often should I have 1:1s with remote reps? Weekly live, minimum, plus one async midweek check-in. New hires need daily lightweight touches for the first 30 days. The cadence matters more than the length — predictability is what isolated reps crave.

What if a remote rep goes quiet and disengaged? Treat it as a will-and-connection problem, not a performance one, until proven otherwise. Open with a human check-in, not a metrics review. If genuine disengagement persists after you've rebuilt connection and clarified purpose, it may be a wrong-fit issue that needs a candid conversation — not more coaching.

How do I coach without micromanaging a remote rep? Coach the skill and the outcome, not the hours. Review recorded calls and CRM results, not green dots or login times. Give them a self-grading scorecard so the rep drives their own development and you guide rather than monitor.

Can AI tools coach remote reps for me? AI call-scoring in Gong and Chorus flags moments and patterns at scale, which is a force-multiplier for a distributed team. But it surfaces *what* to coach — the trust, judgment, and the human GROW conversation are still yours. Use AI to find the moment; you still have the conversation.

Bottom Line

The one move that matters: make the work visible, then coach the person. Pull recorded calls before every 1:1, run a question-driven GROW conversation off time-stamped evidence, and keep the relationship alive with an async touch between live calls. For reps you never see in person, trust is built through relentless consistency — same slot, real evidence, kept commitments — not through being in the same room.

Sources

*Sales coaching for remote reps — how to coach salespeople you never see in person, sales manager coaching guide for distributed teams, remote rep coaching framework, async 1:1 cadence, and a remote sales coaching playbook for 2027.*

Keep reading
Was this helpful?  
⌬ Apply this in PULSE
Pulse CheckScore reps on the metrics that matter
Related in the library
More from the library
sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep who blames marketing for bad leads?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps to improve their win rate?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep to trade concessions instead of caving?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you balance coaching and accountability in a 1:1?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps using Gong or Chorus call recordings?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you measure whether your sales coaching is working?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps across multiple time zones?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you keep remote reps accountable without micromanaging?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps to use stage exit criteria correctly?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you document and track coaching across your team?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps to close on value, not price?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep to sound natural on the phone, not scripted?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach a rep who only works inbound leads?sales-coaching · coachingHow do you coach reps to build a mutual action plan with buyers?