How do you coach an SDR who books meetings that never show up?
Direct Answer
When an SDR books meetings that never show up, the problem is almost never the calendar — it's the quality of the commitment. No-shows are a symptom of weak qualification, a missing compelling reason to attend, and no human confirmation between booking and the call. The core move is to coach the rep to earn the meeting (tie it to a specific problem the prospect admitted), then lock it with a multi-touch confirmation sequence so the prospect re-commits at least twice before the meeting starts.
Fix the booking, not the reminder. A rep who books fewer, better meetings with a clear agenda and a same-day confirmation will beat a rep who books twice as many soft "sure, send an invite" meetings. This is a coachable skill, and in 2027 — with buyers double-booked and AI scheduling everywhere — confirmation discipline is what separates a 40% show rate from an 80% one.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Before you fix anything, find out *why* the meetings are evaporating. There are four root causes, and each needs a different response: a skill gap (the rep can't create urgency), a will gap (the rep games the activity metric and books junk to hit a number), a knowledge gap (the rep doesn't know how to qualify or set an agenda), or a system problem (bad routing, a broken booking link, leads handed off cold from marketing).
Coaching a will problem like a skill problem wastes everyone's time.
Listen to three or four of the rep's booking calls in Gong or Chorus before you draw a conclusion. The recording tells you instantly whether the prospect ever expressed a real problem or just agreed to get the rep off the phone.
The Coaching Conversation
Run this as a focused 1:1 using the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will). Keep it about the behavior, not the person — no-shows feel personal to a rep who's grinding the phones, so lead with curiosity.
Goal — "Your held-meeting rate is around 45% and team average is 75%. What do you think a realistic target is for the next 30 days, and what would it do for your pipeline if we got there?" Let the rep set the number; ownership beats assignment.
Reality — Play a recording. "Walk me through this call. At what point did the prospect actually agree they had a problem worth solving?" Most reps go quiet here, because the prospect never did.
Then: "When you booked the time, what reason did they have to show up Thursday at 2 versus deleting the invite?" This is the moment of insight — the meeting had no anchor.
Options — "What are two or three things you could do differently before you book, so the prospect is actually pulled to the meeting?" Coach toward: confirm a specific problem, set a one-line agenda tied to that problem, and name who should attend. Then on confirming: "What would a confirmation sequence look like that gets them to say yes a second time?"
Will — "Of those, which one will you commit to on every booking this week, and how do you want me to hold you to it?" End with one behavior, not five. Write it down. Reps change one habit at a time, not the whole motion at once.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Don't try to fix this in one conversation. Run a tight weekly loop for 30 days and watch the held-rate move. The cadence is observe → diagnose → coach → practice → measure → repeat, and it only works if you close the loop every week instead of coaching once and hoping.
Week 1 — Qualification: every booked meeting must reference a problem the prospect stated in their own words. Week 2 — Agenda: every invite carries a one-line, prospect-specific agenda, not "intro call." Week 3 — Confirmation: install the three-touch sequence (recap email within five minutes, value-add the day before, a short morning-of confirmation).
Week 4 — Independence: the rep self-scores their own calls and brings the two weakest to the 1:1. By the end you want the habit running without you.
Drills & Role-Play
Skills move in practice, not in feedback. Run these reps weekly:
- The 30-second close drill. The rep has to book a meeting and, in one sentence, state the problem, the agenda, and who should attend. If they can't say it crisply, the prospect can't feel it.
- Confirmation role-play. You play a distracted prospect who tries to push the meeting. The rep practices re-confirming value without sounding needy: "Totally understand things are busy — to make Thursday worth your 20 minutes, I'll come with the two benchmarks we discussed for teams your size. Does 2pm still work, or is the morning cleaner?"
- Call review scorecard. Score booking calls on a simple rubric: problem identified (Y/N), agenda set (Y/N), right attendee (Y/N), next step confirmed (Y/N). Three or four "yes" answers predict a show.
What to Measure
Quota is a lagging indicator; coach to the leading indicators that prove the behavior changed:
- Held-meeting rate (the headline number — meetings completed ÷ meetings booked).
- Qualified-meeting rate — meetings the AE accepts as real opportunities, not just attended.
- Confirmation compliance — percentage of bookings that ran the full three-touch sequence.
- Booking-call quality score from your rubric, tracked weekly.
If held-rate climbs but qualified-rate doesn't, you fixed attendance and still have a targeting problem. Watch both.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the reminder, not the booking. Adding a fourth automated email won't save a meeting the prospect never wanted. Fix why they agreed.
- Rewarding raw meetings booked. If comp or leaderboards reward booked meetings, you're paying for no-shows. Move the metric to held or qualified meetings and the behavior follows.
- Rescuing the rep. Don't jump on the confirmation calls yourself. Let them practice and own it, or the skill never transfers.
- Coaching everyone the same. A will problem needs accountability and a metric change; a skill problem needs reps and role-play. Diagnose first.
- One-and-done coaching. Behavior change takes a 30-day loop, not a single pep talk.
FAQ
What's a good show rate for SDR-booked meetings?
Most healthy B2B teams land between 70% and 85% held rate for outbound-booked meetings. Below 60% signals a qualification or confirmation problem, not bad luck. Inbound-booked meetings should run higher, often 85%+, because the prospect initiated.
Should the SDR or the AE confirm the meeting?
The SDR who booked it should own confirmation — they have the relationship and the context. The AE can add a short personal note the day before, which lifts show rates and warms the handoff. Both touching it is ideal for high-value meetings.
How many confirmation touches is too many?
Three is the sweet spot: a same-day recap, a value-add the day before, and a brief morning-of confirmation. More than that reads as desperate and trains the prospect to ignore you. Quality of each touch matters more than volume.
Is it a coaching problem or a lead-quality problem?
Both can be true. If no-shows cluster around one lead source or campaign, it's a routing or quality issue to raise with marketing. If they're spread across a single rep's calls while peers show 75%, it's coaching. Segment the data before you assign blame.
When is a no-show actually a disqualification?
If a prospect no-shows twice with no reschedule, treat it as a soft disqualification and recycle the lead — chasing it burns time the rep should spend on real pipeline. Coach reps to nurture, not stalk.
Bottom Line
No-shows are a booking problem disguised as a calendar problem. Coach the SDR to earn the meeting by anchoring it to a real, stated problem, then lock it with a short, human confirmation sequence — and change the metric you reward from *booked* to *held*. Do it as a 30-day loop with weekly call reviews, and the show rate moves on its own.
Sources
- Gong Labs — what makes prospects show up to meetings
- RAIN Group — sales prospecting research and best practices
- Harvard Business Review — the right way to hold people accountable
- Sales Hacker — SDR qualification and meeting quality
- Sandler — the up-front contract and setting expectations
- Winning by Design — SDR metrics and conversion benchmarks
*Sales coaching for SDR no-shows — how to coach an SDR who books meetings that never show up, a sales manager coaching guide to meeting confirmation, rep coaching framework for held-meeting rate, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
