How do you run a weekly 1:1 that actually improves rep performance?
Direct Answer
Stop treating your weekly 1:1 as a status update. The single highest-leverage move you can make is to replace the "what's happening" review with a structured coaching conversation that diagnoses the rep's specific skill gap, then prescribes a drill they will practice before the next call. Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) as your conversation skeleton, and come armed with data from your conversation-intelligence tool (Gong, Chorus) or CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot).
If you don't have a diagnosis before the call, you're just cheerleading. By 2027, with AI call-coaching tools surfacing every objection and pause, you have no excuse for running a 1:1 without a specific, measurable skill gap to close. This article gives you the exact script, the diagnostic tree, and the cadence to make every 1:1 a performance lever.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Most managers run 1:1s that are reactive. The rep says "I'm struggling with procurement," and the manager says "Try sending a case study." That's advice, not coaching. The root cause of poor rep performance is rarely a single thing.
You need a diagnostic decision tree to separate **skill vs. Will vs. Knowledge vs.
System** issues. A knowledge gap (they don't know the product) needs a different intervention than a skill gap (they can't handle objections) or a will gap (they're burned out). A system gap (bad lead routing) is your problem to fix, not theirs.
Use this decision tree during your 1:1 prep. Pull a recording of their last three calls from Gong or Chorus. Listen for the moment the deal stalled. Then walk this tree:
Real example: A rep says "I keep losing at the legal stage." You pull a Gong snippet. The rep never asked for the legal team's timeline or decision criteria. That's a knowledge gap (they don't know the legal buying process) and a skill gap (they can't run a multi-threaded discovery).
Your 1:1 must address both, not just "send more emails."
The Coaching Conversation — Verbatim GROW Scripts
Your 1:1 should have a 15-minute coaching block (not the whole hour). Use the GROW model with a specific, recent deal as the anchor. Here's the exact script for each stage:
G — Goal (2 minutes)
"Let's pick one deal from last week that you wish had gone differently. What's the one outcome you would change if you could redo that meeting? Be specific — not 'I want to win more,' but 'I want to get the CFO to agree to a technical demo by Friday.'"
R — Reality (3 minutes)
"Show me the call recording from that meeting. What did you actually say when the CFO said 'We're happy with our current vendor'? Play the 30-second clip. Now, what did they say next? What did you miss?"
O — Options (5 minutes)
"You had two paths: either reframe the value or ask a discovery question. Let's list three things you could have said instead. I'll write them down.
Option one: 'What would it take for you to consider a change?' Option two: 'What's the one thing your current vendor doesn't do that costs you time?' Option three: 'Can we do a 10-minute technical benchmark?' Which one feels most natural to you?"
W — Will (5 minutes)
"Great. You're going to use option two on your next call with a similar buyer. Let's role-play it right now.
I'll be the CFO. You have 3 minutes. Ready?
Go. ... Now, what felt awkward? Say it again, slower.
Again. Now, you're going to record yourself doing this drill three times before your next meeting. Send me the recording.
Same time next week, we review."
Key principle: You are not solving the problem for them. You are building their muscle memory to solve it themselves. The Will step must include a specific, measurable practice commitment — not "I'll try harder," but "I will run this objection-handling script on three discovery calls this week."
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
A weekly 1:1 alone won't improve performance. You need a closed-loop coaching cadence that connects the 1:1 to the field. Here's the loop:
Cadence specifics:
- Monday: Rep sends you their top 3 deals from last week with a 2-minute Gong clip of the key moment.
- Tuesday: You review clips and CRM data. You diagnose the gap using the decision tree.
- Wednesday: 30-minute 1:1. First 10 minutes = pipeline review (status only). Next 15 minutes = GROW coaching on the one gap. Last 5 minutes = role-play drill + commitment.
- Thursday/Friday: Rep runs the drill on live calls, records it, sends you the clip.
- Next Monday: You review the clip. If they improved, you move to the next gap. If not, you re-diagnose.
Tool integration: Use Salesforce or HubSpot to track the drill completion. Create a custom field called "Coaching Drill This Week" and a checkbox "Drill Recorded." If the box isn't checked by Friday, the 1:1 is wasted.
Drills & Role-Play
Your 1:1 must include live role-play, not just discussion. Here are three drills that work for the most common gaps in 2027:
1. The "Multi-Threading" Drill (for knowledge/skill gaps)
- Scenario: Rep is stuck talking to one champion. You play the champion. Rep must ask three questions to identify the other 4 members of the buying committee.
- Script: "Who else needs to sign off? What does the legal team care about? What does IT need to see? How do we get a meeting with each of them?"
- Success metric: Rep names 3+ stakeholders and schedules a group meeting.
2. The "Objection Reframe" Drill (for skill gaps)
- Scenario: You play the CFO who says "Your price is 20% higher than our current vendor."
- Script: Rep must use the Challenger Sale technique: reframe the cost as an investment, then ask a discovery question about the risk of staying.
- Success metric: Rep reframes without discounting, and gets the CFO to agree to a business case review.
3. The "Close the Next Step" Drill (for will gaps)
- Scenario: Rep is afraid to ask for a commitment. You play a warm prospect.
- Script: Rep must say "Based on what we discussed, the next step is a technical demo with your team. Can we schedule that for next Tuesday at 10 AM?"
- Success metric: Rep asks for a specific date/time, not a vague "let's follow up."
Pro tip: Record the role-play on your phone or in Gong. Play it back. The rep will hear their own hesitation or filler words. That's the coaching moment.
What to Measure
You cannot improve what you don't measure. Track these three metrics for each rep, updated weekly:
- Drill Completion Rate — Did they record and submit the drill? Target: 100%.
- Skill Transfer Score — On a scale of 1-5, how well did they execute the drill in the live call vs. The role-play? Use Gong's scoring or your own judgment. Target: 4+ within 3 weeks.
- Deal Progression Rate — After the drill, did the deal move to the next stage within 7 days? Track in Salesforce or Clari. Target: 70%+.
Example: Rep A has a 100% drill completion rate but a 2/5 skill transfer score. That means the drill is wrong or the rep isn't practicing correctly. Re-diagnose. Rep B has a 4/5 score but only 50% completion. That's a will gap — they're not doing the work. Address motivation or accountability.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Talking too much. If you're talking more than 40% of the 1:1, you're not coaching. You're lecturing. Stop. Ask questions.
- Coaching without data. If you don't have a Gong clip or a Salesforce report, you're guessing. Use the tool.
- Skipping the practice step. Telling a rep "try harder" is not coaching. Role-play the exact scenario. Make them say it out loud.
- Treating every rep the same. A 10-year vet needs different coaching than a new hire. Use the diagnostic tree to customize.
- Focusing on pipeline, not skill. Pipeline reviews are for Tuesday. The 1:1 is for skill building. Don't mix them.
- Not following up. If you don't check the drill recording, the rep learns you don't care. Accountability is everything.
FAQ
How long should a weekly 1:1 be? 30 minutes, maximum. The first 10 minutes are for pipeline status (keep it tight). The next 15 minutes are the GROW coaching block. The last 5 minutes are role-play and commitment. If you need more time, you're doing too much status. Cut the status.
What if the rep has multiple gaps? Pick one. The biggest gap that's costing them the most revenue. Focus on that for 3-4 weeks until the skill transfer score hits 4+. Then move to the next. Trying to fix everything at once fixes nothing.
How do I handle a will gap (burnout/motivation)? First, diagnose honestly. If the rep is burned out, coaching won't fix it. Have a separate conversation about workload, time off, or role fit. Do not mask a will gap with a skill drill. Use the decision tree early.
Should I use the same script for every rep? No. The GROW framework is the same, but the specific questions and drill must match the rep's gap. A senior rep with a skill gap needs a different drill than a junior rep with a knowledge gap. Customize the drill.
How do I measure if the 1:1 is working? Look at the rep's deal progression rate and skill transfer score over 4 weeks. If both are flat, your coaching is not effective. Also ask the rep: "On a scale of 1-10, how much did this week's 1:1 help you win a deal?" Track that score.
What if the rep doesn't record their calls? Then you cannot coach effectively. Make call recording a non-negotiable. Use Gong, Chorus, or Salesloft to auto-record. If they refuse, that's a will gap — address it in a separate conversation. No recording, no coaching.
How do I coach a remote/hybrid team? The same way, but use video for the role-play. Share your screen, play the recording, then do the drill over Zoom. The medium doesn't change the method. In 2027, hybrid teams are the norm. Your coaching must be just as structured.
Bottom Line
A weekly 1:1 that improves rep performance is not a status update — it's a diagnostic-driven, practice-heavy coaching session that closes one specific skill gap per cycle. Use the GROW model, a decision tree to separate skill from will, and a closed-loop cadence that includes live role-play and recorded follow-up.
By 2027, with AI tools surfacing every gap, you have no excuse for running a 1:1 that doesn't move the needle. **Stop talking. Start diagnosing.
Make them practice.**
Sources
- Gong Labs research: The #1 mistake in sales coaching
- HBR: The GROW model for coaching
- Sales Hacker: How to run a 1:1 that actually works
- RAIN Group: The 5 types of sales coaching gaps
- Sandler Training: The difference between advice and coaching
- Challenger/Gartner: The skill vs. Will matrix
- Winning by Design: The coaching cadence for RevOps
- Salesforce Blog: How to use CRM data for coaching
- CSO Insights: Metrics that matter in sales coaching
*Sales coaching for weekly 1:1s — how to coach reps, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
