How do you coach a rep to tailor the demo to the buyer's pain?
Direct Answer
To coach a rep to tailor the demo to the buyer's pain, stop coaching the demo itself and start coaching the discovery-to-demo handoff: require the rep to name the buyer's top two or three pains before they touch a single slide, then make them open the demo by restating those pains in the buyer's own words.
The core move is the "earn the right to show" rule — no feature gets demoed unless it maps to a pain the rep can quote from discovery. As a manager in 2027, you enforce this through call review (Gong or Chorus), a one-page demo prep canvas, and live role-play where the rep practices the "because you said…" bridge until it's automatic.
This is a skill-and-knowledge problem far more often than a will problem, so coach it with reps and reinforcement, not pressure.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
A rep who gives a generic, feature-dump demo is almost never lazy. Diagnose the root cause before you prescribe, because the fix for each is different.
- Skill gap: The rep did real discovery but can't translate pain into a tailored flow. They know the product, they just default to the "happy path" demo script. This is the most common and the most coachable.
- Knowledge gap: The rep doesn't know the product deeply enough to flex it, so they fall back on the canned sequence because it's the only path they're confident running.
- Will / mindset: The rep believes the demo is the show — "let me just show them everything cool" — and treats discovery as a checkbox. This is a belief problem, not a technique problem.
- System / process: Discovery was thin or skipped (inbound lead, AE inherited the deal, SDR booked a "demo" with no qualification), so there's no pain to tailor to. Here you fix the process, not the rep.
Notice that only one of these is solved by "do a better demo." If discovery was empty, more demo coaching just polishes a guess. Use the tree below to route from symptom to cause.
The Coaching Conversation
Run this in a 1:1 after reviewing a recorded demo together. Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) so the rep owns the insight instead of you lecturing. Keep the recording open so you're coaching evidence, not opinion.
Goal — set the target in their words. Open with: *"Before we watch this back — what was your plan for tailoring this demo to what you heard in discovery?"* If they can't answer, that's your diagnosis right there. Then: *"By the end of this session I want you to walk out with a repeatable way to open every demo with the buyer's pain.
Fair goal?"*
Reality — make them see it, don't tell them. Play the demo opening. Then ask the key questions: "What pains did you actually hear in discovery on this deal?" Let them list them. Then: "Show me where in the demo you connected what you showed to one of those pains." The silence does the coaching for you.
Follow with: *"If you were the VP of Operations watching this, at what minute would you have known this was built for you specifically?"*
Options — generate the fix together. Ask: "What's one thing you could have said in the first ninety seconds to make this demo feel like it was built for them?" Coach toward the bridge phrase: *"Earlier you told me [pain in their words] — let me show you exactly how we handle that first."* Then: "Which two pains were the highest-stakes for the economic buyer, and how would you re-order the demo to lead with those?" The reorder is the whole skill — leading with the pain that closes, not the feature you like.
Will — lock the commitment. Close with: *"What will you do differently on your next demo, and how will I know you did it?"* Get a specific commitment: a written demo prep canvas before the next call, an opening that quotes a discovery pain, and one feature deliberately cut because it didn't map to a pain.
End with: *"I'll review the recording Thursday. I'm looking for one thing — did you earn the right to show every screen?"*
The reframe script for a will / belief problem is different. When a rep thinks the demo is the show, say: *"The demo isn't where you win — it's where you lose. Buyers disqualify you for showing things they don't care about. Your job is to make them think 'how did they know that's exactly my problem,' not 'wow, lots of buttons.'"*
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Tailoring is a habit, so build a 30/60/90 loop rather than a one-off pep talk.
- Days 1–30 — Build the mechanism. Co-create a one-page demo prep canvas: top 3 buyer pains (in their words), the persona/role, the one feature that maps to each pain, the "earn the right" opening line, and the one thing to deliberately NOT show. Require it submitted before every demo. Review two recorded demos per week together.
- Days 31–60 — Transfer ownership. The rep self-scores their own demos against a tailoring scorecard before your 1:1. You spot-check. Run one live role-play per week with a curveball pain. Pull in a top performer to demo the same persona so the rep sees the bridge done well.
- Days 61–90 — Reinforce and measure. Move to exception coaching — you only review demos that scored low on tailoring or that lost. Track demo-to-next-step conversion. Graduate the rep to coaching a newer rep, which cements the skill.
Drills & Role-Play
- The "earn the right" gauntlet. You play the buyer and call out a feature: "Show me reporting." The rep must respond, *"Before I do — you mentioned [pain]; is reporting tied to that?"* They practice refusing to demo features that don't map. Run five rounds, escalating.
- Cold-open role-play. Give the rep three discovery pains on a card. They have 90 seconds to open a demo that quotes all three before showing anything. Score on whether the buyer-persona feels seen.
- Call review with a scorecard. In Gong or Chorus, both watch a recorded demo and independently mark: Did they restate a pain in the first 2 minutes? Did every screen map to a pain? Did they cut anything? Compare scores — the gap is the lesson.
- The reorder drill. Take the rep's standard demo flow and a real deal's pains; they must re-sequence the demo live to lead with the highest-stakes pain. Tests whether they can flex, not just recite.
- Win/loss tape study. Watch one won and one lost demo back-to-back. The rep articulates what tailoring looked like in the win. Self-discovered lessons stick.
What to Measure
Coach leading indicators, not just quota, so you see change before the number moves.
- Demo-to-next-step conversion rate — the cleanest signal that demos resonate.
- Tailoring scorecard pass rate — percentage of reviewed demos where the rep restated a pain in the first two minutes and mapped every screen.
- Features-shown-per-demo trend — should go *down* as tailoring improves; fewer, sharper screens.
- Time-to-first-pain-mention in the demo (pulled from Gong call analytics) — target under two minutes.
- Multi-threaded demo rate — are they tailoring to multiple committee members, a must in 2027's larger buying groups.
- Stage-2-to-Stage-3 velocity — tailored demos shorten the gap between demo and proposal.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the demo, not the discovery. The demo is only as tailored as the discovery was deep. If pains are thin, fix questioning first.
- Rescuing the rep on calls. Jumping in to tailor the demo for them teaches dependence. Debrief after, don't co-pilot the demo.
- Coaching to the deal instead of the skill. "Here's what to show Acme" wins one demo; "here's how to map any feature to any pain" wins the next fifty.
- No follow-through. One great 1:1 with zero recorded-call review next week is theater. The cadence is the coaching.
- Coaching everyone the same. A knowledge gap needs product certification; a will problem needs a belief reframe. Same drill for both wastes everyone's time.
- Confusing a coaching problem with a hiring problem. If a rep can't internalize buyer empathy after a full 90-day loop, that may be a wrong-fit hire or a PIP conversation, not more role-play.
FAQ
How do you coach tailoring when discovery was done by someone else (SDR or inherited deal)? Coach the rep to run a "demo discovery" mini-step: a 10-minute confirm-and-deepen call before the demo, or the first 5 minutes of the demo itself. Script it: *"Before I show anything, I want to make sure I show you the right things — walk me through what's actually broken today."* No tailoring is possible without owned pains.
What if the rep insists buyers asked for a full feature tour? Reframe with the rep: buyers ask for a tour because they don't trust you've understood them yet. Coach the line: *"I could show you everything, but that's a waste of your time — let me show you the three things tied to what you told me, then you tell me what else to open."* Earning trust beats appeasing the request.
How is tailoring different for a buying committee versus a single buyer? Coach the rep to assign each pain to a person and sequence the demo by stakeholder. The CFO's pain leads if she's the economic buyer; the end-user's pain gets its own segment. In 2027's 6-to-10-person committees, an untailored demo loses the room.
Practice "for the operations side… And for finance…" transitions.
Is this a skill problem or a will problem, and how do I tell? Run the diagnosis: ask the rep to map features to pains on a deal they lost. If they *can* but didn't, it's will or habit — reframe and add scorecard accountability. If they *can't*, it's skill or knowledge — drill the bridge and certify product depth.
How long until tailored demos show up in the numbers? Expect the tailoring scorecard pass rate to move within 2–3 weeks of focused reps, and demo-to-next-step conversion to follow inside a 60–90 day loop. If you see zero movement after a full loop with strong follow-through, reassess fit rather than adding more drills.
Can AI call tools coach this for me? Gong and Chorus flag talk ratios, feature mentions, and discovery-to-demo gaps, which makes diagnosis faster and gives you the tape. They don't replace the 1:1 reframe or the role-play — AI surfaces the moment; you still coach the human through it.
Bottom Line
The one move is "earn the right to show": no feature reaches the screen unless it maps to a pain the rep can quote from discovery, and every demo opens by restating the buyer's top pains in their own words. Diagnose whether it's skill, knowledge, will, or a broken discovery process first — then coach with recorded-call review, a demo prep canvas, and live role-play on a 30/60/90 loop.
Measure demo-to-next-step conversion and tailoring scorecard pass rate, and be honest when the gap is a hiring problem, not a coaching one.
Sources
- Gong Labs — What the best sales demos do differently
- HBR — The New Science of Sales Force Productivity
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching: The Ultimate Guide
- Sales Hacker — How to Give a Sales Demo That Closes
- Winning by Design — The SaaS Sales Method
- Sandler — Coaching Salespeople for Performance
- Challenger / Gartner — Teaching, Tailoring, and Taking Control
- The GROW Model — MindTools coaching framework
*Sales coaching for tailoring the demo to buyer pain — how to coach a rep to tailor the demo, sales manager coaching guide, demo discovery coaching framework, and a rep coaching playbook for 2027.*
