How do you coach a rep whose demos are technically strong but boring?
Direct Answer
Coach the engagement skill, not the product knowledge — a technically strong but boring demo means the rep is presenting features instead of running a conversation, so your job is to retrain how they open, sequence, and involve the buyer rather than what they know. The fastest move is to make the demo interactive and story-led: anchor every screen to the prospect's stated pain, cut the click-tour, and force two-way dialogue with deliberate pause-and-ask checkpoints.
Diagnose first to be sure this is a skill gap (presentation craft) and not a will or system problem, then run a focused 30/60/90 plan built on call review, the GROW model, and rapid role-play. This is especially common with sales engineers and ex-technical reps in 2027, where AI call-coaching tools like Gong make the engagement-vs-monologue gap measurable in minutes.
Below is the manager's playbook to fix it.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
A boring demo is almost never a knowledge problem — these reps usually know the product cold. That is exactly the trap. Deep product fluency creates a feature-dump reflex: the rep equates thoroughness with value and treats the demo as a download instead of a discovery-driven conversation.
Before you coach, root-cause which of four drivers is in play, because the fix is different for each.
- Skill gap (most common here): The rep can't structure a narrative, doesn't know how to create tension, never asks engaging questions, and defaults to a linear click-tour. This is coachable and the focus of this guide.
- Will / mindset: The rep believes "the product sells itself" or feels showmanship is beneath them. Coachable, but you must shift the belief first or the skill drills won't stick.
- Knowledge of the buyer (not the product): The rep over-indexes on technical depth because they never did real discovery, so they have nothing to anchor the story to. Fix discovery upstream and the demo improves automatically.
- System / fit: Bad demo environment, no demo script library, or — honestly — a rep miscast as a closer who belongs in a sales-engineer role. Coaching won't fix a casting error.
The diagnosis tree routes you from the symptom to the real cause.
If you land on skill gap or will/mindset, keep coaching. If you land on casting, have a different, honest conversation about a sales-engineer track.
The Coaching Conversation
Run this as a 1:1 using the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will. Do not open with "your demos are boring." Open with evidence and a question, then let the rep self-diagnose. Pull a recorded call from Gong or Chorus and watch a two-minute clip together first.
Goal — set the target together. Say verbatim:
"I want to spend this 1:1 on demos, because I think it's the highest-leverage thing for your win rate this quarter. When a demo goes perfectly, what does the buyer *do* differently by the end?"
Let them answer. You're steering them toward "they get excited / they bring more people / they ask about next steps" — outcomes, not feature coverage.
Reality — surface the gap with the recording, not your opinion. Play the clip, then ask:
"Watch the first three minutes with me. How much of that was you talking versus the buyer? … In your last five demos, when was the last time the buyer interrupted you because they were excited?"
The talk-ratio data does the confronting for you. Gong Labs research has repeatedly shown top performers run closer to a balanced talk-to-listen ratio while losers monologue. Let the silence sit.
Options — co-create the fix. Ask:
"If you couldn't show a single screen for the first five minutes, how would you make them care? What's the one customer story that maps to their pain?"
This forces story-first thinking. Then introduce the structural move:
"Here's a pattern I want you to try: tee up every screen with the pain it kills before you click anything. 'You told me renewals slip through the cracks — watch what happens here.' Then click. Then stop and ask 'how would your team use that?' before moving on."
Will — lock the commitment. Close with:
"Pick your next demo. What's one thing you'll do differently, and how will I know you did it? I'll review the recording Friday."
Naming the next demo and the review date is what makes it stick. Vague encouragement does not change behavior.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Don't try to fix everything at once. Sequence the skill over 30/60/90 days and review one recorded demo per week.
- Days 0–30 — Story before screen. One change only: every demo opens with a customer story tied to the buyer's stated pain, and every screen is teed up by pain before the click. Weekly call review scoring just this.
- Days 31–60 — Interaction. Add deliberate pause-and-ask checkpoints — the rep must stop after each major capability and ask the buyer a question. Target lifting buyer talk time. Add a "tension" move: surface the cost of *not* solving the problem.
- Days 61–90 — Command and choreography. The rep runs multi-stakeholder demos, reads the room, and adapts on the fly. Bring in Command of the Message or Challenger-style reframes so the demo teaches the buyer something new.
The weekly coaching loop never changes shape.
The discipline is one skill per cycle plus a real recording every week. Coaching that drifts back to "let's review the pipeline" stops changing demo behavior.
Drills & Role-Play
Skill is built in reps, not in 1:1 lectures. Run these between coaching sessions.
- The no-screen pitch. Rep delivers the value of the product for 90 seconds with the laptop closed. If they can't make you care without a screen, the demo will never land. Run weekly until it's natural.
- Tee-up drill. Give the rep five features. They must verbalize the pain-statement that precedes each one ("You said X breaks — watch this"). Score for specificity to a real buyer.
- Pause-and-ask role-play. You play the buyer and go silent. The rep must build in questions and react to your reactions. Coach them to stop demoing the second your body language shifts.
- Demo call review with a scorecard. Score recorded demos on five lines: discovery-anchored open, story used, talk ratio, interaction checkpoints, clear next step. Share the scorecard so the rep self-scores before you do.
- Steal-the-best. Have the rep watch the top closer's demo in Chorus or Gong and write down three moves to copy. Peer modeling beats manager lecture for technical reps who respect proof.
What to Measure
Coach to leading indicators, not just quota, because quota moves too slowly to tell you whether the demo is improving.
- Talk-to-listen ratio on demos (from Gong / Chorus) — the cleanest proxy for engagement; you want buyer talk time climbing.
- Number of buyer questions per demo — rising buyer curiosity is the goal.
- Demo-to-next-step conversion — did the demo create momentum (mutual action plan, more stakeholders, a proposal)?
- Multi-threading after the demo — engaged buyers bring colleagues; bored buyers go quiet.
- Stage-progression rate post-demo and eventual win rate as the lagging confirmation.
Track these in Salesforce or Clari so the behavior change shows up before the revenue does. If talk ratio and next-step rate climb, the coaching is working even if this quarter's number hasn't turned yet.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. Fixing one demo with the rep doesn't transfer. Name the repeatable behavior and review the *next* demo to prove transfer.
- Confronting with opinion instead of evidence. "Your demos are boring" triggers defense. A recording and a talk-ratio number let the rep self-diagnose.
- Trying to change everything at once. One skill per 30-day cycle. Story first, then interaction, then command.
- No follow-through. Set the review date in the 1:1 and actually watch the recording. Skipping the review teaches the rep the coaching was optional.
- Coaching every rep the same way. A technical rep needs proof and peer modeling; a green AE needs structure and scripts. Tailor it.
- Rescuing in live calls. Jumping in to save a boring demo robs the rep of the rep. Debrief after, don't take the wheel.
FAQ
How do I tell a rep their demos are boring without crushing them?
Don't say it. Show a recording and ask "how much of this was you talking?" The data does the confronting and the rep keeps their dignity. Frame the whole conversation as raising win rate, not fixing a flaw.
What if the rep insists the product is technical and demos have to be detailed?
Agree that depth matters, then reframe: depth on the *right* feature for *this* buyer beats covering everything. Have them watch a top closer's recorded demo for a technical product and count how few screens they actually showed.
How long until I see the demo improve?
Open-and-story changes show in the first two or three demos. Real interaction and command-level adaptation take 60–90 days of weekly review and role-play. Track talk ratio weekly so you see progress before the win rate moves.
Is this a coaching problem or a hiring mistake?
If the rep does real discovery, can tell a story when prompted, and believes engagement matters, it's a coachable skill gap. If they consistently prefer technical depth and dislike persuasion, they may be a better fit as a sales engineer — that's a casting conversation, not more coaching.
Should I use AI call-coaching tools for this?
Yes. In 2027, Gong and Chorus auto-flag talk ratio, monologue length, and engagement, which turns a subjective "boring" into objective coaching data. Use the tool for diagnosis and measurement; you still run the 1:1 and the role-play.
What's the single highest-leverage change?
Tee up every screen with the pain it solves before clicking. That one move converts a feature tour into a value conversation faster than anything else.
Bottom Line
A boring-but-technical demo is a presentation-skill gap, not a knowledge gap — the rep is dumping features instead of running a story-led, two-way conversation. Diagnose to confirm it's skill (not will, discovery, or casting), then coach one behavior per 30-day cycle starting with story-first, pain-before-screen, and prove transfer with weekly recorded-demo review and rising talk-to-listen ratio.
Use the GROW model in the 1:1, drill with no-screen pitches and pause-and-ask role-play, and let the data — not your opinion — do the confronting.
Sources
- Gong Labs — Talk-to-listen ratio and what top performers do differently
- Harvard Business Review — The Best Sales Reps Do What Others Don't
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching Best Practices
- Sales Hacker — How to Give a Great Product Demo
- Winning by Design — The SaaS Sales Method and demo framework
- Sandler — The GROW Coaching Model for Sales Managers
- MindTools — The GROW Model of Coaching
- Chorus.ai — Coaching reps with conversation intelligence
*Sales coaching for boring demos — how to coach a rep whose demos are technically strong but boring, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, demo engagement training, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
