How do you run a sales 1:1 that's coaching, not a status update?
Direct Answer
To run a sales 1:1 that coaches instead of status-checks, stop asking "where is this deal?" and start asking "what's the rep working on becoming?" The core move is a rep-owned agenda: the rep brings the deals, the questions, and the call recordings; you bring questions, not answers.
Pull pipeline data from your CRM *before* the meeting so you never burn live time on a status update, then spend the 30 minutes on one skill or one stuck deal using the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will). A status update is a manager extracting information; a coaching 1:1 is a manager developing a person.
This guide is the manager's playbook for making that switch — including the verbatim question set, the agenda, and what to measure in 2027.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Most 1:1s drift into status updates for a reason, and the fix depends on the cause. Before you redesign the meeting, diagnose why it became a forecast call. Run the symptom through skill vs. Will vs. Knowledge vs. System.
- System problem (most common): Your forecast process is broken, so you use the 1:1 to scrape pipeline numbers because there's no other reliable source. The fix is upstream — get Clari or Salesforce dashboards clean so the data lives in the tool, not in the rep's head.
- Skill problem (yours): You don't have a coaching framework, so you default to the only thing you know — interrogating the pipeline. The fix is a structured agenda and a question set.
- Will problem (the rep's): The rep treats the 1:1 as an audit to survive, so they prepare a polished status report and dodge real coaching. The fix is rebuilding trust and handing them the agenda.
- Knowledge problem: Neither of you has named what "good" looks like for this rep this quarter, so the conversation has nowhere to go except the deal list.
If the box you land in is SYSTEM or WILL/TRUST, do not try to coach harder — you'll be coaching over a foundation that isn't there. Fix the data plumbing and the trust first.
The Coaching Conversation
Here is the verbatim 1:1 question set. The structure follows the GROW model, the most durable coaching framework in sales management, popularized by Sir John Whitmore. Your job is to ask and shut up. Aim for the rep talking 70% of the time. Bold questions are the ones to copy-paste.
Open by handing over control (the trust reset):
- "This is your meeting, not mine. I already looked at your pipeline in Salesforce, so we're not spending time on status. What's the one thing you most want help with today?"
Goal — what does the rep want to get better at:
- "What does a great version of you look like 90 days from now?"
- "Of everything on your plate, what would move the needle most if you nailed it?"
Reality — get them to self-assess before you weigh in:
- "Walk me through the last call on that deal — what actually happened, in their words and yours?"
- "Where do you think you lost control of that conversation?"
- "On a scale of 1–10, how confident are you in the next step, and what would make it a 9?"
Options — generate paths without rescuing:
- "If I weren't here, what would you try next?"
- "What's one thing you haven't tried because it feels uncomfortable?"
- "Who on the team handles this well — what would they do?"
Will — lock commitment and accountability:
- "What exactly will you do before our next 1:1, and by when?"
- "What might get in the way, and how will you handle it?"
- "How do you want me to follow up on this?"
The discipline that makes this coaching and not telling: when the rep asks "what should I do?", resist answering. Say, "I have an idea, but I want yours first — what's your read?" A rep who solves it with your questions owns the solution; a rep who's handed the answer forgets it by Thursday.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
A single great 1:1 changes nothing. Coaching is a loop you run every week. Keep one standing 30-minute weekly 1:1 per rep, protect it like a customer meeting, and never cancel it for a forecast call. Layer a monthly skills review and a quarterly development plan on top.
- Weekly (30 min): Rep-owned agenda. One deal OR one skill — not both. Review one call recording from Gong or Chorus together.
- Monthly (45 min): Zoom out. Review the leading indicators, update the one skill in focus, listen to a "best call / worst call" pair.
- Quarterly: Reset the development goal, refresh the 30/60/90 for ramping or stretch reps, and recalibrate against quota reality.
The loop only works if the rep, not you, prepares for it. Send a standing pre-work template: "Bring one deal you're stuck on, one call recording you want eyes on, and one skill you want to sharpen." If they show up empty-handed twice, that's a will signal worth a separate conversation.
Drills & Role-Play
Coaching that stops at conversation is advice. Make the rep *do* the thing in the room.
- Call review with a scorecard: Pick one call from Gong. Mute the audio after the buyer's objection and ask, "What would you say next?" Then play what they actually said. The gap is the coaching.
- Live role-play: You play the skeptical economic buyer; the rep runs the next-meeting open. Run it twice — once their way, once after one piece of feedback — so they feel the delta.
- The "tomorrow's call" rehearsal: Before a big meeting, rehearse the first 90 seconds and the close. Reps blow real revenue on openings they never practiced.
- Objection rep-rounds: Fire three real objections from this week's deals; the rep responds in 15 seconds each. Repetition builds reflex; reflex closes deals.
Anchor drills to a named methodology so feedback is consistent — MEDDIC for qualification gaps, Challenger for reframing a stuck buyer, SPIN for discovery depth.
What to Measure
Quota is a lagging indicator — by the time it moves or misses, the coaching window is closed. Track leading indicators that prove behavior is changing now:
- Coaching coverage: % of reps with a logged 1:1 this week, and % of 1:1s that produced a committed action (not a status recap).
- Skill-specific conversion: If you coached discovery, watch the discovery-to-demo conversion rate, not total bookings.
- Call quality scores: Talk-ratio, question count, and next-step-set rate from Gong or Chorus — these shift within weeks.
- Stage progression velocity: Are coached deals moving faster, or just sitting?
- Ramp time: For new reps, days-to-first-deal and days-to-quota trending down.
Pick one leading metric per rep per quarter tied to their development goal. If you can't name the metric that should move, you don't yet have a coaching focus — you have a status update.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Rescuing the rep. You hear a stuck deal and immediately tell them what to do. It feels helpful; it builds dependence. Ask first, always.
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. Saving this one deal helps the quarter. Building the skill helps every future deal. Spend at least half your time on the transferable skill.
- No follow-through. You agree on an action and never check it. Open the next 1:1 with "Last week you committed to X — how'd it go?" Accountability is the coaching.
- Coaching everyone the same. A top performer needs stretch challenges; a ramping SDR needs reps and reassurance. One agenda template, different focus.
- Letting it become a forecast call again. The moment you ask "so where's the Acme deal?" first, you've reset the meeting to a status update. Pull that data beforehand.
- Confusing a performance problem with a coaching problem. If a rep won't do the work after honest coaching and clear commitments, that's a will/fit issue that needs a documented plan — not more 1:1s.
FAQ
How is a coaching 1:1 different from a forecast call? A forecast call is about the *deals* and serves the manager's number; a coaching 1:1 is about the *rep* and serves their development. Run them as separate meetings. Pull pipeline data from Salesforce or Clari before the 1:1 so coaching time is never spent on status.
Who should own the 1:1 agenda? The rep. A rep-owned agenda is the single biggest lever for shifting from status to coaching. The rep brings the deals, questions, and call recordings; the manager brings questions and accountability. Send a standing pre-work template so they always arrive prepared.
What if the rep just wants me to tell them what to do? Resist. Say "I have an idea, but I want yours first." A solution the rep generates sticks; one you hand over evaporates. Telling is faster today and slower forever — it trains dependence instead of judgment.
How long and how often should sales 1:1s be? Thirty minutes, weekly, protected like a customer meeting. Layer a monthly skills review and a quarterly development reset on top. Never cancel the weekly for a forecast call — that signals coaching is optional.
How do I coach when I have no time and a big team? Use AI call-coaching. Let Gong or Chorus surface the calls that need attention, review one recording per rep per week instead of riding along live, and focus your 30 minutes on the single highest-leverage skill. Coverage beats depth when time is scarce.
What if coaching isn't working at all? Diagnose honestly. If it's a skill gap, keep coaching. If the rep won't commit or follow through after clear expectations, it's a will or fit issue that belongs in a documented performance plan — not endless 1:1s. Coaching develops people who want to improve; it doesn't replace accountability.
Bottom Line
The one move that turns a status update into a coaching 1:1 is the rep-owned agenda backed by pre-pulled pipeline data: get the numbers from Salesforce or Clari before the meeting, hand the agenda to the rep, and spend the 30 minutes asking GROW questions about one skill or one stuck deal.
Coach the rep, not the report — and follow up on every commitment so the loop actually compounds.
Sources
- HBR — The Best Sales Managers Don't Chase Revenue
- Gong Labs — Sales Coaching Research
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching Best Practices
- Sales Hacker — How to Run an Effective Sales 1:1
- Sandler — The GROW Coaching Model
- Winning by Design — Sales Coaching Framework
- Salesforce — Sales Coaching Guide
*Sales coaching for the sales 1:1 — how to coach a rep in a 1:1 instead of a status update, sales manager coaching guide, rep-owned agenda framework, and a coaching 1:1 playbook for 2027.*
