How do you coach a rep through a performance improvement plan?
Direct Answer
You coach a rep through a performance improvement plan (PIP) by separating the document from the coaching: HR owns the legal record, you own the development. Diagnose whether the gap is skill, will, knowledge, or system before the PIP starts, then run a short, intense coaching cadence against SMART milestones the rep can actually hit.
Be honest that a PIP is a real fork in the road, coach with dignity and full effort to help them pass, and measure leading behaviors weekly so neither of you is surprised on the final day. The core move: make the PIP a coaching sprint with clear metrics, not a paperwork countdown to termination.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
A rep ends up on a PIP for very different reasons, and the coaching is only effective if you correctly name the root cause. The biggest mistake managers make is treating every underperformer the same. Before you write a single milestone, sort the gap into one of four buckets: skill (they don't know how to run discovery), will (they know how but aren't applying effort), knowledge (they don't understand the product, ICP, or comp plan), or system/territory (a stacked patch, broken routing, or a comp plan that punishes the right behavior).
A PIP is the right tool only for a fixable skill or will gap inside the rep's control. If the real problem is a dead territory or a CRM that doesn't route leads, a PIP is both unfair and useless — you fix the system, not the person. Equally honest: if the rep is a clear wrong-fit hire with no path to the bar, more coaching won't change physics, and stringing them along is its own cruelty.
The Coaching Conversation
The opening conversation sets the tone for the entire plan. Run it in a private room, not over Slack, and partner with HR on the document before you ever say the words "performance improvement plan." Use the GROW model — Goal, Reality, Options, Will — to keep it a coaching dialogue instead of a verdict.
Open with honesty and dignity:
"I want to be straight with you because you deserve that. Your numbers have been below the bar for two quarters, and we're at the point where I have to put you on a formal performance improvement plan. I want to be just as clear about the other half: my job for the next 60 days is to help you pass it.
I'm in this with you. Let's build the plan together."
Goal — make the bar concrete:
"Here's exactly what passing looks like: $X in closed-won by day 60, and along the way, 12 qualified discovery calls a week and four new opportunities created. Does that target feel achievable to you, or do you see a reason it isn't?"
Reality — get their read, not just yours:
"Walk me through what you think is actually getting in the way. Be honest — I'd rather know the real blocker than the polite one. When you lost the Henderson deal, where did it slip?"
Options — coach, don't prescribe everything:
"What's one change in how you run discovery that you think would move your conversion? ... Good. Let's add a second: I want to ride along on two live calls a week and give you feedback the same day."
Will — lock the commitment:
"On a scale of one to ten, how committed are you to hitting these milestones? ... What would make it a nine? Let's solve for that now."
Bold the close so it can't be misheard: "This plan is real, the bar is real, and so is my commitment to coaching you to clear it. We meet every Monday and Thursday for the next 60 days."
The Coaching Plan / Cadence — The PIP Timeline
A PIP without a coaching cadence is just a countdown clock. Structure the plan as a 30/60 sprint (or 30/60/90 if your HR policy allows) with weekly checkpoints, not a single review at the end.
- Week 0 (setup): Co-sign the PIP with HR present. Set SMART milestones — specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound. Schedule every 1:1 in advance so they can't quietly slip.
- Days 1–30 (skill-build): Two coaching sessions a week. Each one reviews a real Gong or Chorus call recording, runs one drill, and ends with a single committed action. Front-load the teaching here.
- Days 31–60 (application): Shift from teaching to verifying. The rep runs the play solo; you observe and confirm the behavior is sticking. Weekly written check-in on milestone status — no surprises.
- Final review: Decide against the milestones you wrote, not against your mood that week. Document either outcome with HR.
Drills & Role-Play
Coaching during a PIP has to produce visible reps, not pep talks. Build muscle with specific, repeatable drills:
- Call-review scorecard: Pull one Gong recording per session and score it against a five-point rubric — opening, discovery depth, qualification (MEDDIC), objection handling, and clear next step. Make the rep self-score first, then compare.
- Discovery role-play: You play a skeptical CFO. The rep has five minutes to surface a real business problem and quantify it. Run it twice; the second run must improve one named thing.
- Objection gauntlet: Fire the three objections they lose to most ("send me pricing," "we're happy with our current vendor," "no budget this year"). They respond live, you coach the language, they redo it.
- Pipeline walk: Twice a week, walk every open deal and force a next step and a close date on each. This exposes happy-ears optimism fast.
The point of drills is reps under pressure in a safe room, so the real call isn't the first time they try the new move.
What to Measure
Quota is a lagging indicator — by the time it moves, the PIP is over. Coach to leading indicators you can read every week:
- Activity: dials, conversations, discovery calls booked, new opportunities created.
- Conversion: discovery-to-opportunity rate, opportunity-to-close rate, stage-to-stage slippage in Salesforce or Clari.
- Behavior change: Did the coached move actually appear on this week's calls? This is the truest signal a PIP is working.
- Ramp/momentum: Is the trend line climbing week over week, even if the absolute number is still below bar?
Write these into the PIP as the SMART milestones themselves so "passing" is objective and the rep can self-track. A rep who can see the scoreboard coaches themselves between your sessions.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Rescuing the rep. Jumping on their calls and closing the deal yourself proves nothing about whether they improved. Coach the skill, don't take the controls.
- Coaching to the deal, not the skill. Saving one deal feels productive but the gap reappears on the next one. Fix the repeatable behavior.
- No follow-through. Setting milestones and then skipping the Thursday 1:1 tells the rep the plan isn't real — and weakens your documentation if it ends in termination.
- Treating the PIP as a formality. If you've already decided to fire them, a fake coaching effort is dishonest and exposes the company. Either coach for real or move to a clean exit conversation.
- Surprising them at the end. A weekly written status note means the final review is a confirmation, never an ambush.
- One-size-fits-all. A will gap and a skill gap need opposite coaching. Diagnose first, every time.
FAQ
Should the PIP be framed as a path to success or a step toward termination? Both, honestly. Tell the rep the bar is real and so is your commitment to helping them clear it. Pretending it's purely developmental erodes trust when it's documented with HR; pretending it's a foregone exit kills any effort to improve. Hold both truths.
How long should a sales PIP run? Most run 30 to 60 days, occasionally 90, depending on your sales cycle and HR policy. The window has to be long enough for at least one full cycle of the coached behavior to show results — a 30-day PIP on a 90-day deal cycle measures activity and behavior change, not closed revenue.
What's the difference between coaching and a PIP? Coaching is the ongoing development you do with everyone. A PIP is a formal, documented period triggered when performance falls below a defined bar, with HR involvement and a clear pass/fail outcome. You should still coach hard during a PIP — the PIP is the container, coaching is the work inside it.
Who owns the PIP document — me or HR? HR owns the legal and documentation side; you own the coaching and the day-to-day execution. Co-write the milestones so they're realistic and measurable, but never freelance the formal language or timeline without HR.
What if the real problem is the territory or comp plan, not the rep? Then a PIP is the wrong tool and you should pause it. Putting someone on a plan for a system failure is unfair and won't fix the number. Escalate the territory or comp issue, and only consider a PIP for a gap genuinely inside the rep's control.
How do I keep the rest of the team's morale up during a PIP? Keep it confidential, stay consistent in how you treat the rep in public, and make sure the team sees that PIPs are fair and survivable — that you coach people, you don't just paper them. A visibly fair process actually raises trust across the team.
Bottom Line
A PIP is not a paperwork countdown — run it as a focused coaching sprint with clear, SMART milestones, twice-weekly sessions, and leading indicators both of you watch. Let HR own the document while you own the development, diagnose skill versus will versus system before you start, and coach with full effort and full honesty so whatever the outcome, the rep was treated with dignity and given a real shot.
Sources
- HBR — The Right Way to Conduct a Performance Improvement Plan
- Gong Labs — Sales Coaching Research
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching Best Practices
- Sales Hacker — How to Coach Underperforming Sales Reps
- SBI — Sales Performance Management
- Sandler — Sales Coaching Framework
- Winning by Design — Coaching Framework
- SHRM — Performance Improvement Plans
*Sales coaching for a performance improvement plan — how to coach a rep through a PIP, sales manager coaching guide, rep PIP coaching framework, and a performance improvement plan coaching playbook for 2027.*
