How do you coach a rep who's upset about a territory change?
Direct Answer
Coach a rep upset about a territory change by separating the emotion from the math: first acknowledge the real loss, then explain the why behind the redistribution, then build a concrete plan to win the new patch. The core move is to name the loss before you defend the decision — a rep who feels heard will engage with the plan; a rep who feels managed will quietly check out.
Do not rescue them by reversing the change or promising exceptions you can't keep. In 2027, with account redistribution increasingly driven by data models and AI scoring, the manager's job is to make the logic transparent and to re-anchor the rep on pipeline they can actually build, not the accounts they lost.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
A territory change touches three things a rep cares about at once: money (the comp math of named accounts), identity (the relationships they built), and fairness (whether the process was just). When a rep is upset, you are rarely dealing with a coaching gap — you're dealing with a will and trust problem triggered by a system change.
Coaching the wrong layer makes it worse: running a skills drill on someone who feels robbed reads as gaslighting.
Diagnose which layer is actually hot before you say anything substantive. Is the rep grieving lost relationships, panicking about the number, or convinced the redistribution was rigged? Each needs a different opening.
The decision tree matters because the fairness grievance branch is the one managers most often misread. If a rep believes the account redistribution was arbitrary or favored a peer, no amount of plan-building will land until you've shown the criteria. Transparency is the coaching, not a preamble to it.
The Coaching Conversation
Run this as a real 1:1, not a hallway drive-by. Use a GROW model spine — Goal, Reality, Options, Will — but open with acknowledgment, because GROW assumes the rep is ready to problem-solve and an upset rep is not. The sequence is: acknowledge the loss, explain the why, build the plan.
Step 1 — Acknowledge the loss (verbatim).
"I want to start by saying this is a real change and I'm not going to pretend it isn't. You built those relationships — that work was real and it mattered. What feels like the biggest loss here for you?"
Then stop talking. Let them answer fully. Do not defend yet. If they vent, take it. The single most common mistake is jumping to justification while the rep is still naming what hurt.
Step 2 — Explain the why (verbatim).
"Here's the reasoning, and I'll show you the actual inputs. We rebalanced because three reps were carrying 60% of the named-account ARR and the rest of the team was starved for pipeline. The model weighted account fit, geography, and existing engagement — not tenure or favorites.
Do you want to walk through exactly which accounts moved and why?"
Show the data. Pull up the Salesforce territory report or the Clari account-distribution view live. A rep who sees the criteria can disagree with the outcome but rarely calls it rigged.
Step 3 — Build the plan for the new patch (verbatim, GROW).
"Goal: what does a strong first quarter on this new patch look like to you? Reality: of these new accounts, which three are most like the deals you've already won? Options: what would it take to get a meeting in the top five by the end of the month? Will: which one are you going to open this week, and what do you need from me to do it?"
Bold the questions so you actually ask them. The shift from "I lost my accounts" to "which one do I open first" is the whole conversation working.
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
One conversation does not resolve a territory change — the fairness and capacity fear resurface the first slow week. Run a tight 30/60/90 cadence so the rep feels supported through the transition, not abandoned after the speech.
- Days 1–30: Weekly 1:1 dedicated to the new patch. Co-build an account map of the new territory. Set a single behavioral goal — e.g., "open five new-patch accounts" — not a revenue goal yet. Review one new-territory call together each week using Gong or Chorus.
- Days 31–60: Shift to deal coaching on the pipeline they've started. Run MEDDIC qualification on the top three new-patch deals. Confirm the comp math holds; if it doesn't, escalate to comp now, not at quota review.
- Days 61–90: Normalize cadence back to standard. Measure pipeline created on the new patch vs. Ramp benchmark. Decide explicitly whether the rep has re-engaged or is a retention risk.
The loop's exit valve — escalate retention — is deliberate. A territory change is one of the top predictable triggers for top-rep attrition, and the cadence must surface that early rather than discover it in an exit interview.
Drills & Role-Play
The skill gap after a territory change is usually a new ICP they don't yet know how to open. Drill that directly.
- New-patch cold-open role-play. You play a buyer in the new territory's segment. The rep runs their opener. Score it on relevance to the new ICP's pain, not their old one. Run it three times until the language fits the new patch.
- Account-prioritization drill. Hand the rep 20 new accounts and 20 minutes. They rank them and defend the top five. This rebuilds ownership — the patch becomes "theirs" through choices they made.
- Call-review scorecard. Pull one new-territory call per week in Gong, score it together on talk ratio, discovery depth, and next-step clarity. Tie each score to one drill for the following week.
- Lost-account reframe drill. Have the rep articulate, out loud, one thing they learned from a lost account that applies to the new patch. This converts grief into transferable skill.
What to Measure
Watch leading indicators, not the quarter's quota, because quota is a lagging number that arrives too late to coach against.
- New-patch accounts opened per week — the clearest early signal of re-engagement.
- Pipeline created on the new territory vs. The team ramp benchmark.
- Call quality scores on new-territory calls trending up week over week.
- 1:1 sentiment — are they bringing problems to solve or relitigating the change? Relitigation past week three is a retention flag.
- Activity recovery time — how many days until their prospecting volume returns to baseline.
If accounts-opened and pipeline-created are both moving, the coaching is working even if revenue lags. If both are flat at day 30 while sentiment stays sour, you have a will/retention problem that more coaching won't solve.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Defending before acknowledging. Leading with the business case while the rep is still grieving reads as dismissal and hardens the fairness grievance.
- Rescuing the rep. Quietly handing back an account or promising an exception undermines the redistribution for the whole team and trains reps to escalate emotionally.
- Coaching to the deal, not the transition. Jumping straight into pipeline review skips the trust repair the rep actually needs first.
- No follow-through. One supportive conversation, then silence, confirms the rep's fear that the change was done to them, not with them.
- Hiding the criteria. Refusing to show how accounts moved guarantees the rep fills the gap with the worst assumption.
- Coaching everyone the same. The grieving rep, the comp-panicked rep, and the fairness-grievance rep need three different openings, not one team email.
FAQ
What if the rep is right and the territory change really was unfair? Then your job is to surface it, not defend it. Take the specific concern to whoever owns account redistribution, get the math corrected if it's wrong, and tell the rep what you did. Credibility comes from being willing to escalate on their behalf, not from defending a flawed model.
Should I ever reverse the change for one upset rep? Almost never. A one-off reversal signals that emotional escalation works and erodes the fairness of the whole plan. If the model is genuinely broken, fix it for everyone; don't carve out an exception for the loudest voice.
How do I coach a top performer who lost their best accounts? Acknowledge the loss is bigger for them, then re-anchor on their proven skill: they didn't lose the ability that built those accounts, only the accounts. Pair them with the highest-ceiling accounts in the new patch and treat the first 30 days as a retention priority, because top reps are the most likely to leave over a territory change.
What if the comp math genuinely doesn't work on the new patch? Then it's a comp problem, not a coaching problem. Run the math with the rep, and if the new territory can't realistically support quota, escalate to comp or sales ops immediately. Coaching a rep harder on an unwinnable patch is the fastest way to lose them.
How long before I treat this as a retention risk instead of a coaching project? About three weeks. If sentiment stays sour and leading indicators stay flat past day 21, loop in your skip-level and revisit comp before the rep starts interviewing. Territory changes are a known attrition trigger, so move early.
Bottom Line
The one move that matters: acknowledge the loss before you defend the decision, then build the new-patch plan with the rep, not for them. Make the account redistribution criteria transparent, run a 30/60/90 cadence, measure accounts opened and pipeline created as your leading signals, and treat persistent disengagement as a retention risk rather than a coaching failure.
Sources
- HBR — The Right Way to Reorganize Your Sales Force
- Gong Labs — Sales Coaching Research
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching Best Practices
- Sandler — Coaching and Mentoring Salespeople
- Winning by Design — Sales Coaching Framework
- SBI — Sales Territory Design and Redistribution
- Salesforce — Sales Territory Management Guide
- The GROW Model — Performance Consultants
*Sales coaching for a rep upset about a territory change — how to coach a rep through territory change, sales manager coaching guide, account redistribution fairness conversation, rep coaching framework, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
