How do you coach a rep to improve their business acumen?
Direct Answer
To coach a rep into stronger business acumen, stop teaching product and start teaching the customer's P&L: have the rep read the prospect's most recent 10-K, earnings call transcript, and one industry trade publication before every key meeting, then debrief what it means for the buyer's economics.
The core move is to replace feature talk with money talk — coach the rep to translate your solution into the metrics a CFO or operator actually owns (revenue, margin, cost-to-serve, payback). Build it through a weekly research-and-debrief ritual plus deal-by-deal role-play where the rep must speak the buyer's business language out loud.
This is a knowledge-and-application gap, not a will problem, so it responds well to structured reps and feedback rather than motivation. In 2027, buyers expect sellers to know their industry trends and ROI math cold — generic pitches get screened out before a human ever picks up.

Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
Weak business acumen looks the same on the surface — the rep gives feature-heavy demos, can't handle "what's the ROI?", and loses to "no decision" — but the root cause varies. Diagnose before you prescribe, because the fix for a knowledge gap is different from the fix for a confidence gap.
Run the rep against four buckets: skill (can they build a business case?), will (do they care to do the homework?), knowledge (do they understand the buyer's industry and financials?), and system (does your enablement give them the research and tools to do it?). Business acumen failures are usually knowledge plus application — the rep has never been taught to read a balance sheet or connect a deal to the customer's strategic priorities, and no one has modeled it for them.
If the rep simply refuses to prepare and the role clearly requires it, that's a will-and-fit conversation, not a coaching project — be honest about which one you have.
The Coaching Conversation
Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will) to run a 1:1 that builds ownership instead of just handing over a reading list. Bold questions are the exact words to say.
Goal. Open by anchoring to a real deal so the work is concrete, not theoretical.
"Let's take the Meridian deal. If you walked into their CFO's office today, could you explain how our solution shows up on their income statement?"
Then make the bar explicit:
"Here's the goal I want us to hit in the next 30 days: before any meeting with a VP or above, you can name their top three business priorities and one number our product moves — in your own words."
Reality. Surface the current state without rescuing them.
"Walk me through how you prepped for the last exec call." … "What did you read about their business before you dialed?" … "When they asked about ROI, what happened?"
Listen for whether the gap is knowledge ("I didn't know where to find that") or application ("I read it but couldn't connect it"). Reflect it back: "So you found the priorities but couldn't tie our product to a dollar figure — that's the muscle we'll build."
Options. Co-create the practice, don't dictate it.
"Where could you get a reliable read on what matters to this account right now?"
If they stall, model the menu: "Three sources — their latest 10-K for risks and strategy, their last earnings call transcript for what leadership keeps repeating, and one industry fluency source like a trade publication or analyst note. Pick one to start." Then teach the translation move directly: "Take their stated goal — say, 'reduce customer churn' — and finish this sentence: *Our product helps you do that by ___, which is worth roughly $___ because ___.*"
Will. Lock a specific, observable commitment.
"What will you have ready before the Meridian call on Thursday, and when will you send it to me to review?"
Close by tying acumen to their own economics: "Reps who speak the buyer's business language win more late-stage deals and bigger ones. This is the difference between hitting quota and blowing past it."
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Business acumen is built with reps over weeks, not a single workshop. Run a 30/60/90 with a tight weekly loop.
- Days 1–30 — Foundations. Teach financial literacy basics: how to read an income statement, what gross margin and CAC payback mean, and how to find and skim a 10-K and earnings call transcript. Assign one account per week to research and present back in the 1:1.
- Days 31–60 — Application. Move from reading to translating. Every deal review now requires the rep to state the customer's business case in dollars before discussing tactics. Begin live role-play of executive conversations.
- Days 61–90 — Independence. The rep self-sources research, builds the business case unprompted, and leads at least one exec meeting where you observe silently and debrief after.
The loop is non-negotiable: observe, diagnose, coach, practice, apply, measure, repeat. The fastest acumen gains come from forcing application on real, live deals rather than hypothetical exercises.
Drills & Role-Play
- The 10-K teardown. Give the rep 20 minutes with a target account's annual report. They come back with three business priorities, two risks leadership flagged, and one place your product fits. Score it on a simple scorecard: priorities found, dollars attached, language used.
- The CFO role-play. You play a skeptical CFO. The rep pitches, and you only respond to ROI and risk language — every feature claim gets "so what does that do for my margin?" Keep going until they self-correct.
- Earnings-call listening. Have the rep pull a recent earnings call transcript and underline every phrase the CEO repeats. Those repeated phrases are the strategic priorities — coach them to mirror that exact language in outreach.
- Industry-trends standup. Once a week the rep brings one industry trends headline relevant to their territory and explains how it changes a buyer's urgency. This builds industry fluency as a habit, not a cram.
- Call-review with AI. Use Gong or Chorus to pull a recorded call and review where the rep stayed in feature-land versus business-land. Tag the exact timestamps and replay them together.
What to Measure
Track leading indicators of acumen, not just the lagging quota number.
- Research completion rate — percent of key meetings where the rep did the 10-K/earnings prep (verifiable from their pre-call notes).
- Business-case presence — percent of qualified opportunities with a quantified ROI or value hypothesis logged in the CRM (visible in Salesforce opportunity fields).
- Executive engagement — meetings booked at VP+ level and multi-threading depth, a direct output of speaking the buyer's language.
- Late-stage win-rate and deal size — acumen shows up most in close rate on competitive deals and in average contract value over a rolling quarter.
- Call-language ratio — using Gong trackers, the ratio of business/outcome talk to feature talk per call.
Behavior change in the first three metrics should precede the revenue lift; if prep and business-case logging climb but win-rate doesn't, your translation coaching is the next thing to tighten.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Coaching the deal, not the skill. It's faster to just write the rep's business case for the Meridian deal — but then you've moved one deal and taught nothing. Coach the repeatable move.
- Rescuing the rep in the room. Jumping in when a prospect asks "what's the ROI?" robs the rep of the rep. Let the silence sit; debrief after.
- Treating acumen as a one-time workshop. A single financial-literacy lunch-and-learn fades in two weeks. It only sticks with weekly application on live accounts.
- No follow-through. Assigning a 10-K to read and never inspecting it teaches the rep that prep is optional.
- Coaching everyone the same. A first-year SDR needs financial-literacy basics; a veteran AE needs executive role-play. Diagnose the individual gap.
- Confusing acumen with charisma. A smooth talker who can't attach a dollar to a claim still has weak acumen — measure the business case, not the vibe.
FAQ
How long does it take to coach business acumen? Expect a noticeable behavior change in 30–60 days and durable skill at the 90-day mark, assuming weekly application on real deals. It's a habit and a knowledge base, so it compounds — reps who keep the research ritual keep getting sharper. A single training event won't move it.
What if the rep says they don't have time to read 10-Ks? Reframe it as deal prep, not extra work, and shrink the ask: 20 minutes skimming the risk factors and management discussion section of one 10-K before a key call. Show the math — one lost late-stage deal costs far more than the prep hours.
If they still refuse for a role that requires it, you have a will-and-fit issue to address directly.
How do I coach acumen on a longer, committee-driven 2027 deal? Map each buying-committee member to the business metric they own — the CFO cares about payback, the COO about cost-to-serve, the line-of-business VP about their own KPI. Coach the rep to build a tailored value hypothesis per persona, sourced from the account's stated priorities.
Multi-threading without business language is just more meetings.
Can AI tools replace teaching financial literacy? AI can accelerate the research — summarizing a 10-K or surfacing earnings themes in seconds — but the rep still has to understand the numbers to defend a business case live with a CFO. Use Gong and AI research as a force multiplier on top of real financial literacy, not a substitute for it.
How is business acumen different from product knowledge? Product knowledge is knowing what your solution does; business acumen is knowing what it's worth to a specific buyer's economics and strategy. A rep can have perfect product knowledge and still lose because they can't translate features into the buyer's margin, risk, or growth priorities.
What's the single fastest lever to improve a rep's acumen this quarter? Institute a pre-call prep gate: no exec meeting happens until the rep sends you a three-line business case (their priority, our impact, the dollar value). Inspecting that one artifact forces the research and the translation every single time.
Bottom Line
Business acumen is a coachable knowledge-and-application skill, not a personality trait. The one move that matters: make the rep do the customer's homework — read the 10-K, the earnings call, and one industry trends source — and translate every feature into the buyer's own money language before each key meeting.
Inspect the business case weekly, role-play the CFO conversation, and measure prep and ROI clarity as leading indicators. Do that for 90 days and the win-rate follows.
Sources
- HBR — The New Sales Imperative
- Gong Labs — Sales Research and Call Analytics
- RAIN Group — Sales Coaching Research
- Challenger — Commercial Insight and Teaching Selling
- Winning by Design — Revenue Frameworks
- SEC EDGAR — Reading Company 10-K Filings
- Harvard Business Review — Finance Skills for Non-Finance Managers
- Sales Hacker — Coaching Reps on Business Value
*Sales coaching for business acumen — how to coach a rep to read 10-Ks, build financial literacy and industry fluency, speak the buyer's business language, a sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and a business-acumen coaching playbook for 2027.*
