How do you coach a mid-market rep stepping up from SMB deals?

Direct Answer

To coach a mid-market rep stepping up from SMB deals, retrain the rep from running a high-volume transactional motion to running fewer, deeper, multi-threaded deals. The core move is to shift them from selling features to a single buyer toward managing a buying committee with a real qualification framework — install MEDDICC (Metrics, Economic buyer, Decision criteria, Decision process, Paper process, Identify pain, Champion) so they slow down to win bigger.
You diagnose whether the struggle is a skill gap (never had to map a committee), a knowledge gap (doesn't know mid-market buying processes), a will issue (still chasing SMB dopamine of fast closes), or a system problem (territory or quota mismatched to the new motion).
Then coach with GROW 1:1s, deal reviews on Gong, and a 30/60/90 cadence that rebuilds their definition of "a good week." In 2027, mid-market committees run 4–6 stakeholders, so the rep who keeps a single-thread SMB habit will stall every six-figure deal.
Why This Happens — Diagnose Before You Coach
The SMB-to-mid-market jump is one of the hardest in sales because everything that made the rep great gets in the way. SMB rewards speed, volume, and one-call closes. Mid-market punishes all three: deals are $40K–$250K, cycles run 45–120 days, and 4–6 people touch the decision.
The SMB rep keeps doing what worked — moving fast, closing the first friendly contact — and the deal evaporates when an unmet stakeholder kills it.
Common failure patterns: single-threading (closing with a champion who has no budget authority), happy ears (mistaking enthusiasm for a buying decision), skipping the decision process (no idea how the deal actually gets approved), and discounting to recreate SMB velocity (collapsing margin to feel fast again).
Diagnose which is dominant before you prescribe.
If quota and territory were never reset for the longer cycle, the rep is set up to fail and coaching won't fix it — escalate. Otherwise, coach the skill or mindset.
The Coaching Conversation
Use the GROW model anchored to one live mid-market deal. The goal is to expose the gap between SMB habits and mid-market reality without crushing a rep who used to be your top performer.
Goal — define mid-market success:
- "You crushed SMB. What does a clean mid-market win look like to you now — and how is it different?"
- "If you could land two $80K deals this quarter instead of twenty $4K ones, what would have to change in how you work a deal?"
Reality — surface the gaps with their pipeline:
- "Let's open the Northwind deal. Who are all the people who could say no, and which ones have you actually met?"
- "Walk me through exactly how this company approves a purchase this size. Who signs, who's in legal, what's the procurement step?"
- "Your champion loves us. Does your champion have budget, or do they have to sell it internally?"
Options — let them build the new motion:
- "What would it take to get a second and third stakeholder into the next conversation?"
- "If we used MEDDICC on this deal, which letter is weakest right now?"
- "How could you turn your champion into a coach who tells you how the deal really gets done?"
Will — lock the next move:
- "Which stakeholder will you get a meeting with by Friday, and what's your ask of your champion to make it happen?"
- "What will you put in the CRM about their decision process so we can review it Monday?"
- "What's your worry about slowing down, and how can I help?"
Repeat back the commitment: "So you book the economic buyer this week, document the paper process, and we MEDDICC the deal Monday."
The Coaching Plan / Cadence
Re-skilling a motion takes a quarter, not a week. Use a 30/60/90 that progressively transfers the new habit.
- Days 1–30: Teach MEDDICC on every open deal. Co-build a stakeholder map for the rep's top three deals. Review one Gong call per week looking specifically for missed stakeholders and ungrounded "yeses."
- Days 31–60: Rep runs MEDDICC self-scoring before each deal review. Add champion-building drills. Introduce a mutual action plan (MAP) on every deal over $50K.
- Days 61–90: Rep owns multi-threading and the paper process solo. You audit pipeline coverage and slip rate. Graduate to negotiation and procurement coaching.
Drills & Role-Play
- Stakeholder-mapping drill: Rep diagrams every buyer on a live deal — name, role, win, influence. You play the skeptic asking "who else can kill this?" until the map is complete.
- Economic-buyer access role-play: You play the champion who's nervous about an intro to their VP. Rep practices the exact ask to get the meeting without bruising the relationship.
- MEDDICC gap review: Pull a Gong recording. Rep scores the deal across all seven letters and presents the weakest one with a plan to fix it.
- "Is this real?" drill: Rep brings their most exciting deal. You pressure-test every "yes" — is it a commitment or happy ears?
What to Measure
- Multi-threaded deal % (deals with 3+ engaged contacts; target 80%+ for mid-market).
- MEDDICC completeness on deals past stage 2.
- Average deal size (should rise as SMB habits fade).
- Slip rate (deals pushing close dates — the SMB rep's biggest tell).
- Economic-buyer engagement rate (met EB before late stage).
- Win-rate on deals over $50K, tracked separately from any residual SMB book.
If deal size rises but cycle time and slip explode, the rep over-corrected into analysis paralysis — coach decisiveness.
Common Mistakes Managers Make
- Letting them keep an SMB quota. A volume quota forces the rep back into transactional habits. Reset the number to the new motion.
- Coaching the deal, not the motion. Saving one mid-market deal teaches nothing if the rep single-threads the next one.
- Assuming SMB success transfers automatically. It often actively hurts; respect how different the muscle is.
- No methodology. "Multi-thread more" is advice. MEDDICC gives the rep a checklist they can self-apply.
- Punishing the slowdown. Mid-market cycles are slower by design; a rep who's learning will look less busy before they look more productive.
- Skipping the paper process. Many step-up deals die in legal and procurement the rep never saw coming.
FAQ
How long does it take a strong SMB rep to ramp to mid-market? Plan on a full quarter to two before the new motion is reliable. The skill isn't the issue — the habit reversal is. A rep who closed in one call now has to orchestrate six people over 90 days, and that rewiring takes reps and patience.
Should I use MEDDICC or MEDDPICC? Either works; the extra P (Paper process) in MEDDPICC matters more as deals get bigger and procurement gets involved. For a rep stepping up to mid-market, explicitly coaching the paper process early prevents the classic end-of-quarter legal surprise.
What if the rep wants to go back to SMB? Take it seriously — not everyone's wiring fits the slower, orchestration-heavy mid-market motion, and that's a legitimate strength, not a failure. Forcing a velocity rep into committee selling can lose you a great SMB closer. Have the honest conversation.
How do I stop them from discounting to feel fast? Make the discount visible and tie coaching to value articulation. When a rep cuts price to recreate SMB momentum, it's usually because they haven't built enough value with the committee. Coach the value story, not just the price discipline.
Is this a coaching problem or a hiring problem? If after 60–90 focused days the rep still refuses to multi-thread and dismisses MEDDICC, you may have a will or fit problem coaching won't solve. But give the motion a fair runway first — the step-up is genuinely hard, and many great mid-market reps struggled for a quarter before it clicked.
Bottom Line
The SMB-to-mid-market step-up is a motion change, not a volume change. Install MEDDICC, coach the rep to multi-thread and map the real decision process, run GROW 1:1s on live deals, and measure multi-threading and slip rate as your leading signals. Reset the quota to the new motion, or coaching will fight a losing battle against the comp plan.
Sources
- MEDDIC Academy: The MEDDICC Sales Methodology
- Gong Labs: How top reps multi-thread enterprise deals
- HBR: Dismantling the Sales Machine
- Winning by Design: Moving Upmarket
- RAIN Group: Selling to the C-Suite and Buying Committees
- Sales Hacker: A Guide to MEDDIC
- Salesforce: How to Sell to a Buying Committee
*Sales coaching for the mid-market step-up — how to coach a mid-market rep stepping up from SMB deals, sales manager coaching guide, rep coaching framework, and a coaching playbook for 2027.*
