Skill Drill: Running One-on-Ones for Pharmaceutical Sales
Skill Drill: Running One-on-Ones for Pharmaceutical Sales
Direct Answer
This drill builds one specific manager skill: running a structured, coaching-led one-on-one with a pharmaceutical sales rep that moves beyond call-count box-checking into real territory strategy. A district sales manager (DSM) or first-line leader runs it with their team of 4–8 reps, in 45–60 minutes, using paired role-play.
The team walks away able to lead a 1:1 that diagnoses where a rep is stuck, sets one measurable action, and ends with the rep — not the manager — owning the next step.
Why This Drill Matters in Pharmaceutical Sales
In pharma, the one-on-one is the single highest-leverage management moment, and it is the one most managers waste. The job is unusually hard to coach: reps sell to credentialed, time-starved prescribers (PCPs, specialists, P&T committee members), navigate formulary and payer access, and operate inside the PhRMA Code and Sunshine Act reporting rules that make "just buy lunch and build the relationship" a compliance liability rather than a strategy.
A weekly 1:1 that only reviews call counts and sample drops misses the actual bottleneck: whether the rep can articulate a clinical message that changes prescribing behavior for the right patient type.
First-line pharma managers are frequently promoted top reps with no formal coaching training. They default to telling — "go see Dr. Reyes again, push the titration data" — instead of asking.
The result is dependence: reps wait to be directed and never build their own territory judgment. Manager Tools' research-backed cadence (a predictable, recurring 1:1 the *report* mostly drives) and the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Will, popularized by Sir John Whitmore in *Coaching for Performance*) both exist to flip that dynamic.
Field coaching firms like The Brooks Group and Sales Performance International teach the same principle to life-sciences teams: the manager's job in a 1:1 is to ask questions that make the rep think, not to hand over the answer.
This drill forces managers to practice asking instead of telling, against realistic pharma scenarios — a rep blocked at a health system's pharmacy, a rep avoiding a tough specialist, a rep coasting on an easy formulary win — so the skill is built in the room, not learned the hard way in a real 1:1 where a rep disengages.
What You'll Need (5 min prep)
- Group size: 4–8 managers or reps (works for a DSM coaching a peer group, or a regional director developing DSMs). Even number is ideal for pairing; with an odd number, the leader joins a triad as observer.
- Room setup: Pairs seated facing each other, far enough apart to talk without bleed-over. A flip chart or whiteboard at the front.
- Materials: Print the three Rep Scenario Cards (below), one set per pair. Print the GROW one-pager (the four stages with two sample questions each). Each person needs a pen and a half-page 1:1 Observation Sheet with three lines: "Best question the manager asked," "Where the manager slipped into telling," "Did the rep own the next step? Y/N."
- Handout — the GROW spine the leader writes on the board:
- Goal: What do you want to walk out of this 1:1 with?
- Reality: What's actually happening in the territory right now?
- Options: What are two or three things you could try?
- Will: Which one will you commit to, and by when?
Round 1 — Set the Scene (5 min)
The leader frames the drill and reads the standard aloud so everyone is anchored to the same bar.
Leader reads aloud: "A great pharma 1:1 is not a status report. By the end, the rep should have said more than you did, named their own bottleneck, and committed to one specific action with a date. Today we practice the hardest part — staying in questions when every instinct says to tell them what to do.
You'll run a real 1:1 against a real territory problem. Your only job as the manager is to move through GROW and resist giving the answer."
The leader writes the GROW spine on the board and points out the trap: in pharma, managers jump straight to "Reality" and then immediately to instructions, skipping Goal and never reaching a rep-owned Will. What good looks like: everyone can recite the four GROW stages and name the one they personally skip.
Round 2 — Run the Reps (20 min)
Pairs run two full 1:1 role-plays, swapping roles halfway. One person is the manager, one is the rep. The rep draws a Scenario Card and plays it straight — including being a little defensive, the way a real rep is.
Scenario Cards (rep draws one):
- The blocked account. You're a specialty rep and a large integrated health system has pulled your drug off the preferred pathway. You've stopped calling on it because "there's no point." You're putting your energy into easy community offices instead.
- The avoided specialist. There's a high-volume endocrinologist, Dr. Okafor, who challenged your titration data six weeks ago and you haven't been back. Your call plan shows you're skipping the highest-value target in the territory.
- The coaster. You hit quota early because one large account auto-refills. You're calling on the same friendly, low-potential offices because they're pleasant, and ignoring three Tier-1 targets.
Steps:
- Manager runs a 7-minute 1:1 using GROW. Set a visible timer.
- The manager must open with a Goal question, not a data dump. The leader can model the opener once:
Leader models the opener: "Before we get into numbers — what's the one thing you'd most like to walk out of this conversation having figured out?"
- At 7 minutes, swap. New scenario, new manager.
What good looks like: the manager asks at least one Options question that starts with "What could you try…" rather than "Have you tried…", and the rep ends by naming a specific account and a day. Banned manager moves: "What you need to do is…", "Just go…", "I would…".
Round 3 — Pressure Test (10 min)
Now raise the difficulty. The leader reassigns pairs and adds a resistance layer: the rep is told privately to push back once with a real pharma excuse — "Compliance won't let me," "That account's a lost cause," "I don't have the clinical data to go back in." The manager must stay in questions and not rescue the rep or argue.
Leader reads aloud before the round: "Reps, you get one pushback this round — make it real, the kind you actually say. Managers, when you hear it, do not solve it and do not debate it. Ask one more question that hands the problem back. 'So given that constraint, what's still in your control?'"
The leader walks the room and listens for the moment a manager caves into telling. What good looks like: when the rep throws the excuse, the manager responds with a question that reframes ownership ("What part of that is actually yours to move?") instead of either lecturing on compliance or agreeing the account is dead.
Round 4 — Debrief & Lock It In (10 min)
Whole group reconvenes. Going around the room, each person reads from their Observation Sheet: the best question they heard their partner ask, and the moment a manager slipped into telling. The leader captures the strongest questions on the flip chart to build a shared "question bank."
Then each participant writes one commitment on their sheet: the single GROW stage they'll deliberately slow down on in their next three real 1:1s, and the telling-habit they'll cut. The leader collects nothing — the rep owns it, which mirrors the skill being taught.
Leader closes: "The test of a good 1:1 isn't how it felt today. It's whether, in two weeks, your rep walks into the next one already knowing their own bottleneck. That only happens if you ask more than you tell."
What good looks like: every participant leaves with one named habit to change and one question added to the shared bank.
Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions
- 5-minute version: Skip pairing. The leader runs a single live GROW 1:1 with one volunteer rep against Scenario 2 (the avoided specialist) while everyone observes the Observation Sheet. Debrief in two minutes: "Where did I almost tell?" Use this as a stand-up opener before a field ride.
- 30-minute version: Run Round 1 (5), Round 2 with one swap (15), and Round 4 debrief (10). Drop the Pressure Test. This fits a weekly team meeting block.
- 60-minute version: Run all four rounds as written (45), then add a second pass of Round 2 with a new manager-supplied scenario from a real territory, and extend the debrief to build out the full question bank as a laminated team reference.
Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues
- The manager interviews instead of coaches. Rapid-fire questions with no silence is still telling in disguise. *Cue:* after a question, count to three before filling the gap.
- Skipping Goal and starting at Reality. Jumping to "so what are your numbers" makes it a status review, not a 1:1. *Cue:* the first question must be the rep's goal for the conversation.
- Solving the compliance excuse. When a rep hides behind the PhRMA Code or Sunshine Act, managers love to lecture on policy. *Cue:* acknowledge the constraint in one sentence, then ask what's still in the rep's control.
- Owning the next step for the rep. "I'll call the account director for you" feels helpful and builds dependence. *Cue:* the rep names the action and the date, out loud, in their own words.
- Coaching the easy reps and avoiding the coaster. *Cue:* the coaster (Scenario 3) is the highest-value 1:1 — practice it most.
FAQ
Should this drill use real reps or just managers? Both. Run it with managers to build their coaching muscle, and run a lighter version with reps so they learn what a good 1:1 should feel like and start driving their own — which is the Manager Tools standard.
How is GROW different from just having a conversation? GROW gives the 1:1 a spine so it ends in a committed action instead of drifting. Without it, pharma 1:1s default to a call-activity audit. The four stages force movement from goal to commitment.
Doesn't pharma compliance limit what a manager can coach? It limits *what* you sell, not *how* you coach. The PhRMA Code governs interactions with prescribers; it has no bearing on asking a rep a good question. Use compliance as a real constraint inside scenarios, never as an excuse to avoid the rep.
How often should a manager run real 1:1s with each rep? Weekly or biweekly on a predictable cadence, per Manager Tools' research — the recurrence and the rep driving the agenda matter more than the length.
What if a rep is defensive and shuts down? That's the skill. Stay in questions, lower the stakes, and ask about the territory rather than the person. The Pressure Test round exists to rehearse exactly this.
Can a regional director use this to coach DSMs? Yes — that's the highest-leverage use. The "rep" scenarios become "your DSM is avoiding a hard coaching conversation," and the same GROW spine applies one level up.
Bottom Line
After this drill, your managers can run a one-on-one that diagnoses a rep's real bottleneck, stays in questions long enough for the rep to think, and ends with the rep owning a specific, dated action. Re-run the full version quarterly, and use the 5-minute demo as a field-ride opener monthly so the question-asking habit stays sharp.
Sources
- The GROW Model — Sir John Whitmore, *Coaching for Performance*
- Manager Tools — One on Ones
- PhRMA Code on Interactions with Health Care Professionals
- The Brooks Group — Sales Coaching
- Sales Performance International — Solution Selling
- Harvard Business Review — The Leader as Coach
- Association for Talent Development (ATD) — Coaching
- Gong — Sales Coaching Research
*One-on-ones skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for pharmaceutical sales managers, with GROW scripts, timing, and coaching cues.*