Overcoming Call Reluctance: Coaching Template for a Weekly Morning Huddle

Direct Answer
This template is a 45-minute weekly morning huddle designed to identify, normalize, and systematically reduce call reluctance among your sales development and closing teams. It uses a repeatable three-part framework—Name It, Normalize It, Navigate It—drawn from behavioral coaching principles and tools like Gong for call analysis and Clari for pipeline forecasting.
The session ends with a specific, measurable commitment from each participant.
1. Warm-Up: The "One That Got Away" (10 min)
Goal: Surface reluctance without judgment. Get one story from each rep.
Script (Leader says):
"Good morning. We're going to start with a quick, no-blame round. Each of you has 60 seconds to share one call from last week where you hesitated before dialing—or a call you avoided entirely.
Don't explain why yet. Just name the prospect, the account, or the segment. I'll go first.
Last Tuesday, I skipped a follow-up to a VP of Sales at a $50M SaaS company because I knew they'd ask about pricing. Your turn."
Facilitator notes:
- Go around the table. No cross-talk or advice during this round.
- Write each story on a whiteboard or virtual sticky note (Miro, Mural).
- If a rep says "I didn't hesitate at all," ask: "What about the one call you almost didn't make?" Everyone has one.
Key output: A visible list of 5–10 specific reluctance triggers (e.g., "cold call to C-suite," "objection about budget," "follow-up after a lost deal").
2. The Reluctance Audit: Name It (10 min)
Goal: Categorize each trigger using the MEDDIC framework's "Pain" dimension—because reluctance is almost always a fear of uncovering or escalating pain.
Script (Leader says):
"Look at the list. Every trigger fits one of three buckets. Bucket one: Fear of Rejection—'they'll say no.' Bucket two: Fear of Incompetence—'I don't know the answer.' Bucket three: Fear of Wasting Their Time—'I'm interrupting.' Let's label each story with R, I, or T. Go."
Facilitator notes:
- Use a simple table on the board:
| Trigger | Bucket (R / I / T) | Underlying Belief |
|---|---|---|
| Cold call to C-suite | R | "They're too busy for me." |
| Objection about budget | I | "I don't know how to handle this." |
| Follow-up after lost deal | T | "They already decided." |
- Real tool reference: Pull up a Gong library clip from your team's own calls showing a rep successfully navigating the exact trigger someone listed. Play 30 seconds. Say: "Notice how they paused after the objection. That's the counter-instinct."
Key output: A shared vocabulary for reluctance. Reps now see it as a pattern, not a personal failure.
3. The Normalization Round: "Everyone Does It" (8 min)
Goal: Use data and peer stories to prove reluctance is universal and manageable.
Script (Leader says):
"I pulled our Clari forecast from last month. Out of 120 calls logged, 22 were 'no answer, left voicemail.' That's 18%. But when I looked at the reps who hit 110%+ of quota, their no-answer rate was 12%.
The difference isn't skill—it's dials. They made more calls because they didn't let the first 'no' stop them. Now, let's hear from two reps who overcame a trigger last week."
Facilitator notes:
- Pre-select 2 reps (ask them in advance) to share a 2-minute story of a call they almost skipped but made—and what happened.
- Named framework reference: Reference Challenger Sale concept of "teaching for tension." Say: "When you avoid the call, you're avoiding the tension that makes the sale possible. The best Challengers lean into it."
Key output: Social proof that reluctance is normal and surmountable. The team's average call volume should increase by 15–20% in the following week.
4. The Drill: Navigate It with a Script (10 min)
Goal: Practice a specific, repeatable verbal technique for the most common trigger identified in the audit.
Script (Leader says):
"The most common trigger we saw was 'Fear of Wasting Their Time' on a cold call to a director. Here's a three-sentence script based on MEDDPICC's 'Pain' and 'Competition' dimensions. I'll read it, then you'll pair up and practice.
Script: 'Hi [Name], I'm calling because I see [trigger event—e.g., your company just raised a Series B]. I have a hypothesis about a challenge that usually comes with that growth—[specific pain]. I'd like to test it with you for 90 seconds. If I'm wrong, I'll hang up and never call again. Fair?'
Now, pairs. One rep reads the script. The other responds with a real objection from the board. Then switch. You have 7 minutes."
Facilitator notes:
- Walk the room. Listen for pace and tone. If a rep rushes, say: "Slow down. The pause after 'fair' is the most important part."
- Named tool reference: "This is the same structure Salesloft uses in their 'Cadence for Cold Outreach' template. It's a permission-based opener."
Key output: Each rep leaves with a muscle-memorized opener that directly addresses their personal reluctance trigger.
5. The Commitment: "One Call I Will Make" (5 min)
Goal: Turn insight into action with a specific, public commitment.
Script (Leader says):
"Before we close, I want each of you to write down—on a sticky note or in Slack—the one call you are most reluctant to make today. Then write the exact time you will make it. I'll share mine first: 'I will call the VP of Sales at Acme Corp at 10:30 AM to ask about their budget for Q3.' Now, go around the table, 30 seconds each."
Facilitator notes:
- Collect the commitments in a shared channel (#morning-huddle-commitments).
- Follow up at the end of the day: "Did you make the call? What happened?"
- Real company reference: "At Outreach, this is called a 'Pact Call.' Their data shows reps who make a pact call are 40% more likely to hit daily activity targets."
Key output: A measurable, accountable action for each rep. Track completion rate week-over-week.
6. Close: The Reluctance Scoreboard (2 min)
Goal: Create a visual, competitive metric that gamifies overcoming reluctance.
Script (Leader says):
"Every Friday, I'll post a Reluctance Scoreboard in this channel. It shows two numbers for each of you: 'Calls Avoided' (self-reported) and 'Calls Made Despite Reluctance' (the ones you committed to and executed). The goal isn't zero avoidance—it's a ratio. Aim for 10:1 made vs. Avoided. Lowest ratio gets to pick the coffee spot next week."
Facilitator notes:
- Use a simple spreadsheet (Google Sheets) or a Clari dashboard with a custom field.
- Celebrate wins publicly. "Sarah made the call to the CFO she dreaded—and it turned into a $50K demo."
Key output: A weekly feedback loop that keeps call reluctance top-of-mind and measurable.
FAQ
Q: What if a rep is consistently avoiding calls and their ratio is below 5:1? A: This is a coaching flag, not a punishment. Schedule a 1:1 using the Challenger diagnostic: "Is this a skill gap (don't know what to say) or a will gap (don't want to say it)?" Q: Can this template work for a remote team? A: Yes.
Use Zoom breakout rooms for the drill in Section 4. Collect commitments in a Slack thread. The Miro board replaces the whiteboard.
Q: How do I measure the ROI of this huddle? A: Track two metrics: (1) average daily dials per rep (from Salesforce or Outreach) and (2) pipeline created from calls made during the 2 hours after the huddle. Expect a 10–15% lift in dials within 2 weeks. Q: What if the team laughs off the exercise? A: That's normal.
Don't force seriousness. Say: "I know it feels silly. But the data from Gartner shows that 60% of salespeople experience call reluctance at some point.
We're just naming it so it doesn't control us." Q: Can I skip the Warm-Up round? A: No. The Warm-Up is the diagnostic. Without it, the drill in Section 4 won't address the team's real triggers.
It's the most important 10 minutes. Q: What if a rep refuses to share a story? A: Offer them a pass for one week. But follow up privately: "I noticed you didn't share.
What's one call you avoided last week? I'll help you with it."
Sources
- Gong.io - "How to Analyze Sales Call Data"
- Clari - "Forecasting Revenue with AI"
- Salesloft - "Cadence Templates for Cold Outreach"
- Challenger Sale - "Teaching for Tension" (Gartner)
- MEDDPICC Framework - "Pain, Champion, Competition" (Salesforce)
- Outreach - "Pact Calls and Rep Activity Data"
- Gartner - "Call Reluctance in Sales Teams" (2022 Research)
- Winning by Design - "Sales Coaching Playbooks"
