FRACTIONAL CRO · MARYLAND-BASED, NATIONWIDE · $0→$200M

Kory White

RevOps & Revenue Leadership

Get a free 30-minute revenue checkup — Kory reviews your pipeline and forecast, then names the 1–2 fixes that move revenue fastest. 25 yrs scaling teams $0→$200M.

Free 30-min revenue checkup →
Hire a Fractional CROHow We Help?LinkedInRésuméCRO Syndicate
← Library
Knowledge Library · pulse-reviews
13/13 Gate✓ IQ Certified10/10?

The Coaching Habit by Michael Bungay Stanier — Cliff Notes Summary for Sales Managers

Book SummariesThe Coaching Habit by Michael Bungay Stanier — Cliff Notes Summary for Sales Managers
📖 2,851 words🗓️ Published Jun 22, 2026 · Updated May 31, 2026
Direct Answer

The Coaching Habit: Say Less, Ask More & Change the Way You Lead Forever by Michael Bungay Stanier (Box of Crayons Press, 2016) argues that effective coaching is not telling — it is asking seven specific questions, in roughly this order, so the rep does their own thinking. Sales managers who run the seven-question pattern in their 1-on-1s tend to develop reps faster than managers who default to advice-giving, because the rep does the thinking, owns the answer, and remembers it. The book's central enemy is the Advice Monster — the manager's reflex to jump in with the solution — and its central discipline is "Stay curious a little longer; rush to action and advice a little more slowly." It has sold more than a million copies and is one of the most widely assigned contemporary texts on manager coaching, appearing regularly on reading lists for first-line sales managers. In the modern sales-leadership canon it sits between Liz Wiseman's Multipliers and Kim Scott's Radical Candor as a practical manual for how a frontline manager actually runs a weekly 1-on-1.

1. The Setup — Why Coaching Fails In Practice

The Setup — Why Coaching Fails In Practice
The Setup — Why Coaching Fails In Practice

1.1 The Coaching Gap

Bungay Stanier opens on the coaching gap: most managers believe they coach their people, but their direct reports rarely experience it that way. What usually happens instead is telling disguised as asking ("Have you considered doing exactly what I would do?") or a performance review wearing a coaching label. The book's promise is to make coaching a daily 10-minute habit rather than a quarterly off-site ritual — small enough that a busy sales manager will actually do it.

1.2 Why The Habit Frame Matters

The author leans on BJ Fogg's habit research and Charles Duhigg's *The Power of Habit* to argue that coaching only sticks when it is small, frequent, and triggered. A sales manager who resolves to "be more coach-like" will drift back to advice-giving. A sales manager who installs the seven questions as a fixed 1-on-1 script has a behavior they can repeat. Trigger, behavior, reward is the loop: the trigger is the 1-on-1 calendar block, the behavior is the question sequence, and the reward is watching the rep solve the deal themselves.

2. Question 1 — The Kickstart Question

Question 1 — The Kickstart Question
Question 1 — The Kickstart Question

2.1 "What's on your mind?"

The opener. Bungay Stanier calls it the Kickstart Question because it threads the needle between too open ("How are you?") and too closed ("Let's review your pipeline"). "What's on your mind?" forces the rep to surface the thing they actually want to talk about — which is almost never what was on the manager's pre-built agenda. In sales-management practice, this is the question that pulls the real blocker out fast: the stuck MEDDPICC Champion, the ghosted Economic Buyer, the comp-plan anxiety, the territory grievance. The manager who skips this question and opens with "Let's review the forecast" gets a sanitized forecast review and learns nothing.

3. Question 2 — The AWE Question

Question 2 — The AWE Question
Question 2 — The AWE Question

3.1 "And what else?"

Bungay Stanier's signature line: "'And what else?' is the best coaching question in the world." The AWE Question can be the second question, the fifth, the tenth. Every time the rep offers an answer, the manager asks "And what else?" until the rep finally says *"Nothing — that's it."* The principle is that the first answer is rarely the best answer — it is the prepared answer. The third or fourth "and what else?" is where the real blocker tends to surface. The AWE Question is also the Advice Monster's kryptonite: as long as you are asking "and what else?" you cannot be giving advice.

4. Question 3 — The Focus Question

Question 3 — The Focus Question
Question 3 — The Focus Question

4.1 "What's the real challenge here for you?"

The Focus Question drives past the symptom to the actual constraint. Bungay Stanier emphasizes the two operative words: "real" (not the surface complaint) and "for you" (not for the company, not for the customer — for the rep personally). A rep who says *"The deal is stuck because procurement is slow"* is naming a symptom. The Focus Question reframes it: the real answer is often *"I don't know how to escalate without burning the Champion"* — a coachable skill gap, not a procurement problem. This is the question that converts a status update into a coaching moment.

5. Question 4 — The Foundation Question

Question 4 — The Foundation Question
Question 4 — The Foundation Question

5.1 "What do you want?"

The Foundation Question forces explicit desire. Bungay Stanier draws on goal-setting and design-thinking work (including Heidi Grant Halvorson on goals and the Stanford d.school's "How might we?" framing) to argue that most workplace conversations stall because nobody states what they actually want. A rep complaining about a stuck deal may want help, advice, escalation, a discount approval, or just to vent — and the manager who guesses wrong wastes the 1-on-1. Asking "What do you want?" out loud feels awkward the first time and obvious the tenth. It turns a meandering vent into a structured ask.

6. Question 5 — The Lazy Question

Question 5 — The Lazy Question
Question 5 — The Lazy Question

6.1 "How can I help?"

The Lazy Question is the explicit antidote to the Advice Monster. By asking "How can I help?" the manager refuses to take on the rep's problem, refuses to guess the solution, and forces the rep to make a clean ask. Bungay Stanier calls it "lazy" on purpose — the lazy manager develops the rep faster than the heroic manager who jumps in with the answer. Liz Wiseman's Multipliers makes the parallel case: her research argues that Multiplier leaders get roughly twice the capability out of their teams as Diminisher leaders who hoard the thinking. The Lazy Question is the single most important behavior shift the book asks of a sales manager: stop solving, start asking.

7. Question 6 — The Strategic Question

Question 6 — The Strategic Question
Question 6 — The Strategic Question

7.1 "If you're saying yes to this, what are you saying no to?"

The Strategic Question forces tradeoffs. Every "yes" is a "no" to something else. In a sales context this question kills the shiny-object problem — the rep who chases a new logo while letting a renewal slip, the rep who agrees to custom scoping that blows up the deal cycle, the rep who says yes to a partner lead that costs 40 hours of solution engineering for a deal that will never close. Bungay Stanier credits Greg McKeown's Essentialism as a parallel text. The question is uncomfortable on purpose. A rep who cannot name what they are saying no to is not actually saying yes — they are just agreeing.

8. Question 7 — The Learning Question

Question 7 — The Learning Question
Question 7 — The Learning Question

8.1 "What was most useful for you?"

The Learning Question closes the loop. Bungay Stanier points to the forgetting curve described by Hermann Ebbinghaus: people lose much of newly heard information within a day unless they actively encode it. Asking "What was most useful for you?" at the end of the 1-on-1 forces the rep to articulate the takeaway in their own words, which aids retention. It also gives the manager free feedback — if the rep can't name anything useful, the 1-on-1 wasn't useful. The Learning Question is the embedding ritual that makes the previous six questions stick.

9. The Advice Monster

The Advice Monster
The Advice Monster

9.1 Tame The Beast

Bungay Stanier's central enemy gets a name: the Advice Monster. Every manager has one. It is the reflex that hears a rep's problem and immediately starts forming the answer instead of the next question. In The Advice Trap (2020), the book's sequel, Bungay Stanier names three Advice Monster personas:

In sales management, Tell-It is the ex-top-rep who became a manager and still thinks like the closer. Save-It is the manager who jumps on every escalation call. Control-It is the manager who rewrites every email. All three diminish the rep. Taming the Advice Monster is the prerequisite for the seven questions to work — otherwise the questions become a thin disguise for telling.

10. The Meta-Principles — Be Lazy, Be Curious, Be Often

The Meta-Principles — Be Lazy, Be Curious, Be Often
The Meta-Principles — Be Lazy, Be Curious, Be Often

10.1 Be Lazy

Refuse to take on the rep's problem. The lazy manager outperforms the heroic manager because the lazy manager forces the rep to develop.

10.2 Be Curious

Longer questions, not faster answers. "Stay curious a little longer — rush to action and advice a little more slowly" is the book's most-quoted line. Curiosity is a discipline, not a personality trait.

10.3 Be Often

Every interaction is a coaching opportunity — the 30-second hallway exchange, the Slack message, the 5-minute pre-call huddle. Coaching is not a quarterly event; it is a daily micro-habit. The practical rule the book pushes is simply to ask more than you tell: the more a manager's 1-on-1s tilt toward questions instead of statements, the more thinking the rep does — and the more they grow.

Frameworks at a Glance

What Holds Up, What Has Aged

What holds up (most of the book). The seven questions have aged well — they show up across modern sales-manager training programs and reading lists (for example, Pavilion's Sales Manager 101). The Advice Monster has become one of the more durable, widely cited concepts in manager coaching. And the "ask more than you tell" discipline maps cleanly onto a metric sales orgs now track directly: talk-to-listen ratio.

What modern tooling has changed. Conversation-analytics tools — Gong, Chorus by ZoomInfo, and Clari Copilot — now record calls and 1-on-1s and surface talk-to-listen ratios and coaching metrics. That is an automated proxy for the question-versus-statement balance the book asks managers to track by feel. Remote and hybrid management has made the seven questions more important, not less — with less ambient context (no overhearing the rep on a call, no walk-by check-in), the manager has to ask more deliberate questions to surface the same signal. The book's chapter on the habit loop pairs well with a modern read like Atomic Habits (James Clear, 2018).

What is slightly dated. The examples lean corporate-generic rather than sales-specific. A modern sales manager reading the book should mentally substitute MEDDPICC Champion, Economic Buyer, deal-stage stall, and forecast call into the generic examples to translate the framework to the sales floor.

FAQ

Why is "And what else?" considered the best coaching question? Because it mechanically blocks the Advice Monster — as long as the manager is asking it, they can't be giving advice. It also surfaces better answers: reps tend to produce a deeper, more useful answer on the third or fourth "and what else?" than on the first, because the first answer is usually the rehearsed one.

Do I have to ask all seven questions in every 1-on-1? No. The Kickstart, AWE, and Learning questions are the natural bookends. The middle four (Focus, Foundation, Lazy, Strategic) get picked based on what actually surfaces. A strong 1-on-1 might use only four of the seven.

What if my rep just wants the answer? Resist the urge to hand it over. Liz Wiseman's Multipliers research argues that leaders who hoard the thinking get far less out of their teams than leaders who draw it out — roughly half the capability. If a rep insists, ask the Lazy Question ("How can I help?") and let them request the specific intervention rather than guessing for them.

How does this compare to Radical Candor? Complementary. Kim Scott's Radical Candor (2017) handles the *feedback* side of management (Care Personally + Challenge Directly). The Coaching Habit handles the *development* side (ask, don't tell). A strong sales manager uses Radical Candor for feedback and The Coaching Habit for 1-on-1s.

Is the book still relevant with AI coaching tools? Arguably more so. Tools like Gong, Chorus, and Clari Copilot now measure the behaviors the book teaches — talk-to-listen ratio, question patterns — and feed them back to the manager. The book is the manual; the analytics are the scorecard.

Where does this sit in the author's lineage? John Whitmore's Coaching for Performance (the GROW model) is the academic ancestor. Bungay Stanier's own Do More Great Work (2010) was the warm-up. The Coaching Habit (2016) is the breakthrough. The Advice Trap (2020) is the sequel, and How to Begin (2022) extends the thread.

Bottom Line

Read The Coaching Habit if you are a sales manager, sales director, or any leader who runs weekly 1-on-1s and suspects you do most of the talking. Monday morning: print the seven questions on a sticky note, put it on your monitor, and run the full sequence in your next 1-on-1. By week three the questions become reflex; by week six your reps will be solving more of their own deals; and if your team records calls, your talk-to-listen ratio will start tilting toward listening. It is one of the shortest, most actionable management books in the modern sales canon — and the one that most reliably turns a top-rep-turned-manager into an actual manager.

flowchart TD Start([1-on-1 starts]) --> Q1["Q1 Kickstart<br/>What's on your mind?"] Q1 --> Monster{"Advice Monster<br/>trying to jump in?"} Monster -->|Yes, resist it| Q2 Monster -->|No| Q2["Q2 AWE<br/>And what else?"] Q2 --> Loop{"Rep done listing?"} Loop -->|No| Q2 Loop -->|Yes| Q3["Q3 Focus<br/>What's the real challenge for you?"] Q3 --> Q4["Q4 Foundation<br/>What do you want?"] Q4 --> Q5["Q5 Lazy<br/>How can I help?"] Q5 --> Q6["Q6 Strategic<br/>If yes to this, what is the no?"] Q6 --> Q7["Q7 Learning<br/>What was most useful for you?"] Q7 --> Done([Rep owns the action])
flowchart LR Mon["Mon: Weekly 1-on-1<br/>Run all 7 questions"] --> Tue["Tue: Deal Review<br/>AWE + Focus on stuck deals"] Tue --> Wed["Wed: Pipeline<br/>Strategic Q on priorities"] Wed --> Thu["Thu: Hallway / Slack<br/>Kickstart + Lazy micro-moments"] Thu --> Fri["Fri: Forecast<br/>Foundation Q - what do you want?"] Fri --> Close["Fri PM: Learning Q<br/>What was most useful this week?"] Close --> Mon

Related on PULSE

Sources

Download:
Was this helpful?  
⌬ Apply this in PULSE
Pulse CheckScore reps on the metrics that matterGross Profit CalculatorModel margin per deal, per rep, per territory