Underperforming sales reps are not failures; they often lack proper coaching or strategic frameworks. Investing in their development can transform these reps from liabilities into consistent performers, saving the high costs associated with turnover and re-hiring.

Related Insights

When motivated reps must seek coaching outside their company, it's a clear indicator of dissatisfaction. These growth-oriented individuals are signaling their needs aren't being met and will likely leave for an organization that invests in them.

Leaders misallocate time on low performers who won't improve or top performers who don't need coaching. The greatest return on coaching time comes from investing 80% of it in the solid B-players (the "six pluses") who have the raw ability to become elite A-players.

Sales leaders must identify reps who focus all their energy on one large, one-time deal, neglecting future pipeline. This "flash in the pan" behavior leads to inconsistent performance. The solution is coaching consistent, daily activities that sustain long-term success.

In a supportive culture, managing underperformance starts with co-authored goals upstream. When results falter, the conversation should be a diagnostic inquiry focused on removing roadblocks. This shifts the focus from the person's failure to the problem that's hindering their success, making tough conversations productive.

Framing coaching as a punitive measure for poor performance destroys the intrinsic motivation necessary for change. It should be positioned as a developmental tool for high-potential growth and expanding impact, not as a punishment for underperformance.

Annual or quarterly performance reviews are high-pressure, judgmental events that create fear. A more effective approach is to reframe management as coaching. This means providing frequent, trust-based feedback focused on developing an employee's long-term potential, rather than simply rating their past performance.

When coaching a struggling salesperson, the root cause is rarely tactical. It's usually "head trash"—deep-seated limiting beliefs and blind spots, often stemming from childhood, that sabotage their efforts. The coach's primary role is to help uncover and dismantle these psychological barriers.

Failing to train sales teams incurs hidden costs that dwarf the training budget. These include lost revenue from missed quotas, wasted marketing leads, and the high expense of recruiting and onboarding replacements for unsupported reps who inevitably leave.

When successful reps get bored and start changing their effective talk tracks, their performance can dip. To coach them, anchor the conversation in data from their peak. Review past call recordings and metrics to show them precisely how their messaging has deviated and guide them back to their proven strategy.

Leaders who complain their team isn't as good as them are misplacing blame. They are the ones who hired and trained those individuals. The team's failure is ultimately the leader's failure in either talent selection, skill development, or both, demanding radical ownership.