Most sales leaders have sat through the same cycle. A quarter goes sideways, someone books a training day, the team learns a new framework, and three weeks later everyone is back to doing exactly what they did before. The workshop wasn’t bad. It just didn’t stick.
Coaching is different. Not because it’s fancier or more expensive, but because it works on the actual behaviour that shows up on real calls, in real deals, with real customers. That’s why more sales managers are shifting budget out of one-off events and into ongoing coaching relationships.
Coaching and training aren’t the same thing
Training pushes information into people. You sit in a room, someone explains a method, you practise it on a role-play, and you leave with notes. It’s useful when a team genuinely doesn’t know something, like a new product launch or a shift in how deals are structured.
Coaching does something else. A coach watches how a rep already sells, notices the small habits that are costing them deals, and works with them to change one or two specific things at a time. It’s less about new knowledge and more about closing the gap between what a rep knows and what they actually do under pressure.
Most reps don’t need more information. They need someone in their corner who can point out that they keep talking past the buyer’s real concern, or that they drop the price the second silence gets uncomfortable. That kind of feedback doesn’t come out of a slide deck.
What good coaching actually looks like
Real calls, real deals
Good coaching starts with what your team is already doing. That means listening to recorded calls, sitting in on meetings, reading through the notes on a stalled opportunity, or riding along on a client visit. The coach isn’t there to grade anyone. They’re there to notice patterns the rep can’t see because they’re too close to their own habits.
From there, the conversation gets specific. Not “improve your discovery questions,” but “in that call with the operations manager, you moved to your demo three minutes after she mentioned budget was tight. What made you skip past that?” Reps can act on feedback like that. They can’t do much with a rating on a five-point rubric.
Small changes, tracked over time
The other thing a decent coach does is keep the focus narrow. One or two behaviour changes per rep at a time, tracked over weeks. If a rep is working on slowing down their qualification questions, that’s the thing you’re looking at on the next call and the one after that. You don’t pile on five other pieces of advice.
This is where a lot of internal coaching falls over. A busy sales manager gives feedback on twelve different things in a single one-on-one, the rep can’t hold all of it in their head, and nothing changes. A structured coaching approach forces you to pick your battles.
Signs your team needs coaching more than another training day
A few patterns usually point to a coaching problem rather than a knowledge gap:
- Your top performers are pulling away from the rest of the team and nobody can work out why.
- Reps sound great in role-plays but struggle when the buyer pushes back on price.
- Deals are getting stuck at the same stage over and over.
- Managers are giving feedback, but the same mistakes keep showing up next quarter.
- Onboarding new reps takes six months longer than it should because there’s no consistent playbook people are being held to.
If any of that sounds familiar, another workshop probably isn’t the answer. The team already knows what to do. Something is getting in the way of them doing it.
What to look for in a coach
Not every experienced salesperson makes a good coach. Being able to sell and being able to teach someone else to sell are different skills, and the second one is much rarer.
A few things worth checking:
They’ve actually sold, recently. Coaches who last carried a bag a decade ago tend to give advice that made sense in a different buying environment. Buyers now do more of their own research, involve more stakeholders, and are harder to get on the phone. A coach who hasn’t worked inside that reality can miss the point.
They watch before they prescribe. A coach who walks in with a fixed methodology and tries to fit your team into it usually leaves you with a team that half-buys into one system. A good coach observes first, then decides what to work on.
They measure something. Coaching that isn’t tied to outcomes drifts. That doesn’t mean tracking every metric under the sun. It means agreeing up front on what should improve, whether that’s close rate on inbound leads, average deal size, or the ratio of first meetings to second meetings, and checking in on it honestly.
That’s the kind of work sales coaching by Dynamo Selling is built around, and it’s a fair reference point for what proper structured coaching looks like in practice.
The quiet compound effect
Here’s the thing about coaching nobody puts on the brochure: the results aren’t dramatic in the first month. You won’t walk out of week one with a transformed team. What you’ll see is a few reps closing deals they probably would have lost, one rep handling an objection they used to fold on, and slightly better forecasting accuracy because people are being more honest about where deals actually sit.
Do that for six months and the numbers move in a way a two-day workshop can’t touch. Coaching pays back slowly, and then all at once. Which is why the teams that stick with it tend to stay ahead of the ones that don’t.

