The New Best Practices of Sales Coaching in the Age of AI
As artificial intelligence transforms sales analytics, sales leaders must learn new coaching strategies to help
If you haven’t heard the news yet, AI has changed everything.
Historians may eventually look back on this moment as one of the great pivot points in human productivity.
From a business perspective, I see it as a major pivot point in business acumen.
For decades, leaders have been trying to get their sales teams to become more data-driven—using customer insights, prescription trends, territory analytics, and performance dashboards to make smarter decisions.
Now something new has entered the equation.
AI.
In a world driven by data, data analytics, and now artificial intelligence layered on top of it, entirely new challenges are emerging for sales leaders and the way they coach their teams.
Whether companies have formal policies about AI or not, their sales teams are already using it.
Last week, I was immersed in a fascinating project focused on building sales leaders' business acumen in the pharmaceutical industry.
A major part of the program focuses on how sales leaders coach their teams using sales data, helping them interpret prescribing patterns, identify opportunities, and take the best actions to grow new prescriptions and revenue.
During one of my subject matter expert interviews, the conversation shifted to something interesting.
AI.
While the company didn’t yet have an official AI platform, tool, or even a formal policy about AI, the sales professionals were already using it anyway.
They were feeding sales data into AI tools and asking questions like:
In other words, the sales team had already moved into an AI-assisted sales environment, whether leadership was ready or not.
That creates an entirely new coaching challenge.
Because if salespeople are using AI to analyze their data, sales leaders now need to learn how to coach the thinking behind the AI.
To help address this gap, I am developing a new learning module for this client. But in the meantime, here are five best practices for sales leaders coaching teams in an AI-driven sales environment.
1. Coach the Thinking, Not Just the Data
AI can generate insights incredibly fast.
But that doesn’t mean the insights are always correct or complete.
Sales leaders must shift from simply reviewing numbers to coaching the thinking process behind the analysis.
Questions like:
AI accelerates analysis, but human judgment still determines the quality of the decision.
The Coaching Question That Is Becoming the Most Important in Sales
In many pharmaceutical companies, sales leaders already use a familiar coaching question when reviewing territory performance:
“What’s the story behind the data?”
AI now makes that question even more important.
A dashboard might show that a physician’s prescribing has declined by 15%.
AI might generate several possible explanations.
But the real coaching conversation should sound like this:
AI can surface the signal.
But great sales leaders still coach the story, the insight, and the action.
2. Teach Sales Teams to Challenge AI Recommendations
One of the biggest risks in an AI-driven environment is something called automation bias.
People assume that if the algorithm suggests something, it must be right.
But AI models only know what they were trained on.
Great sales coaching now includes helping reps ask questions such as:
The goal is not blind trust in AI.
The goal is informed collaboration between human insight and machine insight.
3. Use AI to Expand Strategic Thinking
One of the most powerful uses of AI in sales is the ability to generate multiple strategic scenarios quickly.
Instead of asking one question, sales professionals can ask many:
AI allows sales professionals to explore ideas faster than ever before.
Sales leaders should coach teams to use AI not just for answers, but for strategic exploration.
4. Reinforce Customer Understanding
AI is incredibly good at identifying patterns.
But customers are more than patterns.
They have motivations, constraints, politics, and personalities that algorithms often cannot see.
Great sales leaders remind their teams that customer understanding still matters.
Data might show a prescribing decline.
But only a conversation with the physician will reveal whether the reason is:
AI informs the conversation.
It does not replace the relationship.
5. Help Sales Teams Turn Insights Into Action
The biggest risk with AI-driven analysis is analysis overload.
Sales professionals can quickly generate dozens of charts, predictions, and insights.
But insight without action has no value.
Sales leaders must coach their teams to focus on the most important question:
“What will you do differently this week based on this analysis?”
Great coaching conversations translate insights into clear action steps.
The Bigger Leadership Challenge
AI is not just changing how sales professionals analyze data.
It is changing how leaders coach.
In the past, a sales manager might have been the person who understood the territory data better than anyone else. Today, AI tools can analyze territory data in seconds.
That means the role of the sales leader is evolving.
The best leaders will not compete with AI on analysis.
Instead, they will focus on something far more valuable:
These are the capabilities that turn insights into results.