Sales coaching or sales training: when does it work - and why do the two work well together?
Imagine a salesperson who knows everything. He knows the product, has been through the training, taken notes, asked questions. Yet the results don't come.
Familiar situation?
This is one of the biggest paradoxes of modern B2B sales:
while companies are nearly 79%-a was able to increase its revenues, the individual sales performances are at historic lows. The sellers 70-84%-a will not reach its quota, and the average quota uptake is Around 43%.
This is not a lack of knowledge.
This is application problem.
A At CoachLab We work in this tension zone every day:
where the sales training gives you the basics, but the real breakthrough came with sales coaching bring it.
In this article we show you:
- what is the real difference between sales training and sales coaching,
- when which one really works,
- and why the two a conscious combination of creates sustainable, measurable business results.
Let's briefly clarify the concepts:
What is Sales Coaching?
sales coaching (Sales coaching) is a structured, individual development process, which is based on the real, current situation of sellers. The aim is not to transfer new information, but to build on existing knowledge improving the effective use of, by consciously shaping behaviour, decision-making and attitudes.
During sales coaching, the coach questions, feedback and reflective tools to help the salesperson to:
- better manage complex sales situations,
- make more confident decisions,
- and achieve sustainable performance improvements.
What is Sales Training?
Sales training (Sales training) is a structured, group development format, which aims to transfer sales knowledge, techniques and methodologies. The training provides salespeople with a consolidated knowledge base in areas such as product knowledge, questioning techniques, negotiation techniques and the steps of the sales process.
- ensure rapid knowledge transfer,
- unifies the sales approach within the team,
- particularly effective for onboarding, new product launches or process changes.
However, training alone rarely leads to lasting behavioural change - this is effectively complemented by sales coaching, which in turn supports the habitualisation of important steps.
Knowledge ≠ performance
The „master trifecta” of sales development”
Sales training and sales coaching are often lumped together, but provide answers to problems at a different level.

Sales training - the foundation
Training is a structured, plannable, „one-to-many” type of development.
Its aim is to help sellers:
- understand the new product or service,
- master a methodology,
- learn the „right” steps.
„The training answers, with and how should do.”
This is essential. But it is not enough.
Sales coaching - the engine of performance
A sales coaching not teaching, but development.
An individual, situation-specific, ongoing process that:
- from jams in sharp situations working,
- shapes behaviour, decisions and attitudes,
- not tell, but link to.
„Coaching starts where training ends.”
To use an analogy:
training is like learning to shoot a basketball.
And coaching is when, during a match, the coach notices that you're tired, the opponent's tactics have changed - and helps you make the right decision at the right moment.
Why does training without coaching fail to deliver results?
Research has shown that people who have learned in training 84-87%-will be lost within three months, if there is no conscious reinforcement and feedback.
That's why many sales managers put it this way:
„There was training, it was good... it just doesn't show in the numbers.”
This is where CoachLab's sales development approach is a breakthrough:
- the training builds awareness,
- a coaching skill fixes,
- the two together changes behaviour.
Organisations where training is followed by regular sales coaching:
- 28% higher win rate are achieved,
- 21.3% better quota performance produce,
- and react faster to market changes.

When to use which one?
Sales training really works when:
- onboarding new salespeople,
- they have introduced a new product, service or sales process,
- they want a common language and methodology in the team.
Sales coaching brings spectacular results when:
- there are large differences in the performance of sellers,
- would like to pull up the „middle field” (here even 19% Growth also available),
- work with complex, long sales cycles,
- they want real behavioural change (confidence, proactivity, maturity in decision-making).
„The training unifies.
Coaching brings out the best in the individual.”
Proven business results - not theory
Sales coaching is not a „soft skill”, but a tough business investment:
every 1 unit of expenditure on average 4,53 units of revenue produce.
Some real examples from practice:
- In a SaaS environment:
A well-trained sales team did not deliver the numbers for months.
1:1 after the introduction of coaching Within 3 months, the team's 80% reached its target - no one before. - At a large technology company:
The salespeople supported by coaching 26% more deals closed,
and their sales cycle shortened by more than a month. - Behaviour-focused development:
Coaching based on concrete conversation patterns in an insurance company
Weekly sales growth of 50% brought in.
Why CoachLab?
At CoachLab we do not „sell” training”, but we build results.
We work with training, but our real strength is sales coaching és sales fejlesztés.
Something our customers particularly appreciate:
- structured yet flexible coaching models (GROW, STAR),
- measurable progress and business focus,
- sales vezetőkkel és értékesítőkkel egyaránt működő megközelítés,
- a safe yet challenging development space.
„In today's sales world, the winner is not the one who knows more,
but who in a better situation.”
Selling the future depends on individual competences
In the B2B environment of 2026:
- customers are better prepared,
- decisions are slower,
- and the salesperson is more crucial than ever.
Regular sales coaching not only improves performance:
- 40% improves sales force retention,
- reinforces commitment,
- and generate stable income in the long term.
If you want sales knowledge into results,
and the potential sustainable performance become,
you're in the right place.
Summarising what we have done so far
Sales coaching and sales training: what is the difference and how do they work together in practice?
Sales training (sales training) is a structured knowledge transfer where salespeople learn new techniques and methods (e.g. negotiation, CRM, customer communication) - often in groups. gartner.com
sales coaching (sales coaching) is a an individual, behavioural and situational development process, which fine-tunes the application of existing knowledge, with personalised feedback and practical support. gartner.com
Therefore, the most effective approach, if training is the foundation of knowledge and coaching helps its continuous application and development in real-life situations.
coachlab.hu/en/ - where sales development really works.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is the difference between sales coaching and sales training?
A sales training or sales training structured knowledge transfer, where teams or individuals learn new sales techniques, methods and tools. In contrast to sales coaching or sales coaching a continuous, personalised development process aimed at adapting the individual to specific situations and improving behaviour.
When should you choose sales training?
Sales training is proposed:
* onboarding of new sales staff,
* when introducing new products/services,
* to develop a uniform sales methodology,
* develop basic sales skills.
In this form of training transfer knowledge and build foundations.
When is sales coaching more effective than training?
Sales coaching has its greatest impact when:
# aims to reduce individual differences in performance,
# managing complex sales situations is important,
# want to achieve long-term changes in behaviour, attitudes and habits.
In this case, the sales coach provides personalised support in response to specific sales situations.
What does sales coaching mean in practice?
An experienced sales coach will not, (not only) tell you, with but also with questions and feedback (including sharing best practice) to help you you make the most of your skills - whether it's negotiating, managing a client or exceeding your quota.
What are the most common forms of sales training?
Sales training can be:
# group sales training,
# technical or product knowledge training,
# Sales methodology and role play based training,
Combination of # training and coaching (e.g. follow-up coaching). coachlab.hu
How effective is a combination of coaching and training?
In practice, training imparts the basic knowledge, while coaching helps to apply and reinforce in a live situation - so the two together lead to lasting improvements in behaviour and performance. coachlab.hu











