Your New Sales Coach Is an AI. Here is What That Actually Looks Like.
AI sales coaching is changing how companies train their reps. Here's what it looks like when your practice partner is no longer human.
AI sales coaching is no longer a pilot program or a futuristic concept. It is already running inside some of the world’s biggest companies, and the results are hard to argue with.
At ServiceNow, an enterprise software company with around 8,000 sellers, an AI coach has cut onboarding time from three months to six weeks. Sellers practice pitches with AI personas, get scored in real time, and repeat the exercise until their numbers improve. No waiting for a manager to have a free hour. No subjective feedback that varies depending on who’s in the room.
The shift is happening because the alternative is getting worse. Companies are cutting middle managers to save costs, and the ones who remain are stretched too thin to coach effectively. Something had to fill that gap. Increasingly, that something is AI.
What the Training Actually Looks Like
The core idea is simple. Instead of waiting for a manager to run a role-play session, a sales rep opens a tool and practices with an AI persona.
At ServiceNow, that persona is named Jordan. Jordan acts like a midlevel buyer and opens with a simple question: “What are you here to talk about?” The rep then delivers their pitch, handles follow-ups, and receives a score against a rubric. If they fail to ask enough questions to understand the customer’s needs, the system flags it. After that, they do it again.
Moreover, reps can practice as many times as they want. There is no audience, no judgment, and no scheduling involved. For a lot of sellers, that lower-stakes environment makes a real difference.
At Braintrust, a sales training firm, the approach goes even further. The company uses an AI tool called Yoodli to analyze how reps communicate, tracking things like pacing, filler words, and how concise their answers are. For example, one pharmaceutical client had Braintrust build an AI oncologist persona to practice with. Within three months, the team’s ability to personally connect with customers jumped from 10% to 84%.
Why Companies Are Turning to AI for This
The timing is not a coincidence. Companies have been cutting middle managers for years in the name of efficiency. The ones who remain now oversee bigger teams and spend less time with individual sellers.
A 2025 report from the Work Institute found that 18% of workers cited insufficient professional development as the main reason they quit. In sales, that gap shows up quickly. Without regular coaching, reps take longer to improve, confidence drops, and turnover goes up.
Furthermore, the old way of evaluating sellers was not exactly scientific. At ServiceNow, managers used to assess readiness through what Jayney Howson, the company’s chief learning officer, called a “vibe check.” That meant a quick gut-feel evaluation that varied widely depending on who was doing it. As a result, some sellers moved forward when they were not ready. Others stayed stuck longer than they needed to.
AI sales coaching solves the consistency problem. Every rep gets the same rubric, the same scoring, and the same chance to practice. Additionally, managers get real data instead of impressions. As Howson put it, “AI should help you manage so you can lead.” In other words, the repetitive evaluation work moves to the machine so managers can focus on the harder, more human parts of their job.
What AI Still Can’t Do
Despite the early wins, the tools are quick to show their limits.
At Braintrust, Jeff Bittner noticed that interacting with AI avatars does not feel like talking to a real person. “There’s just something not right about them,” he said. The AI’s lips get a little jittery as it speaks, and that uncanny quality makes the conversation feel off. For practice, it works. For replicating the pressure of a real sales call, it falls short.
At ServiceNow, Howson raised a different concern. She worries that managers are using AI as an excuse to avoid difficult performance conversations. “Managers are leaning out of those conversations,” she said. “That’s a genuine risk.” Furthermore, there is the question of overreliance. AI can score a pitch and flag weak spots, but it cannot tell when a conversation is going sideways in real time or when a client needs a different approach entirely.
“You can’t automate curiosity or the wisdom of knowing a conversation is going the wrong way,” Howson said.
That is ultimately the limit of AI sales coaching. It can standardize practice, speed up onboarding, and make performance measurable. However, it cannot replace the judgment that comes from years of real conversations with real people. The best version of this technology, as both companies see it, is not a replacement for human coaching. It is a tool that makes human coaching possible in the first place.
“It’s not about replacing their job,” Bittner said. “It’s about assisting them.”
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