Jordan's first week as Director of Sales Development looked exactly like her last week as Senior Manager.
She jumped into calls. Sat in on 1:1s. Gave rep feedback in the hallway between meetings. Her calendar was full and visible and she was adding value and doing the thing that had always worked. This, she figured, was what showing up looked like.
Her three managers smiled and said nothing.
By week four the reps were going around their managers to get her opinion. Two managers had stopped preparing for their 1:1s with Jordan because she just told them what she saw anyway. Nothing was being built at the system level because Jordan was doing three people's jobs and nobody's job description said "build the operating system."
The part worth saying clearly: they discussed this in the interview. Jordan knew what a Director role required. She said the right things. She believed them. She was also completely confident she could do it, because she had been exceptional at the level below it and exceptional at something adjacent feels like preparation for the thing itself - until it isn't.
What nobody had built in her was the visibility the Director job actually runs on. Different dashboards. Different data. Not meeting volume by rep but Stage 1-to-2 conversion by manager. Not individual quota attainment but ramp velocity by cohort. Not "how did the call go" but "what pattern do I see across my managers' teams that tells me where the coaching gap is." She had never needed to look at those things. She didn't know she was flying blind until she had been flying blind for sixty days.
And here is the thing about the BDR function in 2026: it is not the same job it was eighteen months ago at any level. The motion is shifting. The AI layer is being built in real time. What "good" looks like on a dashboard is still being figured out by the people who are supposed to define it. Jordan was not just navigating a new role. She was navigating a function that is itself mid-transformation and still figuring out what it needs from each of its leaders.
That makes the first 90 days harder and more important than it has ever been. Here is what it actually looks like at each level.
MySalesCoach State of Sales Coaching 2026 · 6sense BDR Benchmark, 262 BDRs
Manager / Senior Manager - Days 1 through 90
This is the closest-to-the-work seat. Your leverage is the rep. Your success is individual quota attainment, ramp velocity, and the quality of what your team puts in front of AEs every week. Month one here is not about vision or strategy. It is about knowing your people, your funnel, and exactly where the motion is breaking before you touch anything else.
The temptation at this level is to skip the listen phase and go straight to fixing. You were hired because you know how to run a BDR team. You probably do. But you do not know this team yet and the rep who looks like a performance problem on paper might be working a territory with garbage data. Audit the context before you audit the people.
- Listen to every rep's calls before you give a single piece of coaching feedback. Know what good and bad actually sound like on your specific team before your mouth opens about it.
- Map the funnel by rep - not as a team average. Connect rate. Conversation-to-meeting rate. Meeting-to-opportunity rate. A rep with a 6% connect rate and 40% conversation conversion needs completely different coaching than a rep with a 14% connect rate and 20% conversion. Same output. Different problem.
- Find out what your reps actually think the job is. Not what's in their job description - what they believe they're measured on. That belief is what drives their behavior. If it's wrong you have an alignment problem before you have a performance problem.
- Understand the data before you trust the data. Is the CRM clean? Are stage definitions being applied consistently? Is the meeting quality gate real or is it a rubber stamp? Bad data produces bad coaching. Audit the inputs before you draw conclusions from the outputs.
- Build your cadence and hold it. Weekly 1:1s that never move. Call reviews that actually happen. If you push a 1:1 to Friday you are coaching the past instead of changing the week in front of you. Block 15-16 hours a week for direct rep development or you are a reporting analyst with a manager title - and I did not make that up, it just lives in my head permanently.
- By day 45 you should be coaching to specific moments - not "you need to create more urgency" but "at the four-minute mark on Tuesday's call you heard her say her team has been managing this manually for eighteen months and you moved to the next question." That level of specificity is what changes behavior. Everything else is feedback the rep files away and forgets.
- Identify your top performer and reverse-engineer what they do - opener, objection handling, the follow-up question they ask that nobody else asks. Build a replicable model and coach the rest of the team toward it. Not a vague "be more like Alex" but a specific, observable set of behaviors Alex does that can be practiced.
- Know which of your reps needs urgency and which needs confidence. A new hire drowning in cold call anxiety needs completely different coaching than a tenured rep who is coasting. One-size-fits-all coaching is the number one management failure in BDR orgs. Coach the pattern, not the average.
- Start building your comp and territory audit. If quota miss is widespread it is a system design problem, not a rep problem. Territory equity is the invisible variable that makes or breaks performance and it is almost never talked about until someone leaves over it.
- By day 90 you should have a clear ramp model - what does great look like at day 30, 60, 90 for every new hire cohort, and where is the gap if they're not hitting it. Not a vibes-based sense. Documented benchmarks with a coaching intervention attached to each failure point.
- Your 1:1 cadence should be running without you having to remember to do it. It should feel like a system, not an effort. If you are still having to remind yourself to prep for 1:1s by day 90 something is wrong with the structure.
- You should be able to answer the question "which rep is most at risk this quarter and why" without looking at a dashboard. That knowledge lives in your weekly coaching conversations. If it doesn't, the conversations aren't deep enough yet.
Director / Senior Director - Days 1 through 90
The biggest transition in BDR leadership. Your lever is no longer the rep. It is the manager. And this is where most people - including Jordan - walk in knowing that intellectually and then immediately start doing the job below them because it feels real and the new job feels like it hasn't started yet.
The new visibility you need does not arrive automatically with the title. You have to build it. Stage 1-to-2 conversion by manager. Ramp velocity by cohort. Pipeline trends that tell you which manager's team is quietly plateauing three weeks before it shows up in the forecast. These are the dashboards that run the Director job. If you are not looking at them you are guessing. And if you are filling that gap by going back to rep-level work, you are undermining your managers without realizing it.
- Shadow your managers' 1:1s - not to evaluate the reps but to understand how your managers coach. What are they inspecting? What questions do they ask when a rep misses quota? Are they running pipeline reviews dressed up as coaching sessions? That distinction is the whole job at this level.
- Map the funnel by manager, not just by rep. If one manager's team converts meetings to opportunities at consistently higher rates, that is a coaching best practice worth naming and spreading. If one manager's reps all plateau at month six, that is a manager development problem - not six simultaneous rep problems wearing the same costume.
- Do the listening tour and ask the uncomfortable follow-up question. The first answer you get in any listening tour is the polite version of the truth. "What's not working?" gets you the safe answer. "Why hasn't that been fixed yet?" gets you the actual information.
- Build the cross-functional relationships that will run your job: AE leadership (what does the handoff quality actually look like from their side), RevOps (what does the funnel data say that your dashboards might be obscuring), Marketing (what is the ICP signal quality and how does it affect rep activity). At this level your job is as much relational as it is operational.
- Identify two or three things that, if changed in the first sixty days, would move the number most. Share them with your skip-level. Then deliver them. That is how you earn the trust to build the bigger thing.
- Start building the operating rhythm: weekly manager sync, monthly calibration, quarterly planning. This cadence is the system that makes your team's performance predictable. Without it you are managing by exception and fire, not by design. Every good thing you build eventually breaks without a cadence to maintain it.
- Your 1:1 with each manager should be a coaching conversation about how they coach - not a status update, not a pipeline review. Those are separate meetings. "What does your team need right now and do you have the skill to deliver it" is the question that runs a Manager 1:1 at the Director level. If you are asking "how did last week go" you are doing the wrong thing.
- Define what great management looks like at your company in language specific enough that every manager on your team could describe it the same way. If they give you three different answers when you ask, you have not built the standard yet. That is month two's work.
- Get the new dashboards built. Stage 1-to-2 by manager. Ramp velocity by cohort. Meeting-to-opp rate by manager and rep vintage. These are the instruments your job runs on. If they don't exist yet, build them now - not later, now. You cannot coach what you cannot see.
- By day 90 your managers should be running their 1:1s without you in them. If you are still sitting in to make sure they happen, the managers are not yet accountable for them. That is a development gap to close, not a permanent arrangement to accept.
- You should have a clear answer to "what does great management look like here" that your team could recite. Not a document. A shared operating standard that lives in how your managers show up every week.
- Deliver the first version of the operating rhythm to leadership and show the early data. Not perfection. A direction, with evidence that it is working. Month three is about proving you can build something - not that you have built everything.
VP of Sales Development - Days 1 through 90
The VP job is where the first 90 days is least about doing and most about listening, aligning, and earning the trust of the people who will need to execute whatever you design. The VP who rewrites the org in month two hasn't done the work that earns the right to rewrite it. The org will comply and quietly work around them - usually in ways that don't show up until the forecast is due.
At this level your primary relationships are not with your directors. They are with the CRO, the CFO, the regional VPs of Sales, and the CMO. The first conversation you need with each of them is not about pipeline strategy. It is about what they need to trust you. Those are different conversations and most new VPs skip the second one.
- The listening tour at this level is about understanding the political landscape and the history - what has been tried, why it did not work, who the internal skeptics are and whether they are skeptical for good reasons. You get that from the CRO, the regional VPs of Sales, and a few well-chosen conversations with your directors before you have a single opinion in public.
- Agree with your CRO on three things before day thirty: what success looks like at six months in specific and measurable terms, what decisions you own versus what requires their sign-off, and what the BDR function is supposed to be contributing that it currently is not. Get this documented. Ambiguity at the VP level is expensive and the cost shows up six months later when everyone has a different memory of the original conversation.
- Do a full org design audit before you touch a single person. Manager-to-rep ratios, territory design, ICP definition, tech stack, comp plan structure, BDR-to-AE promotion rate, ramp benchmarks by region. Understand what you have before you decide what to change. The VP who restructures in month two without this audit restructures again in month six.
- Talk to AE leadership early and specifically. Ask them what they receive from BDRs and what they actually need. Ask what percentage of BDR-sourced meetings they accept and why they reject the ones they do. That conversation is a complete diagnosis of handoff quality in fifteen minutes and it sets the foundation for the AE partnership you will need for everything that comes after.
- Build the AI strategy early - not a tool list, a philosophy. What does the function automate, what does it augment, and what stays human. The organizations running AI as a productivity layer for research and CRM hygiene while keeping human judgment in the discovery and qualification motion are outperforming the ones who automated the outreach and called it a transformation.
- By day 45 you should have a point of view on the org design - not implemented, articulated. What needs to change and in what sequence and why. Share it with your CRO before you share it with your team. The VP who surprises the CRO with a restructure has misunderstood who their primary stakeholder is.
- Build the measurement framework before you build the enablement. What are you accountable for at six months, twelve months, eighteen months. Not vaguely. BDR-sourced pipeline as a percentage of total. AE win rate on BDR-sourced opportunities. Time-to-first-qualified-opportunity by hire cohort. BDR-to-AE promotion rate. Cost per sourced ARR. These are the metrics that earn the function's budget. Build the framework that tracks them before you build anything that moves them.
- Start the career path conversation publicly. The BDR-to-AE promotion rate is a talent brand metric and a retention lever simultaneously. If it is unclear or low, your best reps leave before you can develop them. Define the path, make it visible, and start tracking it as a success metric from month two.
- Identify the regional differences in your motion. NA, EMEA, and APAC are not the same market with different time zones. The outreach motion that works in NA does not translate directly to EMEA where GDPR, work council dynamics, and a longer relationship-building cycle change the whole architecture. Know where to standardize (ICP, qualification language, handoff standard, measurement framework) and where to adapt (channel mix, cadence pacing, compliance approach, local proof points).
- By day 90 you should be able to defend your BDR-sourced pipeline number and your org design in a board room with no preparation. Not because you have memorized a deck. Because you have spent ninety days building the understanding that makes the defense credible. If you cannot do that yet, you need thirty more days of listening before you start building.
- Ship version one of the operating framework - not everything, something. A measurement standard. A manager development model. A handoff quality definition the AE team has seen and agreed to. Something that proves you can build in this org before you ask for the budget to build more.
- Establish the GTM leadership relationship. The VP who speaks pipeline and business impact at the revenue leadership table earns a seat at future strategic conversations. The one who reports activity metrics in a room full of revenue leaders quietly loses influence every quarter. Know the difference between what you track internally and what you present upward.
The Listening Tour Questions Most Leaders Skip
Every good new leader does a listening tour. Most ask "what's working and what isn't" and get the polite version of the truth. The questions below get the real version. They are different at each level because you are listening for different things.
- "If you could change one thing about how we run outbound this week, what would it be?" Not last quarter. This week. Forces a specific operational answer instead of a strategic wish list.
- "What does your best rep do differently than the rest of the team?" If they can't answer this in specific behavioral terms, the coaching on this team is not differentiated enough to close the gap.
- "What's in the CRM that you don't actually trust?" Data integrity problems hide performance problems. You need to know before you start coaching from the data.
- "When did you last listen to a call that made you genuinely proud?" If they have to think for a long time, that tells you something. If they pull one up immediately and play it, that tells you something else entirely.
- "What does great management look like on this team right now, and who is closest to it?" If they all point to the same person, you have one strong manager and a development problem.
- "Where is the funnel leaking - and is it the same leak across every manager or different ones?" Consistent leaks are system problems. Different leaks by manager are coaching problems. They require completely different interventions.
- "What has AE leadership said about handoff quality in the last quarter?" Ask for the exact words if you can get them. The polished version and the actual version are usually different conversations.
- "Why hasn't that been fixed yet?" This is the follow-up to every answer you get. It is the most useful question in any listening tour and almost nobody asks it.
- "What is the CRO's honest assessment of what the BDR function contributes versus what it should?" If they have never been asked to articulate this directly, you now know that the function has never had a clear mandate. That is your first project.
- "What percentage of closed ARR traces back to BDR-sourced pipeline, and where does leadership want it?" If they don't know the first number, the function is not being measured as a revenue driver. If they don't know the second, there is no target to build toward.
- "What is the AE win rate on BDR-sourced opportunities versus inbound?" This is the single most honest measure of whether BDRs are qualifying or just generating meetings. Most orgs do not track it. The ones that do either love or hate the answer.
- "What would need to be true for you to double the BDR headcount?" The answer tells you exactly what the function needs to prove and what the ceiling on investment is. Build toward that answer from day one.
The AE Leadership Relationship at Every Level
The BDR function earns or loses its credibility in the AE relationship. Not in the QBR. Not in the pipeline review. In the specific quality of what BDRs hand AEs every week and whether AEs trust it enough to show up prepared. That relationship looks completely different at each level - and most BDR leaders underinvest in it at every altitude.
AI Fluency at Each Level: Not the Same Answer
The BDR function in 2026 is mid-transformation and AI is the variable that changes everything downstream. But AI fluency does not mean the same thing at every level of BDR leadership. A Manager asking "which AI tool should my reps use for research" and a VP asking "what is our AI adoption strategy and how do we measure it globally" are having completely different conversations about the same subject. Both matter. Neither one is the other.
- Account research compression. A rep spending 40 minutes researching an account before a cold call is not adding more value than a rep who gets that brief in four minutes from an AI-assisted workflow and spends the other 36 minutes actually calling. Build the research workflow first. It is the fastest win in AI adoption and reps feel it immediately.
- Call review efficiency. AI can surface the specific moment on a call worth coaching before your manager listens to the full recording. That is not a replacement for the coaching conversation. It is a way to make the coaching conversation more targeted and less time-consuming. The manager still has to have the conversation. They just know exactly where to go in it.
- Rep-facing signal identification. Trigger-based outreach is the most durable form of personalization and AI tools make it scalable. Train reps to use AI to identify the signal before they write the email, not to write the email without one. The signal is the skill. The draft is just efficiency.
- What to keep human. The cold call itself. The discovery conversation. The moment a prospect says something real and the rep has to decide what to do with it. Coach AI adoption hard on the research and admin side. Protect human judgment on the conversation side. That is the line.
- Cohort trend analysis. A Director manually pulling Stage 1-to-2 conversion data by manager and rep vintage every week is spending time on work that AI should be doing. Build the dashboard that surfaces this automatically and use the saved time for the actual coaching conversation with your managers.
- Call pattern analysis at scale. When you have four managers each overseeing eight reps, you cannot listen to every call worth listening to. AI can surface the calls where something interesting happened - a rep handled an objection unusually well, or a rep heard a buying signal and moved past it. Use it to identify what to share across the team and what to address individually.
- Meeting quality scoring. Build an AI-assisted meeting quality rubric that scores handoffs against the standard you defined. Not to replace manager judgment - to give managers a starting point for the conversation and a consistent language for what good looks like across the team.
- Spotting the plateau before the forecast. The manager's team that is quietly underperforming shows up in lagging indicators weeks after a Director with the right data visibility would have caught it. AI-assisted pipeline signal detection gives you the leading indicator. Act on it before it becomes a QBR conversation.
- Build the philosophy before the stack. The VP who arrives and immediately buys five AI tools has skipped the most important question: what problem are we actually solving and which layer does it live in. Productivity first - compress research, automate CRM hygiene, generate account briefs. Coaching augmentation second. Operational intelligence third. That sequence matters because trying to skip to layer three without layer one creates adoption problems that are very hard to reverse.
- The adoption measurement problem. Most orgs measure AI adoption by tool login rate. That is activity measurement dressed up as strategic measurement. A rep who logs in and generates a pre-call brief they never read has not adopted AI. A rep who uses an AI account brief to open a cold call with a hypothesis that lands - that is adoption. Measure the behavior change, not the login.
- The governance question nobody talks about. What happens when reps use AI badly at scale. Generic AI-generated emails going out at volume. Hallucinated account details in handoff notes. An AI-assisted objection handler that contradicts your positioning. These are real risks and they are the VP's problem to prevent. Build the governance layer before the adoption program, not after something goes wrong.
- Global standardization vs regional adaptation in AI. The AI workflow that works for an NA rep running aggressive email-first outbound does not translate directly to an EMEA rep where relationship-first prospecting and GDPR compliance change the architecture of what AI can and should do. Standardize the tooling layer globally. Adapt the use case layer regionally. Same principle as the motion itself.
- Present AI to the CRO in ARR terms, not activity terms. "Our reps are 40% more productive" is an interesting internal metric. "AI-enabled output reduced our cost per sourced ARR by 22% while headcount stayed flat" is a board-level argument for continued investment. Know which version of the story you are telling and to whom.
"The first 90 days doesn't just set your reputation.
It sets the ceiling
for everything you build after it."
What Transfers Between Levels - and What Doesn't
The Thing That Makes All Three Work
The best BDR leaders I have worked with and alongside at every level share one capability: they can zoom in and zoom out in the same week without losing their footing at either end.
A VP who can sit in a call review on Tuesday and give specific feedback on the exact moment a rep lost a prospect's attention - and then present BDR-sourced pipeline strategy to the board on Thursday - is not doing two different jobs. She is demonstrating that she understands the work at every altitude. Which is the reason the board believes the strategy and the reason the reps believe she knows what she is talking about.
The zoom-in capability does not mean doing the work at the level below you. It means understanding it well enough to diagnose it, speak to it credibly, and make the decisions that connect to it. A VP who cannot articulate why a manager's Stage 1-to-2 conversion is low at the behavior level cannot build a credible strategy to fix it at the org level. Those two things are connected. The leaders who hold both ends of the thread are the ones who actually move the number.
Back to Jordan
She figured it out around day seventy. Not because someone told her. Because she looked at her calendar and realized she had not had a single conversation about what the operating system should look like. She had been too busy being the best manager on the team to build anything above it.
She cleared two days. Pulled her three managers into a room. Asked each of them what they needed to do their jobs better - not what was wrong with their reps, what did they actually need. It was, by her own account, the most useful conversation she had in her first ninety days and it happened on day seventy-two.
The framework got built in month four. It was good. It would have been better in month one and they both knew it. The managers who felt undermined in January were more willing to adopt something in April - but not as willing as they would have been if Jordan had built it with them from day one.
That gap does not go away. It just gets smaller. And the leaders who minimize it are almost always the ones who were honest about which job they actually had before they started doing it.
Know which level you are at. Build the visibility that level actually requires. And leave the job below you to the person you hired to do it - even when you are better at it than they are. Especially then.
Write down which level you are operating at by title. Then write down which level you are actually doing the work of this week. If they match, you are in the right lane.
If the work level is below the title - name one thing you did this week that belongs to the person below you, and ask what the cost is of you doing it instead of them. That answer is the job. Not the one you were doing. The one you need to start doing.