It is 10:47 AM and a BDR named Priya just got off a call with a VP of Ops at a series-C logistics company. She had prepped for it. She had a hypothesis. She had questions. She was going to run the discovery motion the enablement team spent six weeks building.
She ran none of it.
The VP opened with "I have seven minutes, what does your product do," and Priya's brain reached for the deck she does not have, then for the framework she cannot remember the name of under pressure, then for a version of the elevator pitch that came out of her mouth twenty seconds later while her prefrontal cortex was still buffering. The VP said "got it, thanks, not for us" at minute five and hung up.
Priya closed her laptop. Priya knew what she was supposed to do on that call. Priya did not do any of it. Priya is not going to bring this up in her 1:1 because Priya is 26 and would like to keep the job.
This is not a training problem. Priya has been trained. This is not a knowledge problem. Priya can recite the discovery framework in a role play at 3 PM on a Wednesday with her manager watching. This is an Apply problem, which is a different problem, and it is the exact problem every rep is quietly having every day while everyone assumes the training must have solved it because they built the training.
The gap between knowing and doing under pressure closes in exactly one place. Practice. Not the kind that happens once in onboarding. The kind that gets attached to the work itself, weekly, in a way small enough that a rep will actually do it and specific enough that it produces a behavior instead of a feeling.
Two drills. Eight minutes total. Attached to every real call worth learning from. That is the whole thing.
Why Two Drills And Not More
Every enablement program tries to teach a rep fourteen things. Every rep, under real pressure with a real buyer, executes maybe two of them. The other twelve exist in the training doc and nowhere else.
The math on behavior change is unforgiving. The number of new habits a human can actually install in a quarter is small. It is somewhere between one and three. Not fourteen. Not the whole rubric. Not "and also start doing MEDDIC." A rep who runs two drills consistently for a quarter will outperform a rep who has been handed nineteen frameworks and no drill attached to any of them. Every time. It is not close.
The two below are chosen for one reason. They are the two moments where knowing turns into doing or does not, and the rep is the only person in the room when it happens. Everything else is downstream of these two moments.
The rep who practices the skill twenty times before the real call outperforms the rep who learned the skill in a training and went straight to the real call. That second rep is practicing on your pipeline.
Drill One. Five-Minute Pre-Call Rehearsal.
Not "prep." Prep is what a rep does with an open tab and a vague sense that they should probably know something about this account. Rehearsal is different. Rehearsal is verbal, timed, and rehearses the moment the rep is most likely to fumble, out loud, before it is happening in front of a buyer who does not care.
Five minutes. Same shape every time. Attached to every meeting on the calendar with a real buyer, not to "important" ones, because the rep is the least reliable narrator of which call will matter.
Not prep. Rehearsal. Say the words out loud before the buyer is on the line.
This is five minutes. The rep who does this before every call has, at the end of one month, rehearsed forty openers, one hundred and twenty questions, and forty versions of the exact moment they used to fumble. That is not a training. That is a rep whose reps compound.
The rep who does not do this has, at the end of one month, done zero of that and is still relying on the framework they learned in onboarding to activate on its own when the pressure hits. It does not activate. That is the whole problem the enablement team is trying to solve from a slide deck.
Drill Two. Three-Minute Post-Call Replay.
Not a Gong review. Not a coaching session. Not something the manager runs. The rep, alone, three minutes, immediately after the call, before the next thing on the calendar makes it disappear. Because the window on this is now, not Thursday when they finally get to it, when "I don't remember exactly what happened" replaces "here is the exact sentence that broke it."
Three questions. Written down. Same three every time. The point is not depth. The point is that a rep who does this fifty times will have a private, honest, longitudinal record of their own pattern that no manager, no LMS, and no call intelligence tool can hand them. Because it is the rep's own read of the rep's own work, and that is the read that changes behavior.
Write it down. Immediately. Not later. The read decays fast.
How A Manager Defends The Eight Minutes
Someone reading this is a BDR manager thinking "my reps do not have eight minutes." A different someone reading this is that manager's VP thinking "my reps do not have eight minutes." Both of you are wrong and I say that with love.
A rep on 12 dials a day and 3 meetings is spending nine hours in front of a screen. The claim that eight minutes attached to the meetings that matter cannot be found is not a time problem. It is a priority problem. You are prioritizing volume of activity over compounding of skill. The rep who does this outperforms the rep who does not by month three. Every quarter you delay picking that up, you are running the wrong optimization.
You do not run the drills. You do not audit the drills. You inspect one thing in the 1:1: "walk me through the moment your last call turned." If the rep can answer specifically, the drill is happening. If the rep says "it went okay," it is not, and that is the coaching conversation. Not "you need to do the drill." The drill is downstream of "you cannot yet name the moment your own calls turn on," which is the actual gap.
Why This Works And Most Enablement Does Not
Both drills share three properties that most training programs do not have. They are attached to the work, not scheduled around it. They are small enough that a real human under real workload will actually do them. And they produce a specific behavior instead of a general feeling that the rep is now "better at discovery."
That is the shape of anything that changes behavior. Attached. Small. Specific. Every training that fails on the pipeline review three months later fails on at least one of those three. Usually all three. The eight-minute answer is not a hack. It is what practice looks like when it is designed to happen instead of designed to be attended.
Attached to the work. Small enough to actually do. Specific enough to produce a behavior. That is the shape of anything that changes what a rep does under pressure.
Back To Priya
Priya started running the two drills the next Monday. Not because anyone asked her to. Because she read something on a Sunday night and decided she was tired of walking out of calls she could have run better if she had said the words out loud once before the buyer heard them for the first time.
Week one felt stupid. Talking to herself in an empty room felt like she was faking a job she already had. Week two the openers stopped sounding like a recitation. Week three she noticed she was answering "what does your product do" in one clean sentence instead of the ninety-second monologue she used to close with an apology.
In week six she got another VP of Ops on the line. Seven minutes. Same setup as the one that had ended Priya's week two months ago. This one ended with the VP saying "send me a time next Tuesday, I want my Head of Fulfillment on it." Priya closed her laptop. Priya did not tell her manager. Priya wrote down what she did at the moment the call turned so she could rehearse it tomorrow.
That is the whole compound. Two drills. One rep. A behavior that used to live in a training doc now living in the rep.
Pick the next real meeting on your calendar. Do the five-minute rehearsal out loud, not in your head. On the call, notice the moment it turns. Right after the call, before the next thing, write the three lines of the replay.
Do it ten times. Not the whole quarter. Ten calls. Then decide if this is worth doing forever or if I am wrong. You will not need the second half of that sentence.