Anyone struggles with sales reps reveriting back to their old habits 2 weeks after sales training?
Paul B. I am asking because I want to understand how common this issue is. It almost always has pretty much the same root cause and fairly simple solution, yet it still happens. I wonder, am I missing something. If it's right after training vs. 1-2 weeks after then the root cause is probably different. Seen that too.
How long is the training?
usually happens, when they haven't totally accepted the new method being taught or if they face multiple failure with what they have learnt. but yes its a very very come issue on all fields not just sales
Danny S. The training is typically not the problem. Reps go out and actually do the behaviors they were trained to do for 1–2 weeks. It’s just that it dies out before habit is formed. Dominic A. Yeah. The #1 issue I see is that the behaviors reps were taught to do aren’t properly reinforced to scale and normalize over time. Without reinforcement — especially after early failures — most behaviors fade before they stabilize. #2 is that the trained behavior isn’t properly enabled. Reps are expected to just go out and do what they were “taught” — but that’s not how behavior works in the real world. Training starts the process, but reps build real skill through weeks of supported repetition. If that repetition period isn’t supported with in-the-moment guidance (not a 20-page playbook, but skill-by-skill support), reps usually either forget how to do what they were taught — or lose confidence before it becomes a real skill. These two alone cover probably 60-70% of all cases I encountered. I am curious what is your experiance.
If it dies out after 1-2 weeks couldn’t the argument be made that the training is the problem and didn’t resonate? If a baseball player makes an adjustment that changes what he has been doing for 2 years, practices that adjustment for an hour, is he really going to be able to consistently take that adjustment into the game?
You could make that argument Danny S. — and sometimes it's true. If the training doesn't resonate, isn't a cultural fit, or reps don't see the value, then the behavior usually doesn't happen at all or dies out after one or two tries. That's a different root problem with a faster decay curve. What I’m pointing to is a different failure pattern: reps do the behavior for 1–2 weeks — which means it landed enough to activate. But without reinforcement, enablement, or system pressure, the behavior fades before it stabilizes. So it’s not that training failed — it’s that the system didn’t carry it through.
Yea, definitely can see that. Is there any training check ins after 2 weeks or a month to gather feedback?
Correct me if I’m wrong — I’m a behavior systems engineer, not a sales training consultant — but gathering feedback seems like standard practice in the field. Whether reps give honest feedback about why they “failed” is another matter entirely.
Ahh, my mistake!
Hey KC I recently joined and came across this intriguing topic. Have an "outside the box" thought which might be applicable. The pattern I see curbing rep enablement is an area of opportunity to establish a training which reflects the amount of average time it takes one to form a habit (21 - 27 days). This can be designed to stretch out the 1-2 weeks of education across 4 weeks (easier to digest and resonate). Something which Danny S. highlighted (resonating material). The number 1 issue which I observed is the material which is being presented routinely dissolves at point of scale, reverting back to outdated processes. If it were me I would revisit the training given the situation you've outlined. It's possible the training itself is not scalable. Thoughts?
Paul D. you’re definitely onto something. It does take longer than 21–27 days to build an automatic habit — but that time frame can be enough to develop a consciously applied skill, if the system supports it properly. Now, I’m not a sales training consultant, and I’d love to hear from someone with deep expertise in that space. But from a behavior systems perspective, here’s how I’d approach stabilizing training:
Avoid front-loading everything. Don’t expect reps to absorb all skills in one workshop and apply them immediately. If possible, teach skill-by-skill (or behavior-by-behavior) over a few weeks.
Design a gradient of targets — make week 1 goals easy wins, then increase difficulty incrementally. This builds early traction.
Give visible progress feedback — show reps how they’re improving vs. their own baseline. This adds fuel to momentum and gives reinforcement a direction.
Reinforce effort, not just outcomes. Weekly recognition from managers — even for attempts — helps create sustained engagement.
Frame personal relevance. Help reps connect the training to their own goals, not just leadership priorities.
Enable real-time action. Use prompts and timely guidance to help reps apply the behavior when it actually matters, with the right resources in reach.
And if the format has to start with a single workshop, then make sure there’s some form of lightweight, ongoing reinforcement — weekly or bi-weekly check-ins, manager reviews, even peer practice. Doesn’t have to be heavy. But without any follow-up structure, the system signals to reps that it doesn’t really matter — and that’s exactly how they’ll treat it. Also: don’t just track practice — track whether these behaviors are driving actual outcomes. Sometimes training gets reinforced around what’s easy to measure, not what truly moves the needle. That’s where behavior systems thinking closes the loop. Culture is key — and culture is shaped by what gets reinforced, not just what gets taught.
Reinforcement is definitely the problem - this is where sales management or an enablement coach comes in and is constantly reminding reps of what to do and not do. Is it selling they’re messing up or system hygiene or something else?
Paris P. let’s break down what happens in the behavior system when management fails to reinforce rep training repeatedly: Reinforcement
No feedback on progress → reps can’t tell whether they’re applying the skill correctly. This stalls momentum and interrupts skill formation.
No reinforcement → reps stop associating the behavior with any value. Without a visible reward or signal of importance, habit formation collapses.
Culture
When managers don’t reinforce key behaviors, the system sends an implicit message: “You can do this, but no one’s watching — it doesn’t matter.” This actively reinforces the counter-belief: that effort is irrelevant.
It’s a similar psychological pattern to social media: if you post and no one reacts, it subtly signals that no one cares. That’s how silence forms cultures of disengagement and low ownership. We all seen it many times.
Ownership
People avoid owning tasks that feel meaningless to them — especially when they’re not accountable for the outcome. For example: a warehouse manager may delay pricing updates even though they’re essential to a sales rep. If the system doesn’t make the outcome visible or tie it to their responsibility, that task will get deprioritized — even if the consequences hurt the business.
This is not people being lazy, this is system pressuring people into unhelpful behaviors.
This touches at least three of the six behavior system dimensions in a very real way: reinforcement, culture, and ownership. If these issues persist across the system, the compounding effect becomes quote serious:
Disengagement grows
Burnout creeps in
Friction accumulates invisibly
In practice, the efficiency loss from these breakdowns far exceeds the total cost of training. Critically, these repeated breakdowns generate compounding harm over time. Not because people or training failed, but because the system didn’t support behavior transfer.