Sales Strategy

SDR Training Plan: A 30-60-90 Day Framework for Outbound Teams

June 19, 2026

Introduction

A new SDR can learn your CRM in an afternoon. Learning how to create qualified pipeline takes longer.

That gap is where most SDR training plans break. Teams hand new reps a product deck, a script, a dial target, and a few recorded calls, then wonder why the rep can book meetings that never convert. The issue is not effort. It is usually that the rep was trained on tasks before they were trained on judgment.

A strong SDR training plan should answer five questions:

  • Who are we trying to reach?
  • Why would that buyer care right now?
  • What problems are worth starting a conversation around?
  • What makes a meeting qualified enough for sales?
  • How will we inspect quality before bad habits become normal?

This guide gives you a practical 30-60-90 day SDR training framework for outbound teams. It is built for B2B sales development teams that use cold calling, cold email, list building, and structured handoffs to create pipeline.

What SDR Training Should Actually Produce

SDR training is not finished when a rep knows where the buttons are. It is finished when the rep can consistently create meetings your sales team wants to take.

That means the training plan has to produce four outcomes:

  1. Buyer fluency. The rep understands the ICP, buying committee, common pain points, trigger events, and disqualifiers.
  2. Message control. The rep can open calls, write relevant emails, explain the problem, handle common objections, and ask for the next step without sounding scripted.
  3. Process discipline. The rep can work a list, follow the cadence, log clean CRM notes, and use dispositions correctly.
  4. Quality judgment. The rep knows the difference between a meeting that is merely booked and a meeting that should become pipeline.

If you skip any one of those, your metrics get noisy. Activity may rise while meeting quality falls. That is why training should connect directly to your SDR metrics and KPIs, not just onboarding checklists.

Before Day 1: Build the SDR Training Inputs

The best onboarding starts before the rep joins. If managers are still debating the ICP, script, or qualification rules on the rep's first day, the rep will inherit confusion.

Prepare these assets first.

ICP and Account Rules

Give the rep a clear definition of the accounts they should prioritize. Include:

  • Target industries
  • Company sizes
  • Geographic limits
  • Tech stack or trigger signals when relevant
  • Exclusions and bad-fit accounts
  • Examples of good accounts and bad accounts

Do not stop at firmographics. A rep should understand why those accounts are likely to care, not just what filters define them.

Buyer Persona Notes

Document the people your SDR will contact. Include titles, responsibilities, likely pain points, common objections, and the language buyers use to describe the problem.

For complex deals, include the buying committee. Your rep may start with one contact, but effective outbound often requires more than one stakeholder. If that is new to the team, pair this training with a multi-touch sales cadence and clear multi-threading expectations.

Talk Tracks and Email Examples

Provide examples, but avoid turning reps into script readers. Give them:

  • A cold call opener
  • A problem statement
  • A permission-based transition
  • Two or three discovery questions
  • A concise meeting ask
  • Two strong cold emails
  • Two follow-up emails
  • Common objection responses

The goal is pattern recognition. Reps should learn why a message works, not memorize every word.

Qualification and Handoff Rules

Define what qualifies a meeting before the rep starts booking. At minimum, document:

  • Required account fit
  • Required title or buying influence
  • Minimum pain or initiative signal
  • What notes the AE needs before the meeting
  • What should disqualify a meeting
  • How reschedules and no-shows are handled

This keeps training connected to accepted pipeline, not just calendar activity.

Days 1 to 30: Build Foundation and Controlled Practice

The first 30 days are about comprehension, practice, and controlled execution. A new SDR should not be judged only on meetings booked during this phase. They should be judged on whether they can run the process correctly and improve quickly.

Week 1: Market, Product, and Buyer Context

Start with context before scripts.

A good first week includes:

  • Product and service overview
  • ICP training
  • Buyer persona training
  • Competitive positioning
  • CRM and sequencing tool setup
  • Review of successful and unsuccessful calls
  • Review of high-quality and low-quality meetings

Ask the rep to explain the ICP back to the manager in plain English. If they cannot explain who the buyer is and why the buyer cares, they are not ready for live prospecting.

Week 2: Messaging and Role Play

Move into controlled practice. The rep should write emails, practice call openers, and handle common objections before live volume ramps.

Useful drills include:

  • Rewrite a generic email into a specific one
  • Open a cold call in 20 seconds or less
  • Explain the problem without pitching too early
  • Handle "not interested" without arguing
  • Ask one clean discovery question after the opener
  • Close for a meeting with a clear reason to meet

Record role plays when possible. The point is not to embarrass the rep. The point is to make coaching specific.

Weeks 3 and 4: Supervised Prospecting

Now the rep should begin live work with guardrails. Start with smaller lists, tighter feedback loops, and daily review.

Inspect:

  • Accounts selected
  • Contacts chosen
  • Email personalization
  • Call dispositions
  • CRM notes
  • Objection patterns
  • Calendar invites and handoff notes

Early volume matters, but clean execution matters more. If a rep learns to blast bad-fit accounts in month one, you will spend month two unwinding the habit.

By the end of day 30, the rep should be able to explain the ICP, execute the cadence, write acceptable emails, make live calls, log clean notes, and show coachability.

Days 31 to 60: Shift From Practice to Pipeline Creation

The second month should look less like onboarding and more like managed production. The rep should carry a real activity target, but managers should still inspect quality closely.

Raise Activity in Stages

Do not jump from practice to full quota overnight. Increase expectations in stages based on list quality and market complexity.

A practical sequence:

  • Week 5: controlled daily activity with manager-reviewed accounts
  • Week 6: broader list ownership with call and email QA
  • Week 7: full cadence execution across prioritized accounts
  • Week 8: early quota expectations with quality review

This prevents the team from confusing speed with readiness.

Coach the Conversion Points

At this stage, coaching should focus on conversion points, not motivation speeches.

Look at where the funnel breaks:

  • Are enough contacts being reached?
  • Are connects turning into conversations?
  • Are conversations turning into meetings?
  • Are meetings holding?
  • Are AEs accepting the meetings as qualified?

If the rep gets connects but few conversations, coach the opener. If they book meetings that AEs reject, coach qualification. If they write many emails but get no replies, coach relevance and list fit.

Tie Training to Compensation and Quality

Month two is also where incentives begin to matter. If the compensation plan rewards every meeting equally, reps will learn to optimize for calendar volume. If the plan rewards accepted opportunities and quality gates, reps learn to protect the handoff.

For more detail on this, use a quality-focused SDR compensation plan that rewards the behavior you actually want.

By the end of day 60, the rep should be creating meetings, improving specific conversion points, and showing enough quality judgment to work with less daily supervision.

Days 61 to 90: Prove Repeatability

The final 30 days of the ramp should answer one question: can this rep create qualified pipeline repeatedly?

This is where managers should move from basic onboarding to performance management.

Measure the Right Outcomes

Do not judge the rep only on activity. Look at the full path from inputs to accepted pipeline:

  • Accounts worked
  • Calls, emails, and LinkedIn touches completed
  • Connect rate
  • Conversation rate
  • Meeting set rate
  • Meeting held rate
  • Accepted opportunity rate
  • Notes and handoff quality
  • Feedback from AEs

This gives you a fairer picture than a single meeting number.

Add Advanced Scenarios

By month three, the rep should be ready for harder situations:

  • Calling senior buyers
  • Navigating gatekeepers
  • Handling pricing pressure
  • Re-engaging stalled conversations
  • Multi-threading into a second contact
  • Recovering no-shows
  • Prioritizing accounts when the list is large

This is also the right time to compare call recordings from week two to calls from week ten. The improvement should be obvious.

Decide the Next Path

At day 90, place the rep into one of three categories:

  1. Fully ramped. The rep is creating qualified meetings with acceptable quality and can carry the standard target.
  2. Still developing. The rep shows progress but needs a focused coaching plan around one or two conversion points.
  3. Not a fit. The rep is not improving despite clear feedback, or they cannot meet quality standards.

The decision should be evidence-based. Use call recordings, email samples, CRM notes, meeting outcomes, and AE feedback.

Weekly SDR Coaching Rhythm

Training is not an event. It is a management rhythm.

A simple weekly cadence works well:

  • Monday: review priorities, account focus, and weekly goals
  • Tuesday: call coaching using real recordings
  • Wednesday: email and sequence review
  • Thursday: pipeline and handoff quality review
  • Friday: scorecard, wins, stuck points, and next week's focus

Keep the feedback narrow. If a rep gets ten coaching notes at once, they will fix none of them. Pick the highest-leverage behavior and inspect it again the next week.

SDR Training Scorecard

Use a scorecard so managers coach consistently. Keep it practical.

Buyer and Market Knowledge

  • Can explain the ICP in plain English
  • Knows the main pain points by persona
  • Understands common disqualifiers
  • Can identify high-priority accounts

Call Execution

  • Opens clearly and confidently
  • Earns permission to continue
  • Asks relevant discovery questions
  • Handles common objections calmly
  • Makes a specific meeting ask

Email Execution

  • Writes concise, relevant emails
  • Personalizes without wasting time
  • Avoids generic claims
  • Uses clear calls to action
  • Follows the sequence correctly

Process Discipline

  • Uses correct dispositions
  • Logs useful CRM notes
  • Follows handoff rules
  • Updates tasks and next steps
  • Protects data quality

Meeting Quality

  • Books with the right buyer
  • Confirms a real business reason to meet
  • Provides helpful context for the AE
  • Avoids weak or misleading meetings
  • Learns from accepted and rejected meetings

Common SDR Training Mistakes

Starting With Tools Instead of Buyers

Tool training is necessary, but it is not the core of sales development. A rep who knows the CRM but not the buyer will create bad activity at scale.

Handing Over Scripts Without Teaching Judgment

Scripts help new reps find structure. They become a problem when reps cannot adapt. Teach the intent behind each line so reps can respond like people.

Measuring Only Activity

Dials and emails are inputs. They matter, but they are not the result. Quality reviews should protect meeting standards from the start.

Waiting Too Long to Review Real Work

Managers often wait until a rep misses quota before reviewing calls, emails, and CRM notes. By then, the habits are already set. Inspect real work in week one.

Ignoring the AE Handoff

The SDR job does not end when a calendar invite is sent. If the AE lacks context or rejects the meeting, training should address the handoff.

When to Build Internally vs Get Help

If you have strong sales management, clean ICP data, proven messaging, and time for weekly coaching, you can build SDR training internally.

If you are still defining the market, need pipeline quickly, or do not have a manager who can inspect outbound quality every week, outside help can shorten the learning curve. An experienced SDR outsourcing partner can bring list building, messaging, dialing, email execution, and QA rhythms that many small teams do not have in place yet.

The choice is not simply internal or outsourced. Some teams outsource the first motion to learn what works, then bring the playbook in-house later. Others keep outsourced SDR support as a steady pipeline channel while internal reps focus on strategic accounts.

Final Takeaway

A good SDR training plan does more than teach activity. It teaches judgment.

The best reps learn who to pursue, what to say, when to qualify out, how to hand off a meeting, and how to improve from feedback. That takes a plan, not just a target.

Use the first 30 days to build foundation, days 31 to 60 to create controlled pipeline, and days 61 to 90 to prove repeatability. If you inspect the right work each week, you will know whether the rep is truly ramping before the quarter is over.

The short version

Key takeaways

  • A good SDR training plan starts with buyer context and qualification rules before it moves into scripts, tools, or activity targets.
  • The first 30 days should prove process fluency, message control, CRM discipline, and coachability before a rep carries a full quota.
  • Days 31 to 60 should shift from protected practice to controlled pipeline creation with daily feedback on calls, emails, and list quality.
  • Days 61 to 90 should measure whether the rep can create accepted meetings consistently, not just complete activity.
  • Training works best when managers inspect real work every week: call recordings, email threads, CRM notes, dispositions, and meeting quality.
Questions, answered

Frequently asked questions

The short version is on the surface. Open any question to go deeper.

Most outbound SDRs need 30 days to learn the market, tools, messaging, and basic talk tracks, then another 30 to 60 days to prove consistent pipeline creation. Complex markets, technical products, and multi-threaded buying committees usually require more coaching before the rep is fully ramped.
SDR training should include ICP and buyer education, qualification criteria, call practice, email writing, objection handling, CRM hygiene, cadence execution, list review, handoff rules, and quality standards for booked meetings.
The biggest mistake is treating onboarding as tool training plus an activity target. Reps need to understand who they are calling, why those accounts matter, what pain points to listen for, and what makes a meeting worth accepting.
Measure training success with a mix of leading and lagging indicators: talk-track fluency, connect-to-conversation rate, email quality, meeting set rate, meetings held, accepted opportunities, CRM accuracy, and coachability.

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