A deal closes on Friday. By Tuesday, the project manager is rebuilding the scope from scratch because half of what was sold isn't in the SOW, and the other half was promised verbally to a buyer who's already on vacation. This is the sales-to-operations handover at most professional services firms, and it's where 8 to 20 points of project margin disappear before anyone has written a single line of code or held a kickoff call.
The damage isn't theoretical. It shows up as scope creep that nobody can push back on, timeline slippage that the client blames on you, and a PM team that spends the first two weeks of every engagement doing forensic work instead of project work. By the time finance sees the margin erosion in the monthly review, the cause is six weeks old and untraceable.
Most leadership teams treat this as a people problem. They assume the account executive was sloppy, or the PM didn't ask the right questions, or someone forgot to update the CRM. So they run a training. Add a checklist. Schedule a handover meeting. Nothing changes.
It doesn't change because the handover problem isn't behavioral. It's structural. The sales process and the delivery process live in two different systems with two different data models and two different definitions of what a "deal" actually contains.
Sales tracks stages: discovery, proposal, negotiation, closed-won. Operations tracks tasks: requirements, design, build, deploy. The handover is the single point where one model is supposed to translate cleanly into the other. It almost never does.
What gets passed across that gap is a PDF proposal, a Slack thread, and a 30-minute meeting where the AE summarizes what they remember. The unwritten context — what the buyer cares about, what was negotiated away, what was promised "as a courtesy" — stays in the AE's head. When that AE moves to the next deal, the context evaporates.
After close, the deal record in the CRM gets marked "closed-won" and effectively dies. Operations works in a different tool — Asana, Monday, Jira, a spreadsheet. The CRM is a sales artifact, not a living record of the engagement.
That single architectural decision is the root cause. When the system of record for a customer relationship ends at the signature, everything that comes after has to be reconstructed manually, every time.
The standard playbook has three moves: a handover meeting, a handover document, and a shared Slack channel. Every services firm in North America has tried some version of this. It works for about six weeks and then quietly degrades.
The handover meeting fails because it's compressed. Forty-five minutes to transfer three months of context is mathematically impossible. The PM walks out with a partial understanding and a polite agreement to "sync if anything comes up." Things come up. Syncs don't happen. The AE is already focused on the next quota.
The handover document fails for a different reason. It captures what was sold, not why. A scope line that reads "integrate with client's billing system" looks straightforward in writing. The fact that the buyer's CFO has explicitly forbidden any changes to the billing system, and the workaround was a verbal promise from the AE — that's not in the document. It's in the AE's memory.
When the PM hits that wall in week three, the conversation goes: "I never agreed to that." "The AE told me you would." The AE is unavailable. The client escalates. Margin dies right there.
The shared Slack channel fails because it confuses presence with information. Putting sales and ops in the same channel feels like collaboration. In practice, it produces a stream of half-context updates that nobody reads carefully. Important decisions get buried under status emojis. Three months in, the channel is a graveyard of unresolved threads.
Stop thinking of the handover as a moment. Start thinking of it as a continuous state of the same record. The deal doesn't end at close — it changes phase. Pre-sale and post-sale are two stages of the same object, tracked in the same system, with full history intact.
This means the CRM record stays alive after closed-won. The AE can open the deal six months later and see project status, open incidents, billed fees, and pending fees — without asking the PM. The PM can open the same deal and see every commitment the AE made during the sale, every email the buyer sent, every objection that was raised and how it was resolved.
The other half of the model is treating pre-sale work as structured operational work, not as informal sales activity. Information gathering, scoping, blueprint design, proposal construction — each of these is a discrete unit of work with an owner, a deliverable, and a record. When the deal closes, that work doesn't get re-summarized in a meeting. It's already documented in the system as the artifacts produced during the sale.
This changes the economics of the handover. The PM isn't inheriting a black box. They're inheriting a fully traceable history of every decision that shaped the project. If the buyer claims something was promised, you can pull up the exact moment in the pre-sale workflow where it was discussed or wasn't.
There's a related architectural point that most firms get wrong. A single client account often has multiple concurrent engagements — a website project with marketing, a data project with the analytics team, a managed service with operations. Most firms collapse these into one mega-deal with one PM, because the CRM doesn't make it easy to do otherwise.
That collapse destroys visibility. Each engagement has its own scope, its own buyer, its own margin profile. Tracking them separately, but linked under the same account, is the only way to keep the handover clean for each one and the financial picture accurate at the account level.
If you're not sure whether this is your problem, here are the signals that show up before the financial damage becomes visible:
If three or more of these are true, you're losing margin at the handover and you can't see it in the P&L because the loss is distributed across dozens of small frictions instead of one big line item.
When the sales-to-operations handover stops being a translation event and becomes a continuous record, project managers start engagements at week three instead of week zero. AEs can answer client questions about delivery without scheduling an internal call first. Finance gets margin visibility in real time, not 30 days after the quarter closes. The firm scales without proportionally scaling the chaos.
This is the architecture we build for technology and professional services firms that have outgrown the informal handover. If you want to see exactly what this looks like when it's implemented inside a real CRM — the deal model, the pre-sale tickets, the post-sale visibility, the financial rollup — here's the model we use for companies that sell projects. It's the same architecture running today at firms that decided the handover was too expensive to keep solving with meetings.