Your best closer just landed a six-figure project. They shook hands, sent the DocuSign, and moved on to the next prospect. Two months later, the client calls them directly — frustrated, asking why a deliverable is three weeks late.
Your salesperson finds out the same moment the client does.
They weren't notified. They didn't miss anything. There was simply nowhere to look — so they weren't looking.
The instinct is to call it a handoff issue. Run a better kickoff meeting. Make sure operations reads the notes. Train the team to loop sales back in when something goes wrong.
Those fixes work once. Then the next project slips and the same thing happens, because the root cause isn't behavior — it's architecture. When a deal closes, it disappears from your salesperson's world. It moves into a project management tool, an operations inbox, a Slack channel they're not in. The CRM still shows "Closed Won" and a dollar amount. That's it.
The information about what's actually happening exists somewhere. It just doesn't exist anywhere your salesperson can see it.
When salespeople don't have visibility, they improvise. They text the project manager. They ask in a meeting. They follow up with the client to "check in" — which reads as disorganized when the client is already frustrated.
Each of those improvised touchpoints costs something. The PM gets interrupted mid-execution. The client loses confidence. The salesperson looks like they handed off a deal and disappeared. And the next renewal conversation — or the upsell — starts at a disadvantage because the relationship degraded during delivery.
This is the part that rarely gets measured: the revenue you don't close in year two because year one went quiet after the signature.
Your salesperson opens the deal in your CRM — the same record they worked during presales. Without calling anyone, without switching tools, they can see: where the project stands, what's been delivered, whether anything is flagged, and what's been billed versus what's pending.
Not a summary someone wrote for them. Not a status report requested by email. The live operational data, in the same place where the sale happened. Concretely: the deal record shows project status, any open incidents flagged by operations, and a running total of billed versus pending fees — all updated in real time, without the salesperson asking anyone for anything.
When the client calls, the salesperson already knows. When the renewal comes up, they've been watching the account for months. When something goes wrong mid-project, they can get ahead of it before the client says anything.
This isn't a workflow change. It's what happens when your sales object and your delivery object live in the same system — connected, not copied.
Most companies that have this problem already have the tools. They have a CRM for sales and a project tool for delivery. The gap isn't software — it's that nothing was built to connect them with the salesperson in mind.
The fix has three parts, in order:
When this is in place, the salesperson doesn't need to ask. The system tells them. And they can stay close to the account without creating overhead for operations.
If your top salesperson wanted to know the real status of every project they've sold in the last 90 days — right now, without asking anyone — could they get that in under a minute?
If the answer is no, the problem isn't that your team doesn't communicate well enough. It's that the information isn't where it needs to be.
That's a solvable problem. See how companies that sell projects build this structure — including what the connected deal record looks like in practice.