Don't wait for a formal QBR to discuss expansion. The immediate post-sale period is a golden window for additional sales. The customer's excitement and trust are at their peak. With their most urgent need solved, they are highly receptive to addressing other business challenges.
Salespeople often disengage after a deal closes. However, since they built the initial trust, they must stay involved during onboarding. This maintains customer momentum and ensures the relationship transitions smoothly, which directly impacts renewals, referrals, and future sales.
Relying on a CRM for sales-to-success handoffs is a recipe for failure. A mandatory, conversational meeting is required to transfer crucial context about the customer's goals and history. This prevents customers from having to repeat themselves, which immediately erodes trust and lowers expectations.
A one-size-fits-all onboarding process is ineffective. Customers have varying levels of technical proficiency; a power user may find excessive handholding annoying, while a novice needs it. The process must be flexible and tailored to the individual to avoid creating a frustrating experience.
Don't treat onboarding as a post-sale task. Instead, actively sell the onboarding experience during the sales cycle. Introduce the implementation team and detail the steps to manage expectations, build confidence, and frame onboarding as a core part of the value proposition, not an afterthought.
Onboarding is more than a technical setup; it's a trust exercise. Every step either builds upon or erodes the trust established during the sale. A single misstep can permanently damage the relationship, making future renewals, upsells, and referrals exponentially more difficult to secure.
