Commitment accepted
The commercial record is complete under the agreed process. Do not infer settlement from an invoice or pending transfer.
A new client can sign, pay, and still wait because sales, operations, delivery, and finance do not share one accepted onboarding state. This audit maps the handoff without collecting client data, buying software, or pretending that more reminders fix unclear ownership.
Start with the event your business already treats as commitment: a signed scope, approved estimate, provider-confirmed deposit, purchase order, or another explicit acceptance. Then define a separate readiness event. A signed document proves agreement; it does not prove that delivery has the contacts, access, files, decisions, and constraints required to begin.
The commercial record is complete under the agreed process. Do not infer settlement from an invoice or pending transfer.
One person or queue accepts the next action. A notification sent to several people is not ownership.
Only the information required for the first delivery step is present, validated, and stored in an approved location.
The receiving owner confirms the packet is usable or routes a named exception. Silence is not acceptance.
Trace one recent onboarding instance from commitment to ready-to-start. At every stage, write the owner, the visible next action, the required information, the acceptance event, and the exception route.
Record the event that authorizes onboarding and the responsible business entity.
Assign the onboarding owner and first response deadline.
Send one minimum, role-specific request instead of a loose list across email and chat.
Confirm access through approved sharing methods and keep credentials out of ordinary forms and messages.
Check that owner, scope, contacts, dependencies, schedule, and first decision are understood.
Record the handoff as accepted, rejected with reasons, or waiting on a named item.
Use the latest 10 to 20 comparable onboardings when available. Keep the definition stable and separate active work from waiting. A small sample can expose a design problem, but it cannot prove a financial outcome.
| Measure | Definition | Question it answers |
|---|---|---|
| Time to owner | Commitment timestamp to accepted internal assignment. | Does new work enter a named queue quickly? |
| Time to ready | Commitment timestamp to delivery acceptance. | How long does the complete handoff take? |
| First-pass completeness | Share accepted without a second information request. | Is the minimum packet clear? |
| Reminder count | Manual reminders sent before the required item is accepted. | Is follow-up hiding a missing owner or deadline? |
| Exception age | Time an exception remains without a named decision. | Does the safe path have an owner? |
| Reopened onboarding | Accepted onboarding returned to intake because a required item was wrong or missing. | Is acceptance evidence trustworthy? |
The deal status changes, but the signed scope, responsible entity, and exception terms do not reach operations.
A project is created before a delivery owner accepts the scope and first next action.
Credentials or private records are requested through an unsafe channel because the approved access path is unclear.
A meeting is booked, but nobody has confirmed the decision-maker, dependencies, or success measure.
The first improvement is often a state and acceptance rule, not a new integration. Once the state is stable, software can prepare records, detect missing fields, route routine cases, and calculate elapsed time.
Keep a human decision for material scope changes, financial commitments, security access, sensitive communications, public actions, and exceptions the system cannot verify. A successful action needs evidence from the destination system, not a model-generated success sentence.
No. First define commitment, ownership, the minimum packet, exception handling, and delivery acceptance. Existing tools may be sufficient once the handoff is clear.
Only after the required item, recipient, deadline, stop condition, and escalation are explicit. Automated reminders should not pressure a client for data that is unnecessary or unsafe to send.
A receiving delivery owner accepts the validated onboarding packet and records the first next action. A sent email or created project alone is weaker evidence.
The separate USD $497 AI Operations Audit covers one agreed workflow, its as-is handoff map, one priority blueprint, measures, and a 30-day action plan. Implementation is separate. Scope and terms are confirmed before payment, and no result is guaranteed.
The free scorecard runs in your browser and does not submit answers. If you choose a fit review later, the separate request requires explicit consent and creates no invoice, purchase, subscription, or payment request.
Educational guide, not a client result, testimonial, case study, or revenue promise.