The Onboarding-to-Delivery Handoff That Prevents Losing Clients in Month 2
Most agency client losses don't happen at pitch or delivery. They happen in the transition.
You spend two weeks collecting information, setting up systems, and getting everyone aligned. Then the "active onboarding" phase ends and delivery starts — and that's where things quietly fall apart.
The client doesn't know who their day-to-day contact is. Your team isn't sure what was promised versus what was scoped. Nobody sent a recap of what was decided. The client goes quiet. You interpret it as approval. Six weeks later, they're frustrated and you don't know why.
Here's the handoff framework that closes this gap.
Why Month 2 Is the Danger Zone
The first month of a client engagement is all energy. Kickoff calls, access setups, introductions. Everyone is paying attention.
Month 2 is when the novelty wears off and the real dynamic between agency and client settles. Three things typically go wrong:
1. The client doesn't know who to call
They have a question. They're not sure if it should go to the project manager, the account lead, or the person they spoke to at kickoff. So they send an ambiguous email and wait. If the response is slow or unclear, their confidence drops.
2. Your team doesn't have a single source of truth
The kickoff doc is somewhere in Drive. The intake form answers are in an email thread. The timeline is in a project board that nobody's updated since day one. Anyone joining the account mid-project is flying blind.
3. There's no agreed "we're in delivery mode now" moment
Clients rarely know they've moved from onboarding to execution. If you don't formally close the onboarding phase, the client keeps treating your team like they're still in setup mode — still asking for changes that would have been fine to incorporate in week one but are expensive in week four.
The Transition Checkpoint: A 15-Minute Call
The fix is simple but most agencies skip it: a formal onboarding close-out.
Book a 15-minute "transition call" at the end of the onboarding phase. Agenda:
Part 1 — Confirm the baseline (5 min)
- Review the agreed deliverables (pull from the kickoff doc)
- Confirm the client has everything they need to be a good client: access granted, materials delivered, questions answered
- Ask: "Is there anything unclear about what we're building or what you'll be receiving?"
Part 2 — Introduce the delivery rhythm (5 min)
- Name the single point of contact going forward
- Explain the update cadence: "You'll get a short update every Friday with what we did this week and what's coming next"
- Set the escalation path: "If something's urgent, here's how to reach us outside the regular cycle"
Part 3 — Close the onboarding phase (5 min)
- Explicitly say: "We're now in delivery mode. The intake and setup phase is closed."
- Walk through the next 30-day milestone
- Ask for sign-off: "Does this match what you're expecting?"
This call takes 15 minutes. It prevents 6 weeks of drift.
The Transition Document
After the call (or before it if you want to use it as a reference), send a one-page transition document. It doesn't need to be elaborate — this is the template we use:
[Client Name] — Onboarding Complete
Your account lead: [Name] | [email]
Normal response time: Within 24 hours on business days
Escalation contact: [Name] for urgent issues
What we're building:
[2–3 bullet points summarizing the deliverables, pulled from the kickoff doc]
The first 30 days looks like:
- By [date]: [First deliverable]
- By [date]: [Second milestone]
- [Date]: First check-in call to review progress
How you'll hear from us:
Every Friday you'll receive a short update: what we completed, what's next, and anything we need from you.
Questions or changes:
All project communication goes to [email/channel]. This keeps the whole team in the loop and avoids anything getting lost in direct messages.
One page. Ten minutes to fill in. Sent the day of the transition call.
What the Single Source of Truth Looks Like
The transition document only works if your team can find it. The onboarding-to-delivery handoff requires one place where everything lives:
- Kickoff doc — agreed goals, success metrics, what's in and out of scope
- Intake form responses — the raw information the client provided
- Access tracker — every platform, access level, and who granted it (with the date)
- Active scope — the current deliverable list, with statuses
- Communication log — a running record of what's been discussed and decided
For a two-person agency, this can be as simple as a structured Notion page or a Google Doc with clear sections. For anything bigger, it should be in your project management tool.
The point isn't the tool — it's that anyone on your team, five weeks into a client project, should be able to answer "what did we promise in the kickoff?" in under two minutes.
The Friday Update
Once delivery starts, a short weekly update prevents most "just checking in" emails.
The format that works:
Done this week: [2–3 bullets of completed items]
Coming next week: [What they should expect to see]
We need from you: [Specific, time-bounded request if applicable]
It takes 10 minutes to write. It keeps the client in the loop without requiring a call. And it creates a record that shows you're consistently delivering.
If you ever need to push back on scope creep, the weekly update log becomes your evidence: here's the 8 weeks of updates showing what we delivered and what was agreed. The new request wasn't in any of those updates because it wasn't part of the scope.
Pulling It Together
The transition from onboarding to delivery is where most agencies lose clients silently. The client doesn't complain — they just don't renew, or they become the difficult client you dread dealing with.
The fix is a 15-minute call, a one-page document, and a weekly Friday update. None of these are complicated. They're just not the default, so agencies skip them until a client relationship goes badly and they add the step retroactively.
The agencies that run clean delivery relationships are usually the ones that close the onboarding phase explicitly and never let the client wonder who to call or what happens next.
I built the Agency Onboarding OS to systematize exactly this kind of transition: intake forms, kickoff docs, access trackers, communication templates, and the delivery rhythm documents are all included. If you want to grab the free onboarding checklist first, it's at agencyonboardingos.com/checklist.
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