Enterprise Onboarding
Four-phase framework for onboarding enterprise customers from contract to value realization. The goal isn't just go-live — it's sustained adoption that doesn't cliff at Week 12.
When to Use
Triggers:
- "How do we onboard this enterprise customer?"
- "Customer went live but adoption is weak"
- "We keep losing customers 3 months after go-live"
- "POC to production transition"
- "How do I prevent Week 4 ghosting?"
- "Customer success onboarding framework"
Context:
- Enterprise or mid-market deals
- Complex technical requirements
- Multiple stakeholders involved
- 30-90 day implementation timelines
- Risk of churn during first year
Core Frameworks
1. The Week 4 Ghosting Problem (And How to Prevent It)
The Pattern:
Week 1: Kickoff call goes great. Everyone's excited.
Week 2-3: Technical discovery, requirements gathering. Still good.
Week 4: Customer stops responding. Meetings get cancelled. "Too busy."
What Happened?
You started customer onboarding before internal alignment on their side.
Who Owns This Project Internally?
- Sales rep? (Already moved to next deal)
- Technical champion? (Day job took over)
- Executive sponsor? (Delegates, doesn't drive)
- Nobody? (This is why they're ghosting)
The Framework: Internal Owner Validation
Before kickoff call, answer:
Who on customer side will:
- Attend weekly project meetings? (Not "invited" — will actually show up)
- Unblock issues with procurement/legal/security? (Has authority)
- Drive adoption with end users? (Has influence)
- Escalate when things stall? (Has executive access)
If you can't name a specific person for each, you don't have a project owner. You have a signed contract with nobody driving it.
How to Fix It:
During sales → CS handoff (before customer kickoff):
Sales rep must identify:
- Primary project owner (name, not role)
- Their capacity (dedicated or side project?)
- Their authority (can they unblock?)
- Their motivation (what's in it for them?)
If there's no clear owner:
Don't start onboarding yet. Have sales introduce you to economic buyer:
"Before we kick off implementation, we want to make sure we have the right project owner on your side. In our experience, implementations succeed when someone owns driving this forward week-to-week. Who on your team should we partner with?"
Common Mistake:
Assuming someone will own it. Ask explicitly. If they can't name someone, the deal is at risk.
2. The Adoption Cliff (Week 12 Problem)
The Pattern:
Go-live happens Week 6. Usage spikes. You celebrate.
Week 8: Usage plateaus.
Week 10: Usage declining.
Week 12: Usage down 50% from peak.
Why This Happens:
You treated go-live as the finish line. Go-live is the starting line.
What Drives Sustained Adoption:
Not: Feature completeness, technical integration, training sessions
Yes: Ongoing value demonstration, user success stories, expanding use cases
Framework: Adoption Stages Beyond Go-Live
Week 1-6 (Implementation): Get it working
- Measure: % of technical setup complete
- Owner: Technical lead
Week 6-12 (Initial Adoption): Get people using it
- Measure: # active users, frequency of use
- Owner: Enablement / DevRel
Week 12-26 (Sustained Adoption): Prove ongoing value
- Measure: Use case expansion, team spread
- Owner: Customer success
Week 26+ (Expansion): Grow within account
- Measure: New teams, new use cases, upgrade triggers
- Owner: Account executive + CS
The Handoff That Most Teams Miss:
Week 6 (go-live) → Week 12 (sustained adoption)
Most CS teams celebrate go-live and move to next customer. This is when churn seeds get planted.
What to Do Week 6-12:
Week 7: First value report
"Here's what your team accomplished in the first week: [specific metric]. Here's what good looks like at Week 12: [target]."
Week 9: User success story
"[User name] on [team name] saved [X hours/reduced Y errors] this week. Here's how they're using it."
Week 11: Use case expansion conversation
"You're using us for [primary use case]. Teams like yours also use us for [adjacent use case]. Want to explore?"
Common Mistake:
Measuring "go-live completion" instead of "sustained active usage." Go-live is not success. Week 26 retained adoption is success.
3. Pre-Onboarding: Success Is Built Before First Customer Call
The Pattern:
Most onboarding failures trace back to pre-kickoff gaps.
What Gets Missed:
Sales didn't brief CS properly:
- Deal drivers unknown
- Stakeholder dynamics unclear
- Technical requirements assumed
No internal project owner identified:
- CS reaches out, nobody responds
- Meetings get scheduled with wrong people
- Decisions don't stick
Customer timeline unrealistic:
- They want go-live in 2 weeks
- Technical setup takes 6 weeks minimum
- Expectations misaligned from Day 1
Framework: Pre-Kickoff Checklist
Before scheduling kickoff call, validate:
Account Intelligence:
Internal Setup:
Customer Readiness:
Timeline Validation:
Decision Criteria:
Only schedule kickoff when all four sections validated. If gaps exist, surface to sales or executive sponsor before engaging customer.
Common Mistake:
Starting onboarding without internal clarity. This creates confusion, missed deadlines, and erosion of customer confidence.
4. The Four-Phase Onboarding Flow
Phase 1: Kickoff (Week 1)
Goal: Align on objectives, timeline, success metrics
Attendees: Executive sponsors + project leads + technical leads
Agenda:
- Introductions and roles (5 min)
- Executive alignment on strategic objectives (5 min)
- Success definition: "What does success look like in 3/6/12 months?" (10 min)
- Timeline and milestones (5 min)
- Meeting cadence (weekly project team, monthly exec review) (5 min)
- Next steps (technical discovery call, success plan review) (5 min)
Deliverable: Kickoff recap sent within 24 hours with success metrics, timeline, next meetings
Phase 2: Discovery & Planning (Week 2-3)
Goal: Understand technical landscape, map use cases, plan rollout
Three parallel workstreams:
Workstream 1: Technical Discovery
- Current infrastructure (on-prem, cloud, hybrid)
- Existing tools and integrations
- Security/compliance requirements
- Timeline constraints
Workstream 2: Success Planning
- Use cases prioritized (start with highest-value)
- Success metrics defined (how to measure adoption)
- Training needs identified (who needs what)
Workstream 3: Technical Setup
- SSO/identity configuration
- Integrations required
- Data migration (if applicable)
- Pilot group identified
Deliverable: Customer Success Plan document with use cases, metrics, timeline, milestones
Phase 3: Implementation (Week 4-6)
Goal: Deploy to pilot group, validate use cases, prepare for broader rollout
Three parallel tracks:
Track 1: Administration & Setup
- SSO configuration complete
- Integrations live
- Data migrated (if applicable)
Track 2: User Enablement
- Training sessions for pilot group
- Documentation shared
- Office hours scheduled
Track 3: Pilot & Feedback
- Pilot group using product
- Feedback collected weekly
- Issues triaged and resolved
Deliverable: Go-live readiness checklist completed, pilot group validated
Phase 4: Go-Live & Ongoing Success (Week 6+)
Goal: Roll out broadly, sustain adoption, expand use cases
Week 6-8 (Rollout):
- Broader rollout to all teams
- Training sessions scheduled
- Support available (Slack, email, office hours)
Week 8-12 (Value Demonstration):
- First value report (Week 7)
- User success stories shared (Week 9)
- Use case expansion conversation (Week 11)
Week 12-26 (Sustained Adoption):
- Monthly business reviews
- Adoption tracking (active users, frequency, use cases)
- Expansion opportunities identified
Common Mistake:
Treating go-live as completion. Phase 4 is where retention is won or lost.
5. The Parallel Tracks Anti-Pattern
The Pattern:
Most onboarding teams run workstreams sequentially:
- Technical setup (Weeks 1-2)
- Then training (Weeks 3-4)
- Then pilot (Weeks 5-6)
Total time: 6 weeks
What Works Better: Parallel Tracks
Run technical setup, training, and pilot simultaneously:
- Week 1: Technical discovery + identify pilot group + schedule training
- Week 2: SSO config + pilot group training + pilot starts
- Week 3: Integrations + broader training + pilot feedback
Total time: 3 weeks
Why Parallel Works:
- Shortens time-to-value
- Keeps customer engaged (something happening every week)
- Identifies blockers early (pilot group surfaces issues before broad rollout)
How to Execute:
Assign clear owners to each track:
- Track 1 (Admin): Technical lead
- Track 2 (Enablement): Training/DevRel lead
- Track 3 (Pilot): CSM + pilot group champion
Weekly sync across tracks to surface dependencies and blockers.
Common Mistake:
Waiting for "perfect technical setup" before starting pilot. Get pilot group using it early, even if setup isn't perfect. Their feedback makes the broad rollout better.
Decision Trees
Should I Start Customer Onboarding?
Has sales identified a project owner by name?
├─ No → Get project owner identified before kickoff
└─ Yes → Continue...
│
Is their timeline realistic given typical deployment?
├─ No → Reset expectations before kickoff
└─ Yes → Continue...
│
Do you have internal capacity?
├─ No → Delay kickoff or get more resources
└─ Yes → Proceed to kickoff
Is This Onboarding At Risk?
Is customer responding to meeting invites?
├─ No → Week 4 ghosting, escalate to exec sponsor
└─ Yes → Continue...
│
Are they completing their action items?
├─ No → No project owner, identify who drives this
└─ Yes → Continue...
│
Is pilot group using the product?
├─ No → Pilot group wrong or product not solving pain
└─ Yes → On track
Is Adoption Sustained Post-Go-Live?
Are active users growing Week 6 → Week 12?
├─ Yes → Healthy adoption
└─ No → Continue...
│
Are active users declining?
├─ Yes → Adoption cliff, intervene immediately
└─ No (plateau) → At risk, start value demonstration
Common Mistakes
1. Starting customer onboarding before internal alignment
- Wastes first 2-3 weeks, creates confusion, kills credibility
2. Not identifying real project owner upfront
- Discovers it Week 4, has to restart or deal stalls
3. Overcommitting on timeline without technical requirements
- Discovers blockers mid-implementation, misses deadline
4. No internal communication hub
- Decisions don't propagate across teams, rework happens
5. Treating go-live as project complete
- Adoption cliff at Week 12, account at risk
6. Sequential tracks instead of parallel
- Implementation takes twice as long, customer loses momentum
7. No ongoing metrics post go-live
- Discovers adoption issues too late to save account
Quick Reference
Pre-Kickoff Validation:
Kickoff Agenda (30-45 min):
- Introductions (5 min)
- Executive alignment (5 min)
- Success definition (10 min)
- Timeline and milestones (5 min)
- Meeting cadence (5 min)
- Next steps (5 min)
Adoption Tracking (Week 6-26):
- Week 7: First value report
- Week 9: User success story
- Week 11: Use case expansion conversation
- Week 13: First monthly business review
- Week 26: Expansion readiness assessment
Four Phases:
- Kickoff (Week 1): Align
- Discovery (Week 2-3): Plan
- Implementation (Week 4-6): Deploy to pilot
- Go-Live & Sustained (Week 6+): Rollout, value demonstration, expansion
Red Flags:
- Customer not responding Week 4 → No project owner
- Pilot group not using product Week 5 → Wrong group or wrong use case
- Active users declining Week 8-12 → Adoption cliff forming
Related Skills
- enterprise-account-planning: Pre-sale deal planning and stakeholder mapping
- operating-cadence: Onboarding review cadence and health metrics
- product-led-growth: Self-serve onboarding patterns
Based on enterprise onboarding across multiple platform companies — designing partner onboarding directly and collaborating closely with CS on customer onboarding. Not theory — lessons from seeing Week 4 ghosting happen repeatedly and learning that go-live ≠ success, and understanding the adoption cliff that kills 30% of deals in first year.