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Business Coaches.
You haven't found your lane, you're dominating it.
But your operations doesn't reflect that.
Subconsciously, you've added these items to the "we'll cross that bridge when we get there" list. And now, it's time to cross the bridge. And it's going to be a lot harder to cross it with all you're carrying. It doesn't have to be this hard. With the right strategies and operations support in place, we can get over this bridge with ease.
Someone who brings brings structure to what you've been holding together with a tight fist. It's time to untighten it.
Your team moves in sync: Clear roles. Clear expectations. Clear communication (without everything flowing through you).
Launches run smoothly: Timelines, tasks, and touch points organized and executed without the chaos or last-minute scrambles.
Delivery feels consistent and clean: Programs and clients experience your brand at its highest standard — every time.




"Working with Q, directly restore elements of myself and the business that I needed and I didn't know that that is what I was asking for we first conneted. I'm able to now remember why I started..."
- Mahdi, ceo of Mahdi woodard
Hey! I'm qwantel, but you can call me q
For the past 7 years, I’ve managed and operationalized online businesses just like yours — from group programs and digital communities to high-volume coaching ecosystems with growing teams.




"Truly, Qwantel has been a Godsend. I needed direction for the growth of my business. I knew what I saw in mind but it was hard to pull the pieces together. Qwantel led my thoughts into the tangible with a kind, patient, yet action-oriented fashion. She didn't allow any of my goals to fall through the cracks, keeping me in line by laying out content, processes and procedures to guide my trajectory. She's been a tremendous asset to my business and life. Qwantel is a professional that can be trusted to deliver with excellence in all she does. I'd highly recommend her."
- Kanishia, ceo of The kani hair group




"I love our dynamics in general! She thinks about the client delivery and she thinks about the data and operations and systems side of things. It' like having a right-hand partner and data wizard all in one..."
- taeler, ceo of taeler de haes




"Q is definitely worth every single penny! Since working with her I feel confident that my backend is handled and I can focus on what I need to keep my business running. I discover something new every single time we're together..."
- jasmine, ceo of baddies and budgets

Raise your hand if you've ever opened a CRM and immediately thought, "How did we get here?" I’ve been there — more times than I can count.
Most audits start as spreadsheets and end as abandoned docs. Someone says, “We need to clean this up,” so the team pulls a list of fields, automations, and reports… and then? Nothing changes.
Over the past seven years auditing CRMs across HubSpot, Salesforce, and HighLevel, I developed the Five-Pillar CRM Audit Framework I use on every engagement. It keeps audits focused, organized, and actionable.
And if the structure is right - you've wasted hours of "digging" for nothing.
In this guide, you’ll learn:
How to define your audit purpose (so you don’t waste time documenting noise)
The five pillars every CRM audit should include
How to turn report into a roadmap
How to build an ongoing audit rhythm that scales
Before you touch a field or open a workflow, clarify why you’re auditing.
Are you scaling? Fixing broken automations? Preparing for a data migration?
Your purpose determines your focus.
Write it down in one line. Example:
“We’re auditing HubSpot to improve visibility between Marketing and Sales and reduce duplicate data.”
That one sentence will keep you from spiraling into a 500-field spreadsheet no one reads.
Every CRM looks different, but I’ve found audits stay clear and useful when you evaluate them through these five pillars:
The Five Pillars (my framework):
Data Hygiene
Process Alignment
Automation Health
Reporting & Visibility
Enablement & Adoption
Let's discuss each one and I'll give samples of what you can review in each area.
This is where everything begins — clean data equals clean decisions.
Goal: Ensure accuracy, ownership, and structure.
What to Review:
Duplicates, incomplete, or outdated records
Required fields, naming conventions, and ownership
Dropdown values and picklists for consistency
Key metrics (Lead Source, Close Date, Deal Stage)
Guidance:
Export all properties into a spreadsheet and mark what’s redundant, unused, or unclear.
If you don’t know why a field exists, it’s probably time to archive or consolidate it.
Your CRM should mirror how your business actually runs not how someone thought it did six months ago.
Goal: Confirm that pipelines, lifecycles, and handoffs match real operations.
What to Review:
Lifecycle stages and entry/exit criteria
Deal or ticket stage definitions
Cross-team handoffs (Sales → CS → RevOps)
Pipeline alignment with customer journey
Guidance:
Interview at least different stakeholders and managers from each team and ask:
“What happens before and after your part of the process?”
Then compare their answers to what the CRM shows. You’ll immediately see where the system doesn’t match reality.
Automations are powerful — until they start conflicting, looping, or running in the wrong order.
Goal: Identify where workflows help or hinder performance.
What to Review:
Triggers, conditions, and re-enrollment settings
Duplicated or conflicting automations
Workflow naming conventions and documentation
Ownership and last review date
Guidance:
Create an Automation Index — one simple table with:
Workflow Name
Purpose
Owner
Status (Active/Paused)
You’ll spot gaps and redundancies in minutes.
Reports should tell a story, not just display data.
Goal: Align dashboards to business questions and decisions.
What to Review:
Are reports tied to KPIs that matter?
Are dashboards filtered correctly and consistently?
Are duplicate metrics or conflicting sources confusing teams?
Guidance:
Start from leadership goals:
“What decisions need better data?”
Then design reports that support those — not vanity metrics.
Even the cleanest CRM fails if no one knows how (or why) to use it.
Goal: Ensure your team understands, trusts, and maintains the system.
What to Review:
Training materials and onboarding for new hires
Documentation and change logs
Feedback loops for user suggestions
Usage patterns (login frequency, record updates, field completion)
Guidance:
Ask users:
“What’s confusing or unnecessary inside the CRM right now?”
You’ll learn more in that one question than in hours of data review.
A list of problems isn’t a plan.
Once your audit’s complete, categorize your findings into three layers:
Quick Wins (1–2 weeks)
Duplicate cleanups
Field consolidation
Naming convention updates
System Enhancements (2–4 weeks)
Pipeline redesigns
Automation rebuilds
Dashboard restructuring
Strategic Projects (1–3 months)
Data governance frameworks
Cross-team integrations
System migrations
Each item should end with:
Who owns it and when it will be done.
That single line turns documentation into direction.
Your audit is only valuable if people understand it.
Build a short, visual summary that includes:
Audit purpose and scope
Top three findings per pillar
Before/after visuals or screenshots
Recommended next steps
Keep it short and skimmable. A 20-slide deck no one opens is worse than no audit at all.
A CRM audit isn’t something you “do when it’s bad.”
It’s a maintenance habit.
Here’s a simple cadence:
Monthly: Field cleanup + automation review
Quarterly: Stage validation + dashboard check
Annually: Full pillar-by-pillar audit
The goal isn’t perfection — it’s consistency.
When audits become routine, your CRM becomes scalable.
Auditing in isolation — always involve stakeholders early.
Trying to fix everything at once — focus on impact.
Skipping documentation — what’s not recorded won’t stay fixed.
Ignoring adoption — tools don’t create trust; training does.
If your CRM feels messy, inconsistent, or underused, this is your sign.
My CRM audits include:
Full Audit Report: Deep dive into architecture, workflows, and automation health
Prioritized 90-Day Action Plan: Quick wins + long-term improvements
Implementation Strategy Call: A guided walkthrough to turn insights into execution
When you’re ready to clean up your CRM and keep it clean — let’s make it happen.
Keep up the momentum with one or more of these next steps:
📣 Sharing helps spread the word, and you’ll look like a total genius when someone receives this blog recommendation from you. + Posts are formatted to be easy to read and share.
📲 Hang out with me on LinkedIn. Don’t be afraid to say hello or message me.
📬 Want to meet online? Schedule a call to connect with me. I'm happy to discuss system, RevOps and grow a new connection.
📊 Need a second set of expert eyes? Book a CRM Audit and Get a 90-day roadmap that helps your systems run cleaner, faster, and smarter. Schedule a CRM Audit Discovery Call. to get started.

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