The WorkflowMax Blog

The Project Death Spiral: Why Your Sales Team Isn’t Actually the Problem

Written by WorkflowMax | Mar 16, 2026 12:54:30 PM

By Ryan Kagan

Every professional services leader has a version of this horror story.

You’re six months into a project. The “estimated” hours are a distant memory. Your delivery team is burnt out, caffeinated to the eyeballs, and low-key resentful. The client is asking for “one more quick tweak,” and your profit margin has officially evaporated into thin air.

When the post-mortem happens, the finger-pointing starts immediately. Usually, it points directly at the Sales team.

“Sales sold a dream we couldn't build.” “The scope was undefined from day one.” “We never should have taken this client on.”

It’s easy to make the Sales team the villain. It’s convenient. It’s a common sentiment passed around when things don't go to plan. But after years of looking under the hood of businesses through WorkflowMAX, I’ve realized something uncomfortable: The "Sales Blame Game" is a lie we tell ourselves to avoid looking at our own operational chaos.

If your projects are failing, it’s rarely because of a “bad sell.” It’s because you’ve built a culture that is addicted to being “bespoke” and terrified of the word “No.”

The "Bespoke" Trap

In the world of consulting and professional services, we love the word "bespoke." We tell ourselves, and our clients, that our work is unique, tailored, and one-of-a-kind. We wear "bespoke" like a badge of honour.

But here is the spicy truth: "Tailored" is often just code for "we make it up as we go".

When every project is a "snowflake," you can’t estimate accurately. You can’t scale. You can’t build a repeatable path to success. Most importantly, you can’t protect your team. This "highly bespoke" model is the primary fuel for the Project Death Spiral. You’re not being creative; you’re being inefficient. You’re exposing yourself to the risk of scope creep and unknown quantities of work every single time a contract is signed.

The most successful leaders I know, the ones actually living the "Better Business, Better Life" reality, have figured out a secret: Productization is freedom.

By synthesizing your expertise into repeatable, scalable models, you aren't losing your "unique edge." You’re sharpening it. You’re defining the sandbox you play in so well that when Sales brings a deal to the table, everyone knows exactly how to win. You move from being a "bespoke nightmare" to a "sausage repeat factory" in the best possible way, one that drives high profitability and predictable outcomes.

What Lurks Beneath the Surface

When we see a project disaster, we see the tip of the iceberg: the missed deadline or the over-budget invoice. But the cause is always what lurks beneath the surface: the culture, the ways of working, and the approach to operations.

If projects are failing, we have to ask the hard questions about how we set our Sales team up for success in the first place.

  • Do they have the right tools? Are they governed by the right operations and job-costing calculators?
  • Do they have the right data? Are they targeting the right Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) based on actual profitability data, or are they just chasing revenue that "sucks the life out of the team"?
  • Is there a "Two-Way Street"? Is there an open dialogue between Sales and Delivery to unpack the size and sophistication of a scope before it's sold?

Without visibility into these "below the surface" metrics, you aren't running a business; you’re gambling.

Empowerment is an Operational Metric

The real "disaster" isn't a missed deadline. The disaster is a culture where the delivery team doesn't feel empowered to have a tough conversation.

I have a strong belief that no matter what role you play in the business, you are part of Sales. If you are a consultant on-site and the client asks for something outside the Statement of Work, you are in a sales conversation. If you don't have the tools or the cultural "permission" to say, "That’s a change request, let’s talk about the budget adjustment," you are burning your own company's house down.

In my experience, particularly in the professional services world, teams aren't empowered to say No. And it’s scary. It’s terrifying to say no when you’re worried about cash flow, payroll, and how you’re going to pay your staff next week.

But as Steve Jobs famously alluded to, you should be as proud of the things you say no to as the things you say yes to. The sooner you say no to the wrong work, the sooner you recognize what you’re going to be famous for.

The Altruism of Profitability: Better Business, Better Life

This isn't just about spreadsheets and margins. This is about the human side of the discussion.

We talk about "Job Profitability" a lot at WorkflowMAX. To some, that sounds cold. To me, it sounds altruistic.

When a project goes into a death spiral, who suffers? It’s the staff member who has to stay late on a Friday because of an unmanaged scope creep. It’s the founder who can’t sleep because a "big client" is actually a loss-leader that is sucking the company’s oxygen.

Profitability is the oxygen that allows you to actually enjoy the business you’ve built. Better Business meaning better data, better systems, and the courage to productize: leads directly to a Better Life.

Stop the Bleeding

So, how do you stop the spiral?

  1. Ditch the "Unique" Ego: Start looking for the patterns in your work. What can be synthesized? What can be repeated?
  2. Implement a Workflow for Change: Make "Change Request" a standard stage in your project pipeline. It sounds simple, but how many businesses actually acknowledge when they are in a state of change?
  3. Use Your Data to Drive Your "No": Stop taking "gut-feel" meetings. Look at your job management data. Which categories of work are actually profitable? Which clients keep you up at night? Use that data to empower your Sales team to target the right wins, not just any win.

The Bottom Line

Stop blaming Sales for the fire in the kitchen.

If you want a better life: less stress, higher margins, and a team that feels supported, you have to fix the engine below the surface. Move away from the bespoke nightmare. Synthesize your value. And for heaven’s sake, give your team the tools to protect your profitability.

Better business isn't about working more hours to cover up for a lack of structure. It’s about building a repeatable, productive, and highly profitable way of work that serves you, rather than you serving it.

Let’s stop settling for project disasters. Let’s build something scalable. Who’s with me?