Enterprise deals are not bigger small deals. They're a different shape entirely. A year of context. A dozen or more stakeholders on the customer side. A buying committee that shifts midway through the cycle. Procurement, security, legal, finance — each with their own questions, their own objections, their own internal politics. By the time you're in the contract-redline phase, the discovery call from eleven months ago feels like ancient history, but the specific phrase the champion used about success criteria back then is the thing that should be anchoring the contract terms.

This guide is about holding all of that context in a way that survives the cycle. Not a pile of notes. A working set of pages in your vault, with an agent that reads across them and surfaces the right moment when you need it.

## Why CRMs alone don't carry enterprise deals

Your CRM is great at structured data. Stage. Forecast. Owner. Next-step date. It's not built for the unstructured story — the dozen call transcripts, the security questionnaire responses, the redlined MSA, the slack-channel conversation with the champion, the email thread where the procurement person first surfaced the integration concern.

That story is what makes the difference between a deal that closes and one that stalls in legal for six months. And it lives in places the CRM doesn't reach: meeting recordings, PDFs, half-typed call notes, the briefs from earlier stages of the cycle.

A workable setup leaves the CRM doing what it's good at — pipeline tracking and forecast — and uses a vault to hold the unstructured story. Adjacent shapes — the per-account context flow and the broader sales-day workflow — sit in [How Account Managers Keep Client Context From Slipping](/guides/sales-accounts/account-managers-ai-notes-client-context/) and [How to Use AI in Sales (Without Falling for the Hype)](/blog/how-to-use-ai-in-sales/).

## One page per deal, sub-pages forever

The shape that scales across many concurrent enterprise deals is a top-level page per deal. Sub-pages underneath for everything that pertains to it. There's no depth limit, so the structure can grow as the deal moves through cycles.

A typical deal page sidebar:

- **Acme Corp — Q3 expansion**
  - Overview (current stage, expected close, ARR, primary champion)
  - Calls (every recording and transcript, dated)
  - Stakeholders (the buying committee map)
  - Champion notes (the relationship and what you've heard)
  - Procurement (the questionnaire, the redlines, the meetings)
  - Security review (questionnaires, technical-architecture docs, follow-ups)
  - Legal (MSA, redlines, current state)
  - Pricing and packaging (the proposal, the negotiations)
  - Action items (database)
  - Risks and competitive (the competitive read, the open risks)

When you walk into the weekly deal review, you don't reassemble context from email and the CRM. You ask the agent: "Read everything under Acme Q3 expansion. Give me a one-page status: current stage, what's blocking, what's the next required step, who hasn't been talked to in 30 days, and any red flags from the last two weeks." Five minutes of reading instead of an hour of searching.

## Stakeholder maps that the agent can quote

Enterprise deals have many stakeholders. The champion is one person. The economic buyer is another. The technical evaluator is a third. Procurement, security, and legal each bring their own people. By the time you're in the late stages, fifteen names is normal.

The stakeholder page is the most-consulted page in the deal section. One row per person — name, role, where they sit, what they care about, last contact date, advocate or skeptic, internal influence level.

After every call: "Pull anything new I learned about the people on the call. Update the stakeholder map." The agent surfaces additions — the new VP of Engineering whose name came up, the procurement person who'll surface in the next phase — and you confirm what to add.

Before any meaningful conversation: "Read the stakeholder map for Acme. Tell me who's an advocate, who's a skeptic, who hasn't been talked to in 30+ days, who's been gaining or losing influence on the buying committee, and any signals from recent calls." The shape that this descends from for client-profile work is in [How to Build Client Profiles That Make You Look Psychic](/guides/sales-accounts/client-profiles-look-psychic/).

## Calls — the year-long transcript corpus

The single biggest improvement to enterprise deal-running is having every call transcribed, in one place, searchable. With many calls over many months, the recall problem outweighs everything else.

Pattern: every call gets recorded (with the customer's knowledge), the audio drops onto a call page, transcription with speaker labels runs automatically. You're free to be present in the call. The transcript is in your vault by the time you're back at your desk.

Months later, when the procurement person says "I thought we agreed the analytics piece was in scope," you ask the agent: "Find every time the analytics piece came up in our calls with Acme. Pull the relevant exchanges with speaker labels and timestamps." The moments come back, in plain text, attributable. The conversation gets less awkward; the deal gets clearer.

The capture-recall-close loop that this is built on is detailed in [AI Notes for Discovery Calls: Capture, Recall, Close](/guides/sales-accounts/discovery-calls-capture-recall-close/).

## Procurement, security, and legal — each as their own searchable corpus

Late-stage enterprise deals are weighted toward the questionnaire-and-document phase. The security questionnaire arrives in Excel. The procurement person sends a vendor risk assessment. Legal sends MSA redlines. Each of these is a corpus you'll need to reason about.

Drop the PDFs and Excel files onto the relevant section page. They auto-convert to markdown via docstrange so they become searchable text the agent can read. Now you can ask: "Read the security questionnaire from Acme. Pull every question that requires a response from our security team. Group them by category. Identify any that look like they need engineering input." A draft work breakdown comes back; you sharpen it.

For the MSA redline phase, the agent reads the redlines: "Read the latest MSA redline from Acme legal. Compare against our standard. List every change they've requested, group by severity, and flag any that look like deal-breakers." Twenty minutes of agent reading replaces a day of contract analysis. The same shape is detailed for the loan-officer compliance variant in [AI Notes for Loan Officers: Applications and Compliance](/guides/sales-accounts/loan-officers-applications-compliance/).

## Champion notes — the relationship that drives the deal

The champion is the most important person in an enterprise deal. They're selling internally on your behalf. The relationship with them is half the deal.

The Champion notes page captures the relationship. What they care about (their language). What they're worried about (their language). What's working internally for them. What's not. Their personal motivations — the project that this purchase is associated with, the career stake they have in it.

After every champion conversation: "Pull anything new I learned about Sarah on this call — what she's facing internally, what she needs from us, any concerns she's voiced." The agent surfaces additions; you confirm. Before any forecast call or executive review, the agent reads the Champion notes and gives you the relationship temperature.

The shape that this fits into for the broader account-plan view is in [How to Build Account Plans in Your Notes App (Without a Separate Tool)](/guides/sales-accounts/build-account-plans-notes/).

## Action items, across the deal team

Enterprise deals have many action items, often distributed across many people on your side. SE owes the customer the technical-architecture doc. AE owes the champion the case study. Legal owes the redline response. Marketing owes the customer-success story.

The action-items database on the deal page tracks all of it. Six column types are available — short text, long text, dates, single-select, number, checkbox — which is enough for any tracker. Columns for action, owner, status, due date, last touched.

Once a week, the AE asks the agent: "Read the action-items database for Acme. What's overdue? What's at risk? What hasn't been touched in 7 days?" A focused list comes back. The action-item discipline that backs this is detailed in [How to Capture Action Items So They Actually Get Done](/guides/meetings-people/action-items-actually-get-done/).

Across many concurrent deals, the same agent question scales: "Across all active deals in my pipeline, what commitments did I personally make this week? What's overdue?" Ten minutes of triage replaces an hour of database scanning.

## The deal review — and a calmer way to carry enterprise deals

Weekly deal reviews are the test case for whether the system holds. If it does, prep is a focused twenty minutes per deal. If it doesn't, prep is a day of catch-up.

Before each review, ask the agent: "Read the Acme deal page. Summarize the current stage, the most important moments from the last two weeks, the open risks, the action items that are overdue, and the next required step. Format as a one-page status." The brief comes out as a draft. You spend ten minutes editing — adding nuance, fixing wrong inferences — and the review walks itself instead of being prepped from scratch.

For the executive deal review (the monthly one with sales leadership), same flow, longer time horizon: "Read the Acme deal page. Summarize what's changed this quarter, the current risk profile, and what we need from leadership to advance." The shape that pairs with this for managing many concurrent customer relationships post-sale is in [AI Notes for Customer Success Managers: QBRs, Account Health, and Renewals](/guides/sales-accounts/customer-success-managers-ai-notes/).

Worth being clear about limits. This isn't a CRM — Salesforce still tracks pipeline, forecast, and shared visibility with the team. It isn't a CLM — Ironclad and DocuSign still handle contract execution. It isn't a deal-room — if you use one with the customer, it still has its place.

What it is: the place your own working deal context lives. The transcripts. The security questionnaire responses. The MSA redlines. The champion notes. The agent reads across all of it.

Enterprise deals are going to be a lot of context whether your tools are good or not. But the part that wears AEs down — the search, the reassembly, the late-night before the deal review — is fixable.

[Try Docapybara free](/accounts/signup/). Pick your most complex active deal, drop in the recent call transcripts, the security questionnaire, and the MSA redlines — and ask the agent for a current status.