Resource

What to Do When a New Rep Joins

Published April 21, 2026 by BoogieBoard Bot Β· Updated April 21, 2026

A new rep joins. They should not have to wonder what they are supposed to cover.

What to Do When a New Rep Joins

A new rep joins. They should not have to wonder what they are supposed to cover.

A good company should be able to answer one simple question during the hiring process:

What is this person’s Territory?

If that answer is vague, delayed, or political, the process is broken.

This is not really a hiring problem. It is a territory management problem. The best teams plan ahead, define the future patch ahead of time, assign temporary coverage ahead of time, and give the new rep a clear answer before or at start date.

Start with a clear definition of a healthy Territory

You cannot build a good patch for a new rep unless you already know what a good patch looks like.

That is what Balance Goals are for.

Balance Goals define what makes a Territory fair and effective. They give managers a standard for building the patch and give the new rep a clear explanation for why the accounts were chosen.

That may include:

  • revenue potential
  • account count
  • pipeline
  • renewal timing
  • customer health
  • whitespace
  • workload
  • geography or proximity

If you do not have this definition, building a new patch will feel arbitrary.

Build the future state early when you can

The best version of this process is simple:

  • create the future Territory before the rep starts
  • assign temporary coverage until the rep arrives
  • let the new rep inherit that Territory on day one

That is cleaner for the company, cleaner for reporting, and cleaner for the customer. It also makes quota and ramp planning much easier because you know what the rep is expected to inherit and when the Territory should reach full potential.

This is where the Territory object helps. An account can be covered temporarily by one rep while already being assigned to the future Territory the new rep will inherit. That separates temporary coverage from long-term structure, which is exactly what you want.

Protect existing customers and live deals

Not every account should be treated the same.

Existing customers and live opportunities need more caution. If they are going to move, that decision should be deliberate. If they should stay with temporary coverage for a period of time, that should be deliberate too.

The goal is to avoid unnecessary turnover. Customers do not want to change hands multiple times. Live deals do not benefit from random reshuffling.

So the right question is not:

What can we take to build this patch?

The right question is:

What should this rep own long term, and what can move without creating unnecessary damage?

If you cannot plan ahead, use just-in-time design

Capacity is not always easy to predict.

If the hire happens before the patch is fully built, you can still make good decisions if your Balance Goals are clear. Managers can pull from existing books, explain why, and build a defensible patch quickly. But only if the criteria are already published and understood.

Without that, just-in-time design turns into account grabbing.

Track movement over time

You should track both:

  • account ownership over time
  • Territory assignment over time

That lets you see whether an account or customer has been moved multiple times. Too much movement creates churn risk, rep frustration, and distrust in the process. A stable Territory label helps you manage this even when temporary ownership changes.

Make manager discretion explicit

Managers will always need judgment.

That is fine.

But the team should know where that discretion applies. For example:

  • moving a live deal
  • protecting a sensitive customer relationship
  • making an exception based on geography or proximity
  • delaying a transfer to avoid unnecessary disruption

If that logic is hidden, people assume favoritism.

The takeaway

When a new rep joins, the company should already have a clear answer to:

What is this person going to cover?

The best process is simple:

  • define what a healthy Territory looks like
  • build the future state early when you can
  • assign temporary coverage before the rep starts
  • protect existing customers and live deals
  • track ownership and Territory movement over time
  • make manager discretion explicit
  • explain the patch clearly to the new rep

If you do that well, the rep starts with clarity.

If you do not, they start with confusion.


New Rep Territory Readiness Policy Template

Policy name: New Rep Territory Readiness Policy Applies to: [Sales Team / AM Team / CSM Team / Segment] Coverage model: [Territory-Based / Owner-Centric] Owner: [RevOps / Sales Ops / Sales Leadership] Last updated: [Date]

1. Purpose

This policy defines how the company prepares accounts and Territory coverage when a new rep joins.

It answers four questions:

  1. What will the rep cover?
  2. Who covers those accounts before the rep starts?
  3. Which accounts need special handling?
  4. When does the rep inherit long-term ownership?

2. Decision principles

Use these principles in this order:

  • the new rep should get a clear answer during the hiring process
  • temporary coverage and long-term ownership are separate decisions
  • existing customers and live opportunities require more caution
  • long-term decisions should align to our published definition of a healthy Territory or book
  • ownership changes and Territory changes must be tracked over time
  • manager discretion is allowed only in the categories defined below
  • all changes must be documented

3. Definition of a healthy Territory or book

Use the following metrics to evaluate the future patch:

  • [Metric 1]
  • [Metric 2]
  • [Metric 3]
  • [Metric 4]
  • [Metric 5]

4. Future-state Territory rules

Before the rep starts:

decide whether a future Territory can be created ahead of time
assign accounts to the future Territory if applicable
define temporary coverage for those accounts until start date
confirm whether the rep will inherit a pre-built Territory or a just-in-time patch
confirm expected timing for full ownership transfer

5. Existing customer and live opportunity triage

Review these accounts first:

  • existing customers with active renewals
  • existing customers with churn risk
  • accounts with open pipeline above [threshold]
  • strategic accounts
  • accounts with active executive relationships
  • accounts with active implementation, support, or escalation work

For each of these accounts, answer:

  • Who covers this account before the rep starts?
  • Should this account move to the new rep at start date?
  • If not, what is the right long-term answer and timing?

6. Ownership and Territory tracking

The company must preserve a record of:

  • current account owner
  • future Territory assignment
  • temporary coverage assignment
  • final ownership transfer date
  • total number of times the account has moved within [time period]

7. Manager discretion

Managers may override the standard process only for the following reasons:

  • [Reason 1]
  • [Reason 2]
  • [Reason 3]

All overrides must be documented in: [System / Doc / CRM Field / Notion Database]

8. Quota and ramp alignment

Before the rep start date:

define the expected starting Territory potential
define when the Territory is expected to reach full potential
align quota expectations to ramp timing
confirm any staged ownership transfer if applicable

Use With AI

Download or copy the markdown version of this template and paste it directly into Claude, ChatGPT, or your LLM of choice. Then add context about your org:

  • whether you use a Territory-Based Model or an Owner-Centric Model
  • what metrics define a healthy Territory or book in your business
  • whether the future Territory can be created before the rep starts
  • how temporary coverage works today
  • how existing customers and live opportunities should be prioritized
  • whether geography or proximity should shape the patch
  • where manager discretion should apply
  • how quota should ramp relative to Territory readiness

The LLM will use the template structure and your context to generate a customized version for your specific new-rep scenario.

Part of BoogieBoard's Territory Planning Resource Library. More templates and guides at boogieboard.ai/resources.