Resource
Published April 21, 2026 by BoogieBoard Bot · Updated April 21, 2026
A Territory changes. A rep wants to keep an account or opportunity that would otherwise move.

A Territory changes. A rep wants to keep an account or opportunity that would otherwise move.
That is where Holdover Policies come in.
A Holdover Policy lets a rep keep an account or opportunity during a Territory change because it meets defined criteria. The goal is simple: reduce disruption without undermining the future-state Territory Model.
But here is the important disclaimer:
Not all holdovers are good.
In many companies, holdover opportunities have lower close rates than people expect. They often represent deals that already should have closed, or weak pipeline that someone wants to protect. The exception is longer sales cycles. That is why a fair Holdover Policy should be narrow, clear, and skeptical of opportunity quality.
Less is usually more.
A Holdover Policy is not supposed to be a giant side door around your Territory Model. It is supposed to be a limited tool for protecting specific situations during change.
If too many accounts or opportunities get held over, your future-state model stops being real. Reps are technically moved, but the work is still sitting in the old structure. That creates confusion, slows adoption, and makes reporting messier.
Start with this rule:
Use holdovers sparingly. Prefer Account Locking when the account truly should not move.
If a real opportunity is far enough along, moving it immediately can be disruptive. A Holdover Policy can give the current rep a short period to finish what they started.
Some accounts or opportunities are too sensitive to move just to achieve balance. Strategic relationships, renewal timing, major support issues, or executive sponsorship may justify temporary protection. Often this is better handled with Account Locking Criteria, but holdovers can still play a role if timing matters.
A clear Holdover Policy can give reps one defined vehicle for input instead of forcing all feedback into side conversations.
But it should not be the only vehicle.
Reps should already have input into Territory quality, target account logic, and Account Locking Criteria. Their only shot at being heard should not be “please let me keep this one.”
This is where teams get sloppy.
The existence of an open opportunity does not automatically mean it should be held over.
A fair policy should define real thresholds, such as:
That is the key distinction.
A weak policy says: any open opp stays.
A fair policy says: only clearly defined opps that meet real criteria stay, and only for a limited time.
If you allow holdovers, put a clock on them.
A good Holdover Policy answers:
For example:
A rep may retain ownership of a qualified Stage 3+ opportunity above [$X] for up to 90 days after Territory go-live. After that, the account and opportunity transfer to the new owner unless an approved exception is documented.
Without a time box, holdovers linger. Then the Territory change is technically done but not really done.
This is the simpler answer in many cases.
If an account really should not move, lock it.
If the account has an active renewal, a support issue, a meaningful executive relationship, or some other strong reason to stay with the current rep, Account Locking Criteria is usually cleaner than a temporary holdover. That preserves continuity without creating a second transition later.
That is why the default should usually be:
A Holdover Policy should be published with ultra-clear rules.
Reps should know:
A good policy reduces politics. A vague one creates resentment.
A fair Holdover Policy should be small.
If the policy is so broad that large parts of the future-state model are suspended, it is too big.
A fair Holdover Policy is usually one of these:
That is enough.
A fair Holdover Policy should do one thing well:
limit disruption without undermining the Territory Model.
That means:
If you do that well, holdovers stay practical.
If you do not, they become a mess.
Policy name: Holdover Policy Applies to: [Sales Team / AM Team / CSM Team / Segment] Owner: [RevOps / Sales Ops / Sales Leadership] Last updated: [Date]
This policy defines when a rep may temporarily retain an account or opportunity that would otherwise move during Territory redesign or Territory change.
The goal is to reduce disruption without undermining the future-state Territory Model.
Use these principles in this order:
A rep may request an account holdover only if the account meets one or more of the following criteria:
Account holdovers last until: [date / duration]
At expiration, the account will:
An opportunity may qualify for holdover only if it meets all required criteria below:
Opportunity holdovers last until: [date / duration]
At expiration, the opportunity will:
To prevent overuse:
All approved holdovers must include:
Track:
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:
The LLM will use the template structure and your context to generate a customized version for your specific Holdover Policy scenario.
Part of BoogieBoard's Territory Planning Resource Library. More templates and guides at boogieboard.ai/resources.