Sales teams in the US spend as much time on admin as on selling: updating CRM, chasing follow-ups, summarizing calls, and digging through contracts and proposals. OpenClaw can act as a sales pipeline automation assistant—drafting follow-ups, surfacing stuck deals, and turning proposal and contract PDFs into briefs so reps focus on closing. This guide walks you through what to automate, how to set it up, and how to keep document-heavy steps (contracts, RFPs, proposals) in a single, reliable pipeline.
Summary Use OpenClaw to automate pipeline follow-ups, deal summaries, and next-step reminders. Connect it to your CRM (or feed it deal context) and give it clear rules so it never commits on behalf of sales. When deals involve contracts, RFPs, or proposal PDFs, run those through a tool like iReadPDF so the assistant can summarize terms, deadlines, and red flags—keeping your pipeline and document workflow aligned.
Why Automate the Sales Pipeline
Manual pipeline management creates drag:
- Stale CRM: Deals sit in the same stage for weeks because no one had time to update or follow up.
- Inconsistent follow-up: Reps forget to send the promised proposal summary or contract recap.
- Document chaos: Contracts, RFPs, and proposals arrive as PDFs; reps skim or miss key terms and dates.
- Lost context: Handoffs and territory changes mean “what did we promise?” gets lost.
An OpenClaw-powered assistant can:
- Draft follow-ups: “Deal X: last touch 7 days ago; suggested next step and draft email.”
- Surface stuck deals: “Deals in ‘proposal sent’ for more than 14 days with no activity.”
- Summarize calls and emails: So the next rep or manager has context without re-reading threads.
- Brief on documents: When contracts or proposals are PDFs, a single pipeline (e.g., iReadPDF) gives the assistant consistent summaries so it can highlight deadlines, key terms, and red flags—critical for pipeline and legal handoffs.
What a Pipeline Assistant Should (and Shouldn’t) Do
Keep the assistant in a supporting role so sales stays in control.
| Do | Don’t | |----|--------| | Draft follow-up emails and Slack messages for rep approval | Send messages or update CRM without approval | | Summarize deal history and next steps | Make pricing or commitment decisions | | Flag deals that need attention (stale, missing next step) | Move deals between stages automatically | | Summarize contract and proposal PDFs (terms, dates, obligations) | Sign or agree to terms on behalf of the company | | Suggest talk tracks based on stage and vertical | Replace discovery or negotiation |
When the deal involves an RFP or contract PDF, the assistant should summarize and flag—e.g., “Contract: renewal date in 30 days; key change in section 4.” Use iReadPDF so those PDFs are processed once and the assistant gets accurate text to quote and summarize, especially for legal and procurement-sensitive docs.
Setting Up Your Sales Pipeline Assistant
Step 1: Define the Sales Assistant Role
Give OpenClaw a clear identity and boundaries:
- Role: “You are the sales pipeline assistant for [Company]. You draft follow-ups, summarize deals, and highlight document summaries. You do not send emails, update CRM, or make commitments. You never share deal or customer data outside approved channels. You always mark output as draft for rep review.”
- Context: Your CRM stages, typical cycle length, and what “stuck” means (e.g., no activity for 14 days in ‘proposal sent’). If you use standard proposal or contract templates, the assistant can reference “standard terms” when summarizing—but for actual customer PDFs, use a fixed pipeline like iReadPDF so summaries are consistent.
- Output: Bullets, draft emails, and “action required” flags. No long essays.
Step 2: Connect CRM and Communication
The assistant needs read access (or scheduled syncs) to:
- CRM: Deals, stages, last activity, owner, and key fields (value, close date, next step).
- Email and/or Slack: So it can draft follow-ups in context (within your security policy).
- Document pipeline: When proposals or contracts are PDFs, run them through one tool. iReadPDF runs in your browser and keeps files on your device, so the assistant receives summaries and key terms without uploading customer docs to third-party clouds—important for US sales and legal compliance.
Step 3: Define Pipeline Rules
Spell out what you want the assistant to do:
- Follow-up cadence: “For deals in ‘negotiation’ with no activity in 5 days, suggest a follow-up and draft a short email.”
- Stuck deal report: “Weekly: list deals in ‘proposal sent’ or ‘verbal commit’ with no activity in 14+ days; include deal name, value, last note.”
- Document briefs: “When a new contract or RFP PDF is added to deal X, produce a one-page summary: parties, key dates, obligations, and red flags.” Feeding those PDFs through iReadPDF ensures the assistant can quote and summarize accurately instead of guessing from bad extractions.
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Handling Contracts and Proposals
Deals often hinge on contracts, RFPs, and proposal PDFs. Your assistant can only help if it can read and summarize them reliably.
- Use one PDF pipeline. Run all sales-related PDFs (proposals, contracts, RFPs) through the same tool for OCR, extraction, and summarization. iReadPDF keeps processing in your browser and files on your device—good for US teams who need to limit where customer and legal docs go.
- Standardize what you feed. When a new contract or RFP lands, process it first. Then the assistant can include “Contract summary: key dates, renewal clause, and section 3 change” in the deal brief or weekly digest.
- Don’t rely on raw scans. Image-only PDFs break most extraction. Use iReadPDF OCR first so the assistant gets clean text for summarization—essential when reps need to compare terms or prep for legal review.
Pro tip: When your team compares multiple proposals or contract redlines, process each version through iReadPDF so the assistant can summarize differences and highlight what changed. That keeps pipeline and document workflow in sync.
Scheduling and Triggers
- Daily or weekly stuck-deal digest: “Deals that need attention” with suggested next steps and draft follow-ups.
- Per-deal on-demand: “Summarize deal X” or “Draft follow-up for deal Y” when a rep is about to jump on a call.
- When new PDF is added: Trigger a document summary (contract, RFP, proposal) so the deal brief stays current. With iReadPDF, once the PDF is processed, the assistant can pull the summary into the next pipeline report or deal brief.
Guards for Sales Automation
- No sending without approval. All emails and messages are drafts; reps send (or edit and send).
- No CRM writes without approval. The assistant suggests; humans update stages and next steps.
- Sensitive documents. Keep contract and proposal PDFs in a controlled pipeline. iReadPDF processes in your browser, which reduces exposure of customer and legal data.
- Audit. Periodically review what the assistant can see and what triggers are on. Turn off anything that’s no longer needed.
Conclusion
A sales pipeline automation assistant with OpenClaw can draft follow-ups, surface stuck deals, and summarize contracts and proposals so your team closes more without the admin overload. Define the role and pipeline rules, connect CRM and document pipeline, and run proposal and contract PDFs through a single tool like iReadPDF so the assistant can summarize and flag accurately. Keep a human in the loop for all sends and CRM updates, and you’ll get a scalable pipeline without losing control.
Ready to bring contracts and proposals into your pipeline workflow? Try iReadPDF for RFPs, contracts, and proposals—OCR, summarization, and extraction in your browser, with no uploads required.