Eight pipeline stages
A simple stage model for keeping ownership clear, spotting stalls early, and helping dispositions move with less guesswork.
Understand what disposition covers, where teams lose momentum, and what a healthy buyer workflow looks like from contract to close.
Disposition is the part of a wholesale deal where your team turns a signed contract into a closed assignment or double close. In practice, that means identifying the right buyers, running outreach, handling follow-up, managing interest, and keeping the deal moving until funds hit.
Most operators already do disposition work. The problem is that it often lives across text threads, spreadsheets, call logs, and somebody's memory. That setup can work for a few deals. It breaks down fast once your volume grows or different people own different parts of the process.
A strong disposition function covers more than blasting a buyer list. It includes the full buyer-side workflow.
If any one of those pieces is loose, the deal slows down. If several are loose, the team starts blaming the list when the real issue is the process.
The most common disposition bottleneck is context loss. A lead comes in, a deal gets approved, somebody exports a list, somebody else starts texting, and nobody has one view of what happened next.
That creates small misses that become expensive: duplicate outreach, buyers getting hit with the wrong deal, hot replies buried in personal inboxes, or no clean way to tell which channels actually moved the deal.
Disposition usually does not fail because there are zero buyers. It fails because the team cannot move the right buyers through a repeatable process quickly enough.
Healthy teams operate from one clear system. Every deal enters the same workflow. Every outreach attempt gets logged. Every buyer signal is visible to the team. Nobody is guessing what happened after the first blast.
At minimum, your workflow should answer these questions in seconds.
A disposition system should reduce the time between contract and qualified buyer response. That is the job. Good systems do that by tightening data quality, matching, outreach, and follow-up in one place.
They also make coaching easier. When every touchpoint is visible, you can see whether a deal needs better pricing, better targeting, faster follow-up, or a stronger message. You stop diagnosing from anecdotes and start diagnosing from behavior.
Do not start by adding more channels. Start by cleaning the handoff between deal approval, buyer targeting, first outreach, and follow-up. Those four points create most of the delay.
Once those fundamentals are stable, automation helps. Before that, automation only scales confusion.
Disposition is not a final step after the real work. It is the buyer-side operating system for your deal flow. When the process is clear, teams move faster, buyers get better experiences, and managers can finally see what is helping or hurting speed to close.
More from the blog on buyer sourcing, outreach, and disposition systems.
A simple stage model for keeping ownership clear, spotting stalls early, and helping dispositions move with less guesswork.
Most platforms turn A2P 10DLC into a 20-step form. Covent compresses the user side to seconds and is honest about what the carriers still control.
Each channel has a different job. Running all three on the same deal, automated, is what turns disposition into an engine instead of a gamble.