GHL Migration 8 min read

Monday.com to GoHighLevel: What Actually Moves, What Stays, and How to Sequence a Multi-Location Rollout

Inside a live franchise migration. 97 columns mapped. 10 tools consolidated into one. Here's what the process actually looks like when it's done right.

A multi-location service franchise brought me in to fix their lead pipeline. Multiple locations across multiple states. Ten separate tools touching some piece of customer acquisition. And a Monday.com board with 97 columns that nobody fully understood anymore.

Here's what I walked into, what was broken, and what the migration actually looked like.


The Stack Before I Touched It

Monday.com. Make.com Enterprise. Twilio. Calendly. Zoom. Jotform. PandaDoc. Three other platform-specific tools.

Ten tools. All handling some piece of lead management. Monthly cost: $310–440 depending on usage spikes.

10 Tools in Stack
97 Monday.com Columns
$440 Monthly Tool Cost

The Monday.com board was the center of gravity. 7,300 leads across all locations. Their API exposed 43 lead fields and 111 customer profile fields — and most of those fields were either empty or wrong.

The segmentation field returned null for every single record. That means every lead — regardless of what service they needed — got the exact same messaging. No personalization. No relevance. Just generic copy fired into the void.

Source attribution across all locations was tracked as a single label: "Online Web." Meta ads, organic search, referrals, walk-ins — all lumped together. They were spending $3–7K/month on Meta ads with zero campaign-level attribution. No way to know which ad produced which customer.


What Was Actually Broken

The board had 7,300 leads. Only 170 were in active pipeline. That's 2.3%.

The other 97.7% was sitting in various stages of "dead" — and nobody was trying to bring them back.

Lead StatusCount% of Pipeline
No Response (never followed up)2,14929.6%
Marked "Not Interested"3,57049.1%
Not Viable4045.6%
Active Pipeline1702.3%

84% of every lead that ever entered the system hit a dead end with no path back. No re-engagement. No reactivation. Just silence.

I pulled a recent 4-month window to check whether this was legacy debt or an active problem. 676 new leads created. 541 went inactive. 80% inactive rate on fresh leads.

Those 541 leads: 100% had email on file. 96% had phone numbers. Fully reachable. Nobody was reaching them.

At their average customer lifetime value, even a conservative 2% reactivation rate on that group alone — $715K in recoverable revenue sitting in a column labeled "Dead."


The Follow-Up That Was Killing Them

Before
  • Day 0 and Day 1 SMS were word-for-word identical
  • Post-visit email opened with "This is an automated message from..."
  • 2–5 day gap between site visit and follow-up
  • Leads auto-moved to "Dead" after 8 days
  • No-show detection: manual staff confirmation
  • No re-engagement sequence. Ever.
  • Zero data captured on why customers left
After
  • AI-personalized messaging by customer segment
  • Follow-up fires within 15 minutes of visit
  • Automated no-show detection via webhooks
  • Manager notification: one-tap confirm/no-show
  • 3 automated reminders before each visit
  • 4-segment reactivation campaigns by timing
  • Exit reasons captured on every departure

The gap between a prospect visiting and hearing back was 2–5 business days. In service sales, that window is where decisions happen. If you go dark for a week, you're following up after they've already signed with someone else.


What Migrates and What Stays

This is where most migrations go wrong. People try to move everything.

🔑

Rule of thumb: Only the lead funnel migrates to GHL. Operations, HR, billing, project management — all stay on Monday.com. Monday is good at operational tracking. It's bad at lead nurture and automation sequencing. Each tool keeps the job it's built for.

This franchise had 20 active Make.com scenarios. Only 5 retired — the ones handling lead intake and follow-up automation. Those got rebuilt natively in GHL. The other 15 stayed. They handle ops workflows that GHL doesn't touch.

Stack cost after migration: $130–350/month for GHL replacing the entire lead management layer. Net savings before you count a single recovered lead.


What Got Built

11 pipeline stages. Linear. No ambiguity about where a lead sits at any moment.

Pipeline Architecture
New Lead Contacted Call Invited Call Booked Call Done Visit Invited Visit Booked Visit Done Follow-Up Pending Closed
14 Workflows Built
12 Custom Fields
5 Sub-Accounts

14 workflows for the pilot location alone. Every touchpoint — SMS, email, internal notification — runs through AI to generate personalized copy based on the customer's segment, the manager's notes, and where they sit in the pipeline.

Each location gets its own GHL sub-account with its own pipeline, email configuration, staff assignments, and localized branding. Same architecture, location-specific execution.


How You Sequence a Multi-Location Rollout

You don't launch every location at once. You pilot one, prove the system, then roll.

01

Audit & Map

Map every tool, every field, every automation scenario. Identify what GHL replaces vs what stays. Audit data quality.

02

Build Pipeline & Fields

Create stages, exit paths, custom fields. Structure before automation. Get the architecture right first.

03

Build Workflows & Integrations

Automated sequences, webhook integrations, AI personalization, no-show detection, notification systems.

04

Pilot Launch

Highest-volume location goes first. All intake paths tested. All automations verified. Staff trained.

05

Sequential Rollout

Remaining locations deploy the proven system with localized customization. Not a rebuild — a replication.

Multiple intake paths per location means double-digit intake configurations across the franchise. Each one mapped, tested, and verified before go-live. This is where DIY migrations break. Not on the pipeline stages — on the intake routing.


The Math

60% Tool Cost Reduction
$715K Recoverable Revenue
15 min Follow-Up (was 5 days)

80% inactive rate on fresh leads dropping — because now there's actual follow-up, actual sequencing, actual re-engagement.

First-ever campaign attribution on $3–7K/month in ad spend. First-ever exit data on customer departures. First-ever segment-based personalization on outreach.

None of this is hypothetical. The system is built. The pilot is live.


Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a Monday.com to GHL migration take?
For a multi-location franchise, expect 6–8 weeks. Week 1 is the audit. Weeks 2–5 are build and integration. Week 6+ is pilot launch and rollout. Single-location businesses can complete in 3–4 weeks.
Does everything move from Monday.com to GoHighLevel?
No. Only the lead funnel and customer acquisition layer migrates. Operations, HR, billing, and project management workflows should stay on Monday.com. Each tool keeps the job it was built for.
What does a GHL migration consultant cost?
A proper multi-location migration with audit, build, integration, and training typically runs $6,000–$18,000 depending on complexity. DIY is possible for single locations, but multi-location rollouts with data migration and custom integrations usually require a specialist.
Should I migrate all locations at once or pilot first?
Always pilot first. Launch the highest-volume or most complex location, prove the system works, then roll to the rest. Piloting catches edge cases before they multiply across every location.

Running on a stack that grew by accident?

Tools added one at a time, never architected together. That's the problem I solve. Book 45 minutes and I'll map what moves, what stays, and what sequence makes sense for your operation.

Book a Discovery Call
GC

Genevieve Claire

Operations strategist. Previously EA Sports FIFA — $100M productions, $7B franchise. Now I build operations infrastructure for multi-location businesses. LinkedIn →