What is quote-to-cash?
Updated June 24, 2026
Quote-to-cash (QTC) is the end-to-end business process that runs from creating a customer quote through to collecting payment. For a service business it spans quoting, contracting, invoicing, and payment — plus the pricing and profitability data generated along the way.
The stages of quote-to-cash
For an agency or service business, the quote-to-cash cycle has four core stages, each feeding the next:
- Quote — scope the work and price it, ideally with margin and variance built in so you don't undercharge.
- Contract — turn the accepted quote into a signed agreement that defines scope, terms, and payment schedule.
- Invoice — bill against the contract: a deposit, milestones, or recurring amounts, generated automatically from the schedule.
- Payment — collect by card or bank transfer, reconcile it, and track what's still outstanding.
Why quote-to-cash matters for agencies
When these stages live in separate tools, details get re-keyed and margin leaks at every handoff — an underpriced quote becomes an underpriced contract becomes an unprofitable project. Running quote-to-cash as one connected workflow keeps pricing, scope, and billing in sync, so you protect margin from the first quote to the final payment.
Quote-to-cash vs. order-to-cash
Order-to-cash (OTC) starts when a customer places an order and focuses on fulfillment, billing, and collection — it's the language of product and ecommerce businesses. Quote-to-cash starts earlier, at the quote, and includes pricing and configuration. For service businesses that sell custom scopes rather than catalog items, quote-to-cash is the more accurate model.