These two connected apps extend the AE Central Command Pack past capture and into actual operator follow-through. Skye Lead Vault is the offline field-and-pipeline machine for lead intake, quick capture, scoring, scripts, routes, analytics, backups, and daily follow-up discipline. Skye Split Engine Ops is the offline money-operations lane for deal ledger control, payout math, recurring split templates, settlement receipts, CSV movement, contacts, and protected backups. Used together, they create a real bridge from lead to ledger.
AE FLOW and ConnectLog help AEs capture and work opportunities. Skye Lead Vault deepens that operating discipline with scoring, route planning, activity timelines, script packs, quote flows, and daily command-center pressure. Skye Split Engine Ops takes the post-close side seriously by organizing payout logic, settlement records, money movement visibility, and protected receipt history.
Skye Lead Vault is the stronger offline command desk for actual lead operations. The build includes a Daily Command Center, full Lead Ledger, Pipeline, Quick Capture, Playbook Studio, Routes, Analytics, Backup Vault, and Settings. It is built to help a closer or operator move beyond loose notes and into a real field system.
Skye Split Engine Ops is the money side of the operating stack. The build includes the Split Engine, Money Ops, Receipts, Contacts, Backup Vault, Settings, and a guided Walkthrough. It is meant for recurring payout math, deal-ledger visibility, settlement documentation, and keeping the payment side organized offline.
These are not throwaway static pages. Skye Lead Vault carries real operator depth: dedupe logic, scoring logic, due-state workflows, daily command center behavior, multi-view lead handling, script generation, quote support, route planning, and encrypted backup workflows. Skye Split Engine Ops carries reusable payout logic, recurring templates, money-ops ledgering, settlement documentation, CSV movement, and recovery discipline. The value comes from usable operational depth, not from pretending to be enterprise theater.