Most decision-makers at advisory firms don’t wake up one day and decide their tech stack is broken.

Usually, it happens more gradually than that.

A new tool gets added to solve a specific problem. Another gets layered in to improve a workflow. A point solution fills a gap. An integration helps bridge one process, even if it doesn’t fully solve it. Over time, the stack grows, the logic behind it gets harder to trace, and the day-to-day work of moving information across the firm becomes more manual than anyone intended.

On paper, the firm may have a modern technology stack.

In practice, the team may still be doing too much work to make that stack function.

That’s the hidden cost of disconnected wealthtech.

It doesn’t always show up as a dramatic technology failure. More often, it shows up as drag. Extra steps. Duplicate work. Slower handoffs. Lower confidence in the data. Processes that rely too heavily on experience, workarounds, or institutional knowledge just to keep things moving.

And over time, that drag adds up.

 

Disconnected Systems Don’t Just Create Inefficiency. They Consume Capacity.

When people talk about disconnected technology, the conversation often stays at a systems level.

The integrations are limited, the workflows aren’t streamlined, the data doesn’t move cleanly, and the stack feels fragmented.

All of that is true, but the real business impact is deeper than that.

Disconnected systems are more problematic than simply creating inefficiency in a firm. They consume capacity that firms could otherwise use to grow and serve clients more effectively — ultimately operating with more confidence.

That cost shows up in small moments all over the business.

An advisor spends extra time preparing for a client meeting because information lives in multiple systems. An operations professional has to verify data manually before a report goes out. A service team member has to re-enter information that should already be available elsewhere. A leader hesitates on a business decision because the reporting behind it doesn’t feel fully trustworthy.

None of those moments may feel major in isolation.

But together, they create a pattern: the firm is spending too much energy managing technology and not enough benefitting from it.

That’s the issue many firms are really trying to solve.

In Orion’s 2026 Advisor Wealthtech Survey, advisors identified optimizing technology integration and data use across the firm as their top strategic focus for 2026, selected by 61% of respondents.1 They also named integrated technology and streamlined workflows among the top force multipliers for growth and success.

That’s a strong signal that firms aren’t simply looking for more capability. They’re looking for more leverage.

Does your stack create lift — or just more layers to manage?

Explore how Orion help firms connect workflows, reduce operational friction, and build a tech stack that supports growth.

 

The Cost Isn’t Just Operational. It’s Strategic.

Operational drag is frustrating on its own. However, the bigger risk is what that drag prevents.

When workflows are fragmented and teams have to work around the stack, it becomes harder to create consistency. Harder to scale. Harder to support advisors well. Harder to deliver a client experience that feels polished from end to end.

That matters more as firms grow.

What feels manageable in a smaller environment can become a real constraint at scale. More households; more complexity; more internal coordination; more pressure on reporting, service, compliance, and responsiveness. If the underlying systems aren’t helping the business move cleanly, growth can expose the weakness faster than it solves it.

This is one of the biggest reasons disconnected technology deserves more attention than it often gets.

It does more than just slow the current state — it can actually quietly limit the next stage of growth.

That’s particularly important in a market where firms are trying to create more personalized experiences without adding proportionate headcount, where client expectations continue to rise, and where leaders are looking for ways to extend the effectiveness of the team.

Technology should help make that possible. But too often, disconnected tech winds up doing the exact opposite.

 

“Good Enough” Systems Can Become a Real Business Constraint

One of the hardest parts of this issue is that the warning signs are easy to normalize.

  • A report takes longer than it should, but it still gets done.
  • Data has to be checked in multiple places, but the team knows how to do it.
  • A workflow depends on a few key people, but it usually holds together.
  • An integration exists, but not in a way that actually removes manual work.

That kind of environment can function for a long time. But what's important to recognize is that “functioning” and “creating lift” aren’t the same thing.

For many firms, the real challenge isn’t that their systems are obviously failing. Rather, it’s that the stack has become good enough to maintain — but not strong enough to create meaningful capacity.

That's a huge distinction, with a potentially significant impact to a firm's operations.

If technology isn’t helping a firm move with greater speed, clarity, and consistency, then some of the value of that investment is likely being lost in the gaps between systems.

 

The Firms that Scale Best Usually Reduce Friction First

When firms talk about growth, the focus often goes to front-end goals: new assets, stronger relationships, deeper planning, more referrals, better client engagement.

Those things matter. But growth doesn’t happen cleanly if the operating foundation underneath it is creating drag.

That’s why one of the clearest signs of a healthy technology strategy is not how many tools a firm owns. It’s how much friction those tools remove.

The firms that scale best usually aren’t the ones constantly adding software. They’re the ones getting more from the systems they already rely on. They’re reducing duplicate work. They’re improving trust in the data. They’re simplifying handoffs between teams. They’re making it easier for advisors and operations professionals to spend time where they add the most value.

That’s what usable capacity looks like.

It’s not abstract. It shows up in the ability to move faster without losing confidence. To grow without adding unnecessary process. To serve clients well without exhausting the team behind the scenes.

 

What Firms Should Look for Instead

If disconnected wealthtech is the problem, then connected workflows are only part of the answer.

Firms also need to ask whether their technology is supporting the actual way the business operates.

That means looking beyond surface-level integration claims and asking harder questions:

  • Where are we still relying on manual work to connect systems?
  • Which workflows slow down as volume increases?
  • Where does data confidence break down?
  • Which parts of the team are carrying the most operational burden?
  • Are our core systems helping us create more capacity, or just helping us cope with complexity?

Those are the kinds of questions that make technology evaluation more useful.

Because at a certain point, the issue is no longer just software selection. It’s business design.

The firms best positioned for what comes next won’t simply be the ones with newer tools. They’ll be the ones whose technology supports a more connected, more scalable, and more usable operating model.

Implement Technology that Creates Capacity

See how Orion technology helps firms reduce friction, strengthen workflows, and create a more connected foundation for growth.

1Source: 2026 Orion WealthTech Survey.