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Still Fighting Your Tech Stack? 5 Fixes to Make 2026 Smoother

Every January, advisors start the year with the same goal: make this the year operations feel easier. Fewer fire drills. Less scrambling. Systems that support the work instead of slowing it down.

Then review season hits.

Tax prep overlaps with client meetings. Data is outdated. Automations half-fire. Integrations quietly fail. Review prep depends on memory, manual checks, and last-minute fixes. Nothing is broken enough to force a reset, but everything adds friction at exactly the wrong time.

The problem usually isn’t the tools themselves. It’s that tech stacks naturally drift over time as workflows evolve. Without regular checkpoints, they stop reflecting how the firm actually operates today.

A short housekeeping pass in January can change that. A focused reset that removes friction before it compounds and ensures your systems support the year ahead instead of working against it.

Below we’ve highlighted five practical housekeeping tasks advisors can tackle now to get their tech stack back under control. You’ll see where small breakdowns tend to hide, which systems are worth checking first, and how to reduce the manual work and last-minute scrambling that shows up every review season.

Think of this as a reset. A way to make sure your tools are doing their jobs so you can focus on yours.

1. Clean up your CRM data

Planning conversations depend on details that often fade into the background inside the CRM. A missing birthdate forces a pause mid-meeting. An outdated retirement date skews the entire discussion. Incomplete beneficiary or trusted contact information turns a straightforward question into follow-up work. Small gaps compound quickly when the system meant to support planning no longer reflects reality.

It’s like trying to bake a cake with missing ingredients. You can keep moving forward, but every step requires guesswork, substitutions, and second checks. Instead of focusing on the outcome, you spend the whole time compensating for what should have been there from the start.

January is the right time to reset that foundation. Focus on the CRM fields that directly shape review conversations and client experience:

  • Birthdates and retirement dates
  • Risk tolerance notes
  • Beneficiary and trusted contact information
  • Communication preferences

When CRM data is complete, everything downstream improves. Reviews stay focused on decisions, not fixes. Advisors lead conversations with confidence instead of caveats. Fewer gaps mean fewer follow-ups, less manual cleanup, and a smoother review season overall.

2. Audit tasks and automations

At some point, a task fires at the wrong time. A review reminder shows up after the meeting already happened. An onboarding checklist assumes a role that no longer exists. A service request sits untouched because no one realized the trigger changed. These failures rarely announce themselves. They surface mid-week, mid-review, or mid-client call, when fixing them costs the most.

The New Year creates a rare window to audit these workflows before pressure exposes their flaws. Focus on the automations that support reviews, onboarding, and ongoing service. The goal is not to add more tasks, but to make sure the existing ones reflect how work actually moves through the firm today.

Here’s where to get started:

  • Walk through one full review workflow from trigger to completion
  • Identify tasks that fire too late, too early, or without a clear owner
  • Remove automations tied to outdated roles, processes, or service models
  • Consolidate overlapping tasks that create noise instead of clarity
  • Adjust timing and triggers to match real-world review and prep cycles

Well-tuned tasks and automations reduce friction long before clients feel it. Review prep becomes predictable. Internal follow-ups drop. Advisors stop relying on memory to keep work moving and start trusting systems that surface the right actions at the right time. That reliability protects your focus during busy seasons and frees up capacity for client-facing work.

3. Confirm integrations still work as intended

At some point, two systems stop agreeing. Performance numbers look different depending on where you check. A planning assumption fails to update. A report pulls incomplete data five minutes before a review. Integrations rarely fail all at once. They drift. Small changes like software updates, permission resets, or field mapping adjustments interrupt data flow quietly, then surface at the worst possible time.

January gives you room to catch those issues before clients do. Start with integrations that support reviews, planning assumptions, and reporting. Then:

  • Confirm data arrives on schedule, not hours or days late
  • Verify information populates the correct fields in each system
  • Spot-check a small sample of client records across connected tools
  • Look for mismatches in balances, assumptions, or performance data
  • When something is off, trace it back to the source instead of applying manual fixes

Reliable integrations remove last-minute uncertainty. Advisors enter meetings confident that numbers match across systems. Review prep stays focused on decisions instead of reconciliation. Teams spend less time chasing discrepancies and more time using data that holds up under pressure, especially when calendars tighten and mistakes carry higher costs.

4. Review user access and permissions

Eventually, someone asks a question no one can answer confidently. Who has access to client records? Who changed that field? Why does a former employee still appear in the system? These moments usually surface during audits, security reviews, or internal conversations. By then, untangling access feels reactive instead of routine.

January creates space to address access intentionally. Start with systems that hold sensitive client data and drive daily work. Then work through access with purpose.

Suggested steps:

  • Pull a current list of all users for each core system
  • Match access levels to current responsibilities, not historical roles
  • Remove permissions tied to former employees or outdated functions
  • Review vendor access and confirm both purpose and duration
  • Document ownership so future changes follow a clear process

Clear access supports faster decisions and stronger accountability. Advisors delegate work without hesitation. Compliance reviews move with less friction. When questions arise, answers come quickly and with confidence.

5. Standardize review prep workflows

Too many review meetings still depend on last-minute effort. One person pulls performance. Another checks cash balances. Someone notices a beneficiary issue minutes before the call. When prep relies on individual habits instead of a shared process, inconsistency creeps in and preventable errors slip through.

It’s like assembling furniture without instructions. The pieces eventually fit, but only after wasted time, frustration, and avoidable mistakes under pressure.

A standardized review prep workflow brings order to that chaos. Start by defining what “ready for review” actually means across the firm. Then build a repeatable process that includes:

  • A clear checklist covering data validation, planning assumptions, and client-specific updates
  • Defined ownership, so every step has a responsible person
  • Timing rules that surface tasks automatically and in the right sequence
  • Centralized access to planning-critical information to reduce manual handoffs

Consistent prep protects advisor capacity and client confidence. Reviews start on time and stay focused on decisions. And fewer surprises lead to fewer follow-ups after the meeting.

Modern efficiency for the 2026 Advisor

If this list feels long, that reaction is understandable. Five housekeeping tasks can sound like a project instead of progress. The key is not to do everything at once. Pick one or two areas creating the most friction today and start there. Even a small cleanup can remove outsized drag from review prep and client conversations. Momentum matters more than completion.

The ultimate goal of this January reset isn’t just to clean up, it’s to ensure your firm is positioned for maximum efficiency throughout 2026. At Nitrogen, we build our tools to be the backbone of that efficiency.

We are proud to offer over 50 integrations with the industry’s leading CRMs, custodians, and reporting tools, ensuring your data flows exactly where it needs to be without the manual “drift” that causes review season stress. This commitment to a seamless tech stack is why Nitrogen earned an 8.7 “Superior” rating in the 2025 Ezra Group Wealthtech Integration rankings.

Whether you are utilizing our Tax Planning capabilities to uncover alpha or leveraging our Research Center to vet investment strategies, Nitrogen ensures your tech stack works for you, not against you. By automating the heavy lifting of data analysis and reporting, we help you eliminate last-minute scrambling and enter every review meeting with total confidence.

Book a demo to see how teams use Nitrogen to simplify review prep and reduce last-minute cleanup.


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