6 business technologies every financial firm should invest in
The financial services sector has never moved as quickly as it has over the past few years. Regulatory pressure is increasing, client expectations have shifted, and the cost of operational inefficiency is more visible than ever.
For financial firms (independent advisers, wealth managers, or mid-sized institutions), technology is no longer a back-office function. It is a front-line competitive variable.
The firms that invest strategically in the right tools today are the ones that will be well-positioned to scale sustainably, serve clients better, and demonstrate compliance with confidence. Here is where that investment is best directed.
In this article, you will find six categories of technologies every financial firm must consider investing in.
1. AI-powered risk and portfolio intelligence
Risk management has traditionally been resource-intensive and time-lagged. Smaller firms are heavily dependent on the judgement of a handful of individuals.
Artificial intelligence is changing this equation substantially.
AI-driven portfolio risk tools can now process thousands of data points across client portfolios in real time, flagging concentration risk, stress-testing against market scenarios, and generating alerts before exposure becomes a problem. For registered investment advisers (RIAs) and wealth managers in particular, this kind of capability is increasingly table-stakes rather than a premium add-on.
For instance, platforms like StratiFi offer advisers a structured, real-time view of portfolio risk across their entire book, thus scoring individual accounts and household-level risk so advisers can have better-informed conversations with clients rather than reactive ones. This shift from reactive to proactive risk management is the practical dividend of investing in this category of technology.
According to Deloitte’s 2025 technology value survey, 74% of organisations surveyed reported high investment in AI and generative AI over the past year, making it the single most widely invested-in technology capability tracked across five major industries.
Financial services is no exception, and the gap between firms building this capability and those still evaluating it is growing. Financial services is no exception, and the gap between firms building this capability and those still evaluating it is growing.
2. Robust cybersecurity infrastructure
Regardless of the industry segment, financial data is among the most targeted by cybercriminals. A single breach carries consequences that go well beyond the immediate financial loss. For instance, regulatory penalties, client attrition, and reputational damage can persist for years.
Despite this, many smaller financial firms continue to operate with security infrastructure that has not kept pace with the threat landscape.
The baseline today includes endpoint detection and response (EDR), multi-factor authentication across all systems, encrypted data transmission, and regular penetration testing.
Platforms like CrowdStrike Falcon and Microsoft Defender for Business are widely used at the SME end of the market. Dedicated financial services security monitoring tools like Darktrace provide behavioural threat detection suited to firms handling sensitive client data.
But the area where gaps are most commonly found is third-party risk. Many firms rely on external platforms, custodians, and service providers, each of which represents a potential point of vulnerability in the chain.
Research suggests cybercrime costs will exceed $15tn globally by 2030, a figure that underlines why treating cybersecurity as a periodic audit is no longer a defensible position for financial firms.
Investing in a structured third-party risk management process, including contractual security requirements, periodic vendor assessments, and integration audits, is not the most visible form of technology investment. It is among the most consequential ones.
The Financial Conduct Authority has made third-party operational resilience a sustained supervisory focus, and that attention is unlikely to ease.
3. Cloud-based document and workflow management
Paper-based processes and disconnected document storage are a slow drain on productivity, compliance capability, and client experience. Cloud-based document management platforms allow financial firms to centralise records, automate version control, enforce retention policies, and enable secure client collaboration from a single system.
Tools like SharePoint and Docuware are commonly used across professional services firms, while purpose-built solutions for regulated industries offer tighter integration with compliance workflows out of the box. As covered in Business Money’s overview of SaaS for financial institutions, cloud-native solutions are increasingly the default infrastructure choice for firms that need to scale without proportional increases in IT overhead.
The compliance benefits are particularly tangible. Audit trails are automatically generated. Regulatory document requests, which previously required manual effort, can be handled in a fraction of the time.
For firms preparing for or operating under MiFID II, Consumer Duty, or equivalent frameworks, this kind of infrastructure pays for itself relatively quickly. It also supports hybrid working arrangements in a way that on-premise systems cannot.
4. Staff training and compliance technology
Financial services have a training and competency problem that technology can materially address. Regulatory requirements evolve continuously, and ensuring that all staff (from advisers to operations teams) are current on their obligations is both a compliance necessity and a practical challenge.
Learning management systems built for financial services firms allow compliance officers and managers to deploy, track, and evidence training across the organisation from a central platform.
Platforms like Skillcast and CUBE (formerly Acin) are designed specifically for regulated industries, with content libraries covering FCA requirements, Consumer Duty obligations, and financial crime prevention.
More general LMS platforms like ProProfs LMS, Cornerstone OnDemand are also popular when firms need to combine compliance training with broader professional development programmes.
Modules can be updated as regulations change, completion is recorded automatically for audit purposes, and gap analysis becomes straightforward rather than manual. For firms that have faced the challenge of demonstrating staff competency to a regulator on short notice, this infrastructure is genuinely valuable.
Beyond compliance, there’s a retention argument: firms that invest in continuous professional development are demonstrably more attractive to the advisers and technical staff they want to keep.
5. CRM and client communication platforms
Client relationship management (CRM) is a platform where financial firms retain and grow their revenue; yet, many continue to rely on spreadsheets or legacy systems that do not integrate with the rest of the firm’s technology stack.
A purpose-built financial services CRM changes the quality of client management substantially.
Redtail and Wealthbox are widely used among independent advisers and smaller RIA firms. Salesforce Financial Services Cloud suits larger operations that need deeper customisation and enterprise integration.
The best platforms trusted by businesses in this category track interaction history, surface clients due for review, flag life events that may trigger a planning conversation, and generate reporting that meets adviser obligation requirements.
When integrated with portfolio management and document systems, they create a connected operational layer that reduces duplication and error. For firms managing a growing client base without proportional headcount growth, an integrated CRM is frequently the lever that makes the difference between scaling and plateauing.
6. Open banking and API integrations
The financial services technology ecosystem has matured. Best-in-class solutions in each category can be connected through APIs rather than forcing firms into a single-vendor bundle that may not serve any function particularly well.
Open banking connectivity, facilitated through platforms like Plaid, TrueLayer, or Moneyhub in the UK market, allows financial firms to aggregate client account data across institutions, giving advisers a complete financial picture without requiring clients to manually compile information.
That improvement in data quality directly improves advice quality and reduces administrative burden on both sides.
API integrations more broadly allow firms to build a technology stack genuinely tailored to their operational model. This offers the ability to swap individual components as better options emerge, rather than accepting significant compromises to make a single platform work across every function.
Summing up
The most sustainable approach for modern businesses is to begin with risk management, cybersecurity, and cloud document management before layering on client-facing and intelligence tools.
Involve advisers and operations staff in the selection process; technology that’s not adopted widely delivers no return. The firms seeing the best outcomes in the coming years are those that treat technology investment as a business change programme.

