Accord Mortgages - Growth Series Blog

The Small Broker’s Guide to Building a Smart Tech Stack

Written by Jeremy Duncombe | Apr 2, 2026 9:04:27 AM

Running a small brokerage today means balancing clients, compliance, admin and growth, often all at once. At the same time, there is no shortage of technology promising to save time, reduce costs or future-proof your business.

For many brokers, the challenge is not always keeping up with new tools. It can sometimes be about  working out what is genuinely worth paying for, and what is already sitting underused in the systems you have.
This guide looks at how to build a smarter tech stack by making better use of what you already rely on, and approaching new investments with confidence rather than pressure.

Ultimately, the aim is not to have more tools, but to create a smoother experience for your clients and a more manageable workflow for you. As explored in our guide to improving customer experience, consistency and clarity often matter more than complexity.

Start with what you already rely on

Before adding anything new, it is worth stepping back and looking at the systems you already use day to day.

For most small broker firms, that typically includes:

  • A CRM
  • Email and calendar tools
  • Sourcing and submission systems
  • Compliance and document storage

It is common to see challenges creep in when:

  • Client information lives in more than one place
  • Follow-ups sit in inboxes rather than systems
  • Key steps rely on memory rather than process

In many cases, this is less about missing technology and more about how existing tools are set up and used.

A quick sense check

  • Where do client details live?
  • How do you track next steps on live cases?
  • What still feels repetitive or manual?

If those answers are not immediately clear, adding another tool is unlikely to make things easier.

Get more from your CRM before buying anything else

Most brokers already pay for a CRM that can support more of their workflow than they realise.

Whether you are using a dedicated CRM or another client management system, many already include:

  • Task and reminder management
  • Automated follow-ups
  • Central client timelines
  • Basic reporting and workflow automation
  • Increasingly, built-in AI features

Yet in practice, it is often used primarily as a contact list.

Small changes that often have a big impact

  • Using tasks to manage follow-ups rather than inbox flags
  • Logging key client conversations in one place
  • Automating simple reminders for document chasing
  • Using pipeline views to spot where cases tend to slow down

For example, if you consistently see cases stalling at document collection, that insight alone can justify a simple automated reminder, without adding another platform or subscription.

The benefit is not just time saved. It is consistency, which clients experience as clearer communication, fewer delays, and greater confidence that their case is being actively managed.

This kind of incremental improvement is also reflected in how some brokers are using AI to stay on top of their mailbox, freeing up time without adding another system.

Be cautious of tech that duplicates effort

Overspending on technology often happens gradually.

It is common to see:

  • Separate tools doing similar admin jobs
  • Standalone AI tools that overlap with CRM features
  • Software added “just in case”, without a clear use case

Each additional system adds:

  • Cost
  • Another login
  • The risk of duplicated or inconsistent data

For example, logging client notes in both a CRM and a separate spreadsheet may feel harmless, but it creates extra work and increases the chance something is missed.

Before committing to anything new, it helps to ask:

  • What problem is this solving?
  • What will we stop doing if we start using it?
  • How does it fit with what we already use?

If those answers are unclear, it may be a sign that the timing is not quite right.

Think AI readiness, not AI shopping

AI is now built into many tools brokers already use, particularly CRMs, email platforms and document management systems.

For most small firms, there is no need to rush into separate AI products to see value.

What tends to matter more is readiness:

  • Clean, up-to-date data
  • Consistent processes
  • Clear ownership of tasks and information

In practical terms, that might mean ensuring every live case has a clear next step logged, documents are stored consistently, and client records are kept current, before exploring any new AI-driven features.

Without those foundations, even the most advanced features are unlikely to deliver meaningful benefits.

A helpful way to think about AI is as a quiet support to existing workflows, helping reduce admin rather than introducing new steps or complexity.

As explored in our article on unlocking AI’s potential even with messy data, getting the foundations right often matters more than adopting new tools.

When it does make sense to invest

There are points where adding or upgrading technology is the right move.

Typical triggers include:

  • Case volumes increasing
  • More advisers joining the business
  • Growing compliance complexity
  • A clear admin bottleneck that existing systems cannot address

At that stage, technology should:

  • Remove a specific friction point
  • Integrate with what you already use
  • Support growth without adding unnecessary complexity

If it is not clear how a tool will save time or reduce risk in your day-to-day work, it may be worth pausing before committing.

Keep future-proofing simple

Future-proofing does not mean predicting every new technology.

For small broker firms, it is often about:

  • Keeping systems simple
  • Reducing duplication
  • Making sure data is accurate and accessible
  • Choosing tools that can scale as the business grows

This approach helps control costs now, while keeping options open for the future.

Key takeaway

A smart tech stack is rarely built by adding more software.

For most small broker firms, progress comes from stepping back and being deliberate, using existing tools more effectively, tightening processes, and being clear about what each system is actually there to support.

If you do one thing, make it this: take stock of what you already rely on and identify one area where better use of an existing system could remove friction from your day-to-day work.

That approach helps control costs now, supports a more consistent client experience, and puts you in a far stronger position to adopt new technology, including AI, when the timing is genuinely right.

Many brokers already have the foundations in place. The opportunity is often in making them work harder, rather than adding more.