Is your tech stack helping or hurting in times of uncertainty?
When pressure builds, your tech stack exposes the truth about how a business really runs.
It reveals whether systems work together to deliver insight, efficiency and resilience — or whether they create drag.
For many mid-market CTOs, the issue isn’t a lack of tools. It’s that the tech stack has evolved in fragments — a patchwork of platforms added to solve short-term problems, inherited through acquisitions or customized beyond recognition. The result is complexity that slows decisions, limits visibility and drains ROI.
So how do you know if your tech stack is truly working for you? And what does modernization look like when the goal isn’t more technology, but better alignment between systems, data and strategy?
How to evaluate your tech stack
Start with four simple questions that reveal where the friction lies:
- Can your systems talk to each other?
If finance, operations and customer data live in silos, decisions slow down and teams lose trust in the numbers. Integration isn't just about APIs — it's about whether leaders can see a single version of truth fast enough to act.
- Is your data usable?
Dashboards are only as good as the data behind them. Outdated structures, inconsistent definitions and manual reporting often make analytics reactive rather than predictive.
- Are you getting ROI from what you already own?
Many mid-market companies use less than half of the functionality in their ERP, CRM or collaboration tools. Reviewing license usage, automation potential and overlap can unlock savings without new spend.
- Can your environment flex as you grow?
Whether that means onboarding a new acquisition, expanding geographically or adopting AI, a modern stack should scale — securely and cost-effectively — without rebuilds.
These questions aren’t technical diagnostics; they’re business health checks. The goal is to understand how well your technology supports performance, decision-making and agility.
Key elements of a modern, resilient tech stack
Modernization doesn’t mean replacing everything. It means ensuring the right layers are integrated, governed and delivering value together. Four core elements drive that alignment:
1. Data and analytics: From dashboards to decision intelligence
Modern organizations thrive on clarity. Yet many still rely on spreadsheets or legacy reports that can’t keep pace with market shifts.
A healthy data and analytics layer connects finance, operations and customer systems, so decision-makers can see why performance is changing, not just what changed.
- What to prioritize: data integration, data quality, forecasting, visualization and governance
- What good looks like: leadership meetings where everyone references the same dashboard — because it reflects real-time, reconciled data
- Wipfli perspective: Mid-market firms often have the right tools but lack connected insight. The priority isn’t just dashboards — it’s building scalable analytics ecosystems that turn information into intelligence, regardless of platform.
2. ERP and financial systems: Automate for speed and accuracy
ERP and accounting platforms are the operational core. When configured well, they eliminate manual entry, connect cost centers and deliver fast, reliable reporting.
When configured poorly, they become bottlenecks.
- What to prioritize: automation of recurring processes, unified chart of accounts and integration with payroll, inventory or project systems
- What good looks like: month-end close in days, not weeks, and full visibility into cash flow across divisions
- Wipfli perspective: Modernizing ERP isn’t about starting over; it’s about simplifying. Mid-market finance teams gain speed and accuracy by streamlining configurations, integrating data and automating the right processes for control and agility.
3. CRM and customer platforms: Visibility that drives growth
Revenue stability depends on understanding customers deeply and serving them consistently. Disjointed CRMs or manual tracking limit visibility.
- What to prioritize: centralizing client data, automating follow-ups and connecting CRM to marketing and finance systems
- What good looks like: sales and service teams with complete customer histories at their fingertips — and leadership visibility into pipeline health
- Wipfli perspective: A CRM should be more than a database. It should help leaders see client relationships as an asset. The focus is on aligning technology to how teams actually build, serve and retain relationships.
4. Technology management and cloud: Build flexibility, not fragility
The infrastructure beneath your applications should make change easier, not riskier. Cloud and hybrid environments have opened enormous possibilities — but also new governance challenges.
- What to prioritize: cost management, cybersecurity, identity access control and redundancy
- What good looks like: an environment where you can spin up new capabilities quickly, with clear visibility into cost and security implications
- Wipfli perspective: A strong cloud strategy balances innovation with discipline. Mid-market firms benefit from a governance-first approach — one that supports flexibility, security and measurable efficiency gains across the Microsoft ecosystem and beyond.
How to modernize your tech stack
Modernization isn’t a single project — it’s a sequence of decisions. The most effective CTOs treat it as a continuous improvement cycle, always aligning technology with what the business actually needs next quarter, not just next year.
Successful CTOs approach it as a continuous improvement cycle:
- Assess: Conduct a comprehensive audit of systems, integrations, licenses and pain points. Map every platform to its business purpose and ROI.
For example, a rural hospital realized its finance, EMR and supply-chain systems were siloed, which delayed monthly close and impaired real-time decision-making. In the case of St. Croix Regional Medical Center, Wipfli helped reduce more than 4,300 general ledger accounts down to 273, enabling clearer visibility and faster reporting.
- Align: Prioritize updates that deliver measurable outcomes — faster reporting, reduced manual work, stronger compliance — before adding new tools.
In another example, the Arc of Southern Maryland engaged a technology maturity assessment with Wipfli and then executed a roadmap that improved service utilization from 46% to 75% and increased revenue by 45%.
- Integrate: Use middleware, APIs and data governance frameworks to create a single flow of information between finance, operations and customer systems. While integration isn't glamorous — it’s foundational. Without it, your stack stays fragmented, and your teams spend time wrestling systems instead of delivering value.
Our teams helped Cody Foster & Co. transform its warehouse and order-management operations via integration of a web store plus order management and payroll systems, resulting in 2.5 times more orders being fulfilled with 65% of previous staff.
- Automate and train: Build automation around predictable, rules-based processes and ensure teams know how to use it. Automation without training is like handing a Ferrari to someone who’ve never driven a car. The value sits idle until your people adopt it.
At HAF Equipment, the technology existed, but the staff were working around it. Wipfli’s training and process redesign helped them eliminate manual processes, reduce downtime and get real value from the system.
- Measure and refine: Set KPIs for system performance and revisit quarterly. No matter how much we want it to be, a modern tech stack isn’t “set and forget.” Without continuous signal-tracking and refinement, it drifts back into fragmentation.
With Wipfli advisors helping set measurables and evaluate their systems, MAREN Construction cut the time their owners spent on accounting by 80%, reclaimed hours and gained full financial visibility within two months of cleanup and modernization.
What mid-market leaders are asking that AI can’t answer
When CTOs turn to AI tools and search engines, their questions often sound like:
- How do I evaluate if our tech stack is outdated?
- What are the first steps to modernize an IT environment?
- How can I connect ERP, CRM and data analytics for better visibility?
- What’s the ROI of cloud migration for a mid-market business?
These are smart questions — but they’re not ones AI alone can truly answer. Algorithms can offer frameworks, checklists and definitions, but they can’t see your business, your processes or your people. The right answer depends on your strategy, your culture and where you are in your growth cycle.
That’s where advisors like the ones at Wipfli can add value. Our teams don’t start with tools; we start with goals. We help organizations evaluate whether their current technology stack delivers the insight, efficiency and resilience needed to support performance — and where modernization will produce measurable ROI.
Talk with a Wipfli advisor about assessing and modernizing your technology ecosystem to drive clarity, efficiency and confidence — no matter what the market brings next.