Ask a relationship manager at almost any bank, insurance carrier, or wealth management firm what slows them down, and the answer is rarely "I don't know my clients well enough." It's that the systems meant to help them do their job are working against them.
Relationship managers spend only about 40% of their time on core, client-facing activities, according to Accenture research. The rest goes to preparation, administration, and internal work, time pulled directly out of prospecting, relationship development, and the conversations that actually grow assets under management. Meanwhile, client expectations are rising: the share of wealth management clients seeking more holistic advice grew from 29% in 2018 to 52% in 2023, per McKinsey. Firms are being asked to do more with the same fragmented systems that already eat most of the advisor's day.
We cover the full picture, including what a modern client operating system looks like and where AI actually changes advisor outcomes, in our white paper, The Modern Client OS: How Financial Services Firms Are Replacing Legacy CRM with D365 and AI. Here's the short version of what's driving the problem and what firms are doing about it.
Banking, insurance, and wealth management each run into their own version of the same wall. The relationship manager pulls a client view together from a legacy CRM, a compliance tool, a trail of email threads, and a spreadsheet they built themselves because none of the official systems talk to each other.
This isn't a minor annoyance. It's a daily operational cost that shows up in three places at once: advisor time that could go toward growth, cross-sell opportunities that surface only after a client has already moved assets elsewhere, and compliance documentation that gets assembled after the fact instead of captured as the work happens.
The math backs this up. McKinsey research shows task-based AI automation can deliver up to 20-30% in time savings for advisors, time that's currently being spent chasing information across systems instead of on the products held, the relationship history, and the next logical conversation that would grow the relationship.
Most financial services CRM rollouts fail advisors for a simple reason: the system gets configured for how management wants to report, not for how advisors actually work. The result is friction, and advisors respond to friction by reverting to their own spreadsheets. Once that happens, the data leadership needs never makes it into the CRM in the first place, and the case for the technology investment weakens along with it.
The advisor who does not use the CRM is not lazy. The CRM does not save them time. That is the implementation problem.
A CRM that actually earns advisor adoption shows the full relationship in one view: AUM, products held, activity history, next steps, and compliance notes, together. It surfaces next-best-action prompts grounded in real signals like life events and portfolio changes. And it captures data with almost no friction, which in practice means native integration with Outlook and Teams instead of a separate login and manual entry.
That last question is the one that matters most. When the answer is yes, the CRM stops being a compliance obligation and starts being the reason advisors can spend more time on the relationships that grow the book of business.
AI doesn't replace the advisor relationship, and it isn't meant to. What it changes is the quality of the time advisors spend building that relationship. Once the CRM has a unified data foundation, AI has real inputs to work with instead of guesses.
AI models rank relationships by expansion or churn risk using real signals rather than static account lists.
Prompts surface directly in the advisor's existing view, next to the client record they're already reviewing.
Copilot drafts meeting prep summaries and follow-up emails grounded in the actual D365 record, not a generic template.
AI-assisted documentation flags when requirements haven't been met and drafts the compliance notes advisors are required to maintain.
The traditional financial services CRM implementation runs 12 to 18 months of requirements gathering, customization, and staged rollouts, by which point the original requirements have already shifted and adoption is at risk before go-live. That timeline isn't a law of nature. It's a symptom of building the system around a generic template instead of the way advisors actually work.
Firms that get this right tend to do a few things consistently well before they scale a rollout:
Done this way, a production-ready environment is realistic in 6 to 8 weeks, not 12 to 18 months, because the scope is fixed and the outcomes are defined before the project starts.
If your advisors are maintaining their own spreadsheets because the CRM doesn't save them time, that's not an adoption problem you can train your way out of. It's an implementation problem, and it's a solvable one. Our white paper, The Modern Client OS, goes deeper into what a financial-services-ready Dynamics 365 environment actually includes.
TrellisPoint's D365 Sales Accelerator for financial services firms is built specifically around advisor workflows, compliance requirements, and the AI capabilities that make both of those easier to manage.
Schedule a conversation with the TrellisPoint team to see how D365 could be configured for your firm's advisors and compliance requirements.
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