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Everyone says they offer AI, but few wealthtech platforms build it effectively into their core. Instead, most vendors add these features poorly, without redesigning their systems to support AI or the advisors who rely on it.
This tendency has heightened the confusion among firms trying to sort through what’s hype and what’s useful. More and more, we’re hearing different versions of the same question: What is an “AI-native platform,” and why does that matter to us?
It’s the right question to ask. But it needs to go beyond terminology and focus on outcomes for both the advisor and the end client.
A truly AI-native management platform isn’t a tool with a few generative features layered on. It’s a system designed to use AI for its core functionality, decision making, and user support. That means machine learning isn’t a sideshow; it’s embedded in how workflows adapt, how communication gets delivered, and how the platform identifies what matters most each day.
Through our Fynancial app, we’ve seen firsthand how AI-native platforms enhance advisor engagement. One of the top-performing advisors on our app says he previously sent out newsletters hoping for engagement, but one post on the app will receive dozens of client responses, some within minutes.
That kind of reaction is exactly what a modern platform should enable. It should not create more dashboards to log into or more manual steps to complete. Rather, it should yield more meaningful interactions that fit into the advisor’s rhythm.
Integrating GenAI
Platforms built before the GenAI moment can retrofit effectively using a creative and AI-first approach. Fynancial was one of them. We launched before ChatGPT changed the market’s vocabulary, but we’ve since partnered with Artificial Intelligence Risk (AIR), a firm that was built from day one around generative AI. We reassessed our systems at the fundamental level to maximize that partnership.
Through this effort, we can now offer AI architecture and functionality as part of our core platform. For this reason, we fit the definition of a “native-AI platform.” Personally, though, I think “Agentic AI platform” is the better term. It captures how our tool doesn’t just support the advisor’s work, but actively drives it.
Still, terminology aside, what matters most is whether the platform helps advisors get more out of their day. And this is where a lot of tools fall short.
Most AI-powered offerings in wealthtech complete a single task. They take notes. They summarize articles. They rebalance portfolios. Some are helpful, but many just create more noise. The biggest issue is fragmentation. New AI tools integrate poorly into the original system, let alone the firm’s broader tech stack. Advisors end up switching between tabs, managing separate logins, and working through clunky handoffs between platforms. It slows them down, which is the opposite of what good technology should do. Tech tools must actually remove friction, instead of repackaging it.
Know What You Need From Your Tech
When wealth management firms review their tech stacks, especially in light of AI capabilities, I think it’s important to ask the right questions. Does this tool actually reduce the advisor’s workload? Does it integrate with the tech we already use? Is it trained on relevant, high-quality data? Does it improve the client experience or just complicate it? Can we explain how it works to compliance?
The most effective platforms don’t make advisors feel like they’re “using AI.” They work in the background, making them feel like they’re getting more done, more efficiently, without giving up their control or personal touch.
The industry is still catching up to this idea. Actually, it’s one of the biggest misconceptions we still hear: that AI makes client experiences feel less personal.
In practice, good AI implementation can do the opposite. Fully integrated AI helps identify the best time to reach out, surfaces useful next steps, and keeps communication consistent and relevant across the client relationship.
When advisors spend less time toggling between systems and more time speaking directly with clients, something shifts. The focus returns to where it belongs: not on dashboards, but on relationships. We’re building toward a future where the advisor’s guidance isn’t drowned out by noise, but amplified by technology. We believe the advisor’s voice can change the world 100 times faster than numbers and graphs.
Tom Fields is the CEO of Fynancial, a digital client experience platform for RIAs.
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