For most financial services firm, the calendar runs on reporting cycles. Every quarter, the same set of client reports must go out — model-driven performance and risk outputs, the same formats as last time with new numbers in them. And every quarter, the firm's most expert people lose days to producing them.
Often, it's a largely manual process: pulling figures from different systems, running models, checking outputs, assembling reports, moving files.
And manual reporting costs more than hours. It makes the whole process more prone to mistakes — the kind that surface in client reports — and it caps growth: when reporting ties up the team four times a year, there's a ceiling on how many clients you can realistically take on.
The reason this work stays manual is that no single part of it ever looks bad enough to fix. Each step is perfectly manageable in isolation — pull the data, run the models, check the outputs, assemble the report. Nothing there screams "automate me."
The damage is in the chain, not the links. A sequence of disconnected manual steps is exactly where time disappears and mistakes slip through, as manual input leads to a figure getting copied into the wrong column, a model run on last cycle's inputs, or a file saved over. Because every individual step seems small and reasonable, the true cost stays invisible — right up until something breaks close to a deadline.
The analysis and the models are the value. The data preparation around them is the tax you pay to get there — and most firms are paying far more of that tax than they realize.
Beyond the obvious time loss, manual reporting carries three alternative costs that are easy to overlook... until they bite.
Error risk.
Manual copying and re-keying between systems is where bad numbers enter, and they enter most often under deadline pressure. In a client portfolio or risk report, a wrong figure isn't just an internal embarrassment — it can misinform a client's decisions, damage trust, and raise compliance and oversight questions. The cost of one bad report can dwarf the cost of the process that produced it.
Key-person dependency.
When a reporting process is manual, it usually isn't fully written down. It lives as tribal knowledge — the one analyst who knows how the quarter-end file really works, which step to run twice, which output to sanity-check. If that person is on leave, off sick, or leaves the firm, the firm's ability to report on time goes with them.
A ceiling on growth.
If the reporting team is already at capacity four times a year, every new client you win makes the crunch worse, not better. You can't scale a book of business on a reporting process that doesn't scale — so the manual grind ends up limiting the commercial side of the firm, not just the operations side. This is the cost that turns "we should tidy this up someday" into "we need to act."
Think of it as a formula you can automatically run every quarter, for every client, and trust to produce the same result. One CloverDX customer took a reporting process that used to eat 4-5 days a quarter and cut it to half a day or less, now it's a click of a button. That kind of result isn't down to one clever fix. It comes from a few consistent principles:
A single pipeline from source to report.
Instead of people manually shuttling data between systems by hand, data can flow through one pre-defined path — pulling from each source system, transforming, running models, checking outputs, and assembling into the finished output — so there is little to no manual effort.
Overall, this can make reporting a repeatable run you can trust, rather than a project you brace for every quarter.
Ortec Finance is a clear example of how much time automating reporting can free up in the real-world.
They are a company that builds the technology and models that financial institutions rely on to guide investment decisions — and their software used by more than 600 clients across over 20 countries. However, each quarter, their own consultants were losing several days to preparing complex investment reports by hand...
So they automated the data work behind their reports by using CloverDX to connect multiple, disconnected manual steps into a single workflow that pulls the data, runs the models, checks the outputs and assembles the reports automatically.
You can read the full Ortec Finance transformation story here.
If your team produces recurring reports or client deliverables, see how CloverDX can automate the processes behind them. Request a demo to learn more.
Alternatively, you can also read the full Ortec Finance story here.