Technology Strategy

7 signs your technology stack is holding your business back

NorthStack Digital
7 min read
7 signs your technology stack is holding your business back

Most small business owners don’t decide to keep bad technology. It creeps in — a workaround here, a “good enough for now” subscription there — until the tools you rely on are quietly costing you more than they give back.

The problem is that outdated or misaligned technology rarely crashes. It just slows things down, drains your team’s patience, and puts you in a position where you’re making decisions based on incomplete information. By the time it feels urgent, it’s already been expensive for a while.

Here are seven signs your technology is working against you — and what to do about it.

“Even the best of drivers can’t win with a car that won’t perform.”

The seven signs

01
Your team complains about the same tools — repeatedly

If the same software keeps coming up in conversation — “this thing is so slow,” “why doesn’t this connect to that,” “I have to do this part manually again” — that’s not just venting. That’s your team telling you they’re losing time every single day.

Pay attention to which complaints are chronic versus occasional. A system that causes friction once in a while is normal. A system that causes friction every day is a cost of doing business that you’re choosing to keep paying.

The pattern to watch for

Workarounds that have become part of the official process. When someone trains a new hire on how to work around a system rather than how to use it, you’ve got a technology problem wearing a training problem’s clothes.

02
Critical tasks can only be done by one person

There’s a difference between having specialists and having dependencies. Specialists improve quality. Dependencies create bottlenecks.

If certain tasks can only be completed when a specific person is available — because they’re the only one who knows the system, because the process lives in a spreadsheet they built, or because access was never properly set up for anyone else — that fragility is a risk worth taking seriously.

The pattern to watch for

If their absence stalls part of your operation, the problem isn’t the person. It’s the technology that made them irreplaceable in the wrong way.

03
Your systems don’t share information with each other

A bookkeeper exports a file from one system, emails it to the operations lead, who manually enters numbers into another. A customer fills in a contact form, and someone copies their details into the CRM by hand. A sale closes in one platform, and the team finds out through a message someone remembered to send.

This is what disconnected technology looks like in practice — and it’s more common than most businesses realise.

MuleSoft’s 2025 Connectivity Benchmark Report found that organisations use an average of 1,061 different applications — with up to 70% of them not properly integrated with each other. 83% of IT leaders said integration challenges are actively slowing their progress.

When your systems don’t talk to each other, every gap between them is a manual step someone has to take. Manual steps mean time, errors, and the real possibility of things falling through the cracks. If you’re wondering what a more connected setup could look like for your business, our technology strategy service is a good place to start.

04
Critical information lives in spreadsheets nobody else understands

Spreadsheets are excellent for what they were designed to do — analysis, modelling, and one-off calculations. They become a problem when they start running your business instead of informing it.

Signs you’ve crossed that line
  • You have a spreadsheet that only one person fully understands
  • Updating it requires a specific sequence of steps to avoid breaking something
  • If that file disappeared tomorrow, it would cause a genuine operational crisis

A 2024 study reviewing 35 years of spreadsheet quality research found that 94% of business spreadsheets contain critical errors — most introduced by end-users working without formal software training. That’s not a knock on your team. It’s a reason to give them better tools.

Spreadsheets don’t have user permissions, audit trails, or real-time sync. They weren’t built for the collaborative, mission-critical work most businesses are now using them for. The question isn’t whether they work — it’s whether they’re the right tool for what you’re asking them to do.

05
Your website can’t keep pace with your actual business

Your website is often the first place a potential customer forms an impression of you. If it looks like it was built for a version of your business that no longer exists, it’s working against you — not for you.

This goes beyond aesthetics. A site that doesn’t clearly reflect your current services or process creates confusion that costs you leads before anyone has ever picked up the phone. A site that’s slow to load or hard to use on mobile loses those leads before they’ve read a word.

The pattern to watch for

If your website requires a developer call every time you need to update a service or change a price — or if visitors regularly ask about things you stopped offering two years ago — it’s worth examining what the site is actually doing for your business. NorthStack’s website design refresh service is built specifically for businesses at this point.

06
You’re making decisions on data you don’t fully trust

When key numbers have to be verified before they’re trusted — or when the same metric shows differently depending on which system you look at — you’re flying with unreliable instruments. Decisions made on inaccurate data can be worse than making no decision at all.

Phrases that signal a data trust problem
  • “I think we did about 40 orders last month”
  • “I’m pretty sure that’s the right cost”
  • “I’ll have to check with [name] on that”
  • “That depends on which system you’re looking at”

The root cause is almost always fragmented storage — data scattered across local drives, old email threads, spreadsheets, and software systems that don’t share a single source of truth. Consolidating it is exactly what cloud-based business tools are designed to solve, and it’s one of the fastest ways to improve decision quality without adding headcount.

07
Your technology costs keep going up with nothing to show for it

Subscription creep is real. A $20-per-month tool here, a $50-per-month integration there, a legacy piece of software your team barely uses but nobody wants to turn off — these accumulate quietly.

Flexera’s 2025 State of ITAM Report found that 35% of businesses say SaaS waste increased over the past year — and only 43% of IT teams have complete visibility across their technology stack.

If your technology costs have grown year over year but you can’t point to clear improvements in speed, output, or capability, that’s worth examining.

The pattern to watch for

Tools bought reactively — one problem at a time — rarely form a stack that works well together. There’s no strategy connecting them. That’s exactly the gap a technology strategy review is designed to close.

What to do when your technology is holding you back

Recognising the problem is the first step. The second is getting an honest picture of what’s actually going on — not just a list of complaints, but a clear view of which systems you have, how they connect, where the gaps are, and what fixing them would cost compared to what keeping them is already costing you.

That process is called a technology assessment, and it doesn’t need to be a months-long engagement. At NorthStack, we keep it practical: a focused conversation, a look at your current tools and workflows, and a plain-English summary of what’s working, what isn’t, and what to prioritise next.

1
List your current tools and what each one is supposed to doMost businesses are surprised by how many tools they’re actually paying for — and how many overlap or sit unused. Start with a simple inventory before anything else.

2
Ask your team where they lose the most timeThe people doing the work every day know exactly where the friction is. A 15-minute conversation with each team member will surface more than a week of solo analysis.

3
Map which systems connect to each other — and which don’tDraw it out if you have to. Every manual handoff between systems is a candidate for automation or consolidation. Seeing it visually makes the gaps obvious.

4
Prioritise by impact, not urgencyThe squeakiest wheel isn’t always the most important one to fix first. Focus on the changes that will free up the most time, reduce the most risk, or improve the most decisions — not just the ones causing the most noise right now.

💡

If a few of the signs above sounded familiar, book a free 15-minute call with NorthStack. We’ll help you figure out where to start — a focused look at your current tools and workflows, and a plain-English view of what to prioritise next. No commitment required.

The bottom line

Technology that holds you back doesn’t usually feel like a crisis. It feels like Tuesday. It’s the slow tool you’ve learned to live with, the manual step nobody’s questioned in years, the system that works fine as long as one specific person handles it.

The cost of that friction adds up — in wasted hours, preventable errors, and decisions made without the full picture. Most of it can be addressed one step at a time, starting with whatever is slowing you down the most.

If you’re not sure where to begin, that’s exactly what we’re here for.

Is your technology working for you or against you?

We help Winnipeg businesses get a clear, honest picture of their current tech stack — and a practical plan for what to do next.

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