Paperwork workflow ownership
Routing, QC, missing-item tracking, signature follow-up, and submission readiness—so packets don’t bounce.
Related: client data preparation.
Transitions don’t break in the strategy. They break when no one owns the operational lane: data readiness, paperwork accuracy, signature follow-up, transfer tracking, exceptions, and the final straggler accounts.
Continuity executes the move. The advisor stays focused on clients. We manage the workflow until the job is actually done.
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Execution isn’t one step. It’s a connected workflow that prevents rework and keeps status visible. Here’s what we typically own.
Routing, QC, missing-item tracking, signature follow-up, and submission readiness—so packets don’t bounce.
Related: client data preparation.
Visibility on what moved, what stalled, and why—so exceptions are managed, not discovered late.
Related: account transfer tracking.
Residuals, partials, late-settling items, and straggler clients—so the move doesn’t drag for months.
Related: completion phase.
Start with readiness so execution scope matches your book’s real complexity.
The first five phases move the book. The sixth phase prevents lingering cleanup debt by staying on for straggler clients and residual work.
Execution risk hides inside “we’ll handle it.” Here’s how to think about it operationally.
Most teams can do parts of a transition. The risk is coordination and visibility under time pressure. Continuity provides a dedicated execution lane: tracking, follow-through, and completion ownership.
Start with readiness to see where your ops will get stretched.
Checklists don’t chase signatures, surface exceptions, or close residuals. A controlled move needs operational ownership and reporting.
Explore the risk map to see what checklists miss.
That’s the point of readiness: find issues early while they’re still cheap. During execution, exceptions are tracked and managed instead of ignored.
See transfer tracking.
Timelines vary by book complexity, signing behavior, and exception categories. What we control is workflow clarity, follow-through, and completion-phase persistence.
The fastest clarity comes from a readiness call.
It prevents the biggest mistake: committing to a timeline without understanding operational reality.
These are the questions advisors ask when they’ve seen transfers stall, packets bounce, or clients get multiple waves of requests.
Late-discovered authority issues (trustee language, entity authorizations, outdated POAs) or missing supporting documents. Execution reduces this by enforcing pre-submit QC and a missing-item workflow instead of guessing.
Because inventory was incomplete before the first packet wave—missing docs, special forms, or signer constraints show up after submission. That’s why readiness + organize/build phases exist.
No tracking + no exception workflow. Non-transferables, unsettled trades, restrictions, margin/options constraints, and partial-transfer edge cases require visibility and follow-up. See account transfer tracking.
Residuals and stragglers: dividends, late-settling items, small positions, partials, aged exceptions. Without a defined owner, they linger. Continuity stays through the straggler phase. See completion phase.
They become client-facing fast if incomplete. When needed, we support targeted cleanup workflows and verification. See cost basis/RMD cleanup.
Start with a Transition Readiness Assessment. It clarifies scope, risks, and where your team will get stretched—before the move becomes client-facing. Schedule here.
Readiness makes the risk visible. Execution prevents it from becoming client-facing.