The Hidden Costs of Running Investment Operations Across Multiple Systems

Most real estate investment firms build their technology stack the same way: one problem at a time. A property management system comes first, then an investor portal, then a debt tracker, with spreadsheets filling every gap in between. The cost of this setup stays hidden because no one tracks it as a single number.

For a while, the approach works. Then the portfolio grows. Every new property, investor or loan means more data moving between more systems. The process that used to take a late evening starts consuming days, then weeks. The true cost stays buried across budgets no one is adding up.

A Stack Nobody Designed

Nobody plans to run investment operations across multiple disconnected systems. Each tool makes sense at the time of adoption. The problem is that the resulting stack consumes team capacity through endless reconciliation cycles and manually rekeyed data.

The pattern plays out consistently across firms of all sizes. The accounting team exports financial data from the property management system and opens spreadsheets to calculate waterfalls. The capital markets team maintains a separate tracker for loan terms and covenants. Investor relations pull it all together, compiles PDF reports and capital notices, and publishes them to a standalone investor portal that has no live connection to any of the above.

As Wills Gardner, SVP of capital markets at Holladay Properties said, “There was no connection between anything. Our investor portal, our property management instance and our corporate general ledger all sat in separate places.” Nobody questions it because it has always functioned. But when you add up the hours different teams spend each quarter moving data between systems and verifying numbers, the figure is larger than expected in terms of time, headcount and direct cost alike.

Where the Cost Accumulates

In conversations with hundreds of real estate investment firms, Yardi has seen the same five cost categories surface repeatedly, often in organizations that believe their current setup is working well enough.

Reconciliation time. Every time data moves from one system to another, someone must verify the numbers still match. One firm estimated that its annual distribution process took over 40 hours per deal. Another reported that its annual reporting cycle consumed up to a week. For firms actively scaling assets under management, this bottleneck turns growth into a liability, as each new asset multiplies the reconciliation burden rather than the returns.

Unnecessary headcount. Several firms have hired additional staff specifically to manage the manual processes that siloed systems create, including roles brought on solely to validate calculations for a manual debt management workflow. The salary cost rarely gets linked to the technology gap that generated the need.

Compounding errors. When waterfall calculations, covenant tracking and reporting live in independent systems maintained by different people, discrepancies accumulate. Errors tend to surface at the worst possible moment, during an audit or a distribution cycle. In a market where limited partners expect faster, more transparent reporting, a single miscalculated distribution can erode confidence that took years to build and put future capital commitments at risk.

Cumulative licensing fees. Firms rarely total what they pay across all platforms in use. Investor portal subscriptions alone can run tens of thousands of dollars per year. Add the cost of a debt tracking tool, property management system and general ledger, and the combined spend typically exceeds the cost of a unified solution.

Delayed decisions. Many firms recognize the limitations of their technology stack long before they act on them. Every deferred action makes the eventual migration more complex and more expensive. The firms that move earlier avoid the compounding data debt that makes later transitions harder.

What a Connected Platform Changes

The answer to system fragmentation is not better integrations between disconnected tools. It is a different architecture. When property management, accounting and investor relations share a single database, reconciliation disappears by design. Data enters once and flows through every function that depends on it. This foundation is also what makes AI analytics practical, as models can only produce reliable insights when they draw from one consistent, clean data source.

Yardi Investment Suite connects every stage of the investment lifecycle to the same foundation that runs property operations. Waterfalls, covenants and reporting draw from the same data source, removing reconciliation and reducing error risk. Automated workflows replace manual bridging between systems, so teams can scale processes without adding headcount.

Cohen Asset Management reduced its quarterly distribution process from two weeks to less than two days after adopting Yardi Investment Suite. For firms already operating on Voyager, the integration is immediate, as the investment layer reads directly from existing property management and accounting data. For firms evaluating a new platform, the suite consolidates operations from day one.

Start with the Math

Before evaluating any connected platform, calculate what your current stack costs. Start with licensing fees across every system, then add estimated staff hours spent on manual processes through period-end and any roles hired specifically to bridge system gaps. Factor in the hours your team spend assembling and reconciling data in spreadsheets and the cost of a single material error. The total often justifies a closer look at what a connected platform delivers.

Yardi Investment Suite consolidates your entire investment lifecycle on a single platform, reducing reconciliation time, improving reporting accuracy and giving your team the data visibility to make faster, more confident decisions. Learn more.


First published on realcomm.com

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AUTHOR

Chris Barbier is a seasoned leader and former CPA with 30+ years in global software and financial services, with deep expertise across the real estate investment lifecycle, from fund management and portfolio accounting to investor reporting. As Senior Director of Investment Management at Yardi, he works with client, sales, services and product teams to deliver tailored solutions for the real estate investment industry.

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