It’s 9:47 AM on a Tuesday. Your ops manager is re-entering data from your CRM into a spreadsheet — again. Your finance team is waiting on three approvals before they can process a vendor payment. A new client is asking why their onboarding isn’t done yet. And somewhere in that chain, something is broken.
Sound familiar? If you’re running a company doing $3M–$25M in revenue, the answer is probably yes — and the cost is higher than you think.
The Invisible Tax on Your Business
Broken workflows don’t announce themselves. They don’t show up as a line item on your P&L. Instead, they hide inside your team’s daily frustrations, your customer’s delayed experiences, and your own nagging sense that the business should be running smoother by now.
Here’s what that actually costs:
- Time: The average knowledge worker spends 19% of their workweek searching for information or re-entering data that already exists somewhere else. For a 20-person team, that’s the equivalent of nearly 4 full-time employees doing nothing productive.
- Money: McKinsey estimates that companies lose up to 20–30% of revenue annually due to process inefficiencies. For a $5M company, that’s $1M to $1.5M walking out the door every year.
- People: Talented employees don’t quit over salary alone — they quit over frustration. When your best people spend their days wrestling with broken tools, disconnected systems, and manual workarounds, they start looking elsewhere. And replacing a mid-level employee costs 50–200% of their annual salary.
- Customers: Slow onboarding, billing errors, missed follow-ups — customers notice. Even if they don’t complain directly, they churn. And in competitive verticals like fintech or rental operations, one bad experience can cost you the referral network that came with them.
The Four Workflow Killers We See Most
After working with dozens of mid-market companies, we’ve seen the same patterns show up again and again. Here are the four most common — and most costly — workflow failures:
1. Manual Data Entry Between Disconnected Systems
Your CRM doesn’t talk to your billing platform. Your project management tool doesn’t sync with HR. So someone — usually a highly paid someone — manually copies data from one system to another, multiple times a day. Every manual transfer is a chance for error, delay, and wasted time.
We recently worked with a fintech company where their ops team was spending 12 hours per week reconciling payment data between three platforms. That’s 624 hours per year of highly skilled labor doing work that a properly configured custom application integration could handle in seconds.
2. Approval Bottlenecks
How many approvals require someone to track down a decision-maker via Slack, email, and then a follow-up email, and then a tap on the shoulder? Approval chains that live in inboxes and chat threads — rather than structured workflows — create invisible delays that compound across every department. A contract that should take two days gets stuck for two weeks. A vendor payment that should process immediately sits in limbo because the right person was in back-to-back meetings.
3. Spreadsheet Chaos
Spreadsheets are the duct tape of operations. They’re flexible, familiar, and absolutely everywhere. They’re also one of the most dangerous tools in a scaling business. Version conflicts, permission gaps, human formula errors, and the fact that they don’t connect to anything — spreadsheet chaos is a silent killer. One rental property management company we spoke with was tracking 200+ units across six separate Excel files maintained by three different people. The reconciliation errors alone were costing them thousands per month.
4. Shadow Processes
These are the workarounds your team invented to deal with the other three problems. The shared Google Doc that tracks what the CRM should track. The weekly “sync” meeting that exists only because the systems don’t share data. The junior analyst who re-exports reports every Monday because the dashboard isn’t trusted. Shadow processes are a signal — your team is smart enough to work around broken systems, but you’re paying them to do it.
How to Identify Your Broken Workflows (Without a Six-Month Audit)
You don’t need a consultant to spend six months mapping your processes before you can fix anything. Here’s a faster path:
Start With the Complaints
Ask your team one question: “What’s the most annoying, repetitive thing you do every week?” The answers will point you directly to your broken workflows. People don’t complain about things that work. If three people independently mention the same process — that’s your first fix.
Follow the Data
Where does data get manually moved? Where do things slow down before they get to the next person? Map the journey of your five most common business transactions — a new client onboarding, a vendor payment, a monthly report — and count how many manual steps are involved. If it’s more than three, you have a workflow problem.
Measure the Time Cost
For each broken process, estimate: how many people touch it, how many times per week, and how long it takes each time. Multiply that by their hourly rate. Most operators are shocked by the number they get. A process that “only takes 20 minutes” three times a day across a five-person team is 25 hours per week — more than half a full-time employee.
Fixing Workflows: What Works (and What Doesn’t)
Here’s the honest truth: most workflow fixes fail not because the technology doesn’t exist, but because they’re approached as software problems instead of process problems. Here’s what actually works:
Fix the Process Before You Automate It
Automating a broken process just makes it break faster, at scale. Before you touch any tool or integration, document what the workflow should look like — the ideal path, not the current workaround. Then automate that.
Prioritize by Impact, Not Complexity
The highest-value fixes are often not the most technically complex. An integration between your CRM and billing system might take two days to build and save 10 hours per week immediately. Start with the highest time/dollar impact first — not the flashiest solution.
Build With Scale in Mind
The solution that works at $5M in revenue needs to still work at $15M. Too many quick fixes — a Zapier zap here, a Google Sheet formula there — create new layers of technical debt. When you fix a workflow, think about what it needs to handle at 3x your current volume.
Measure Before and After
If you can’t measure the improvement, you don’t know if it worked. Capture a baseline — time spent, error rate, cycle time — before you make any changes. Then measure again 30 days after. Real workflow improvements show up quickly in the numbers.
The Real Question: Build, Buy, or Bring In Help?
If you’re a CEO reading this, you’re probably weighing three options:
- Build it internally — assign it to your existing team or hire someone. This often takes 3–6 months and frequently gets deprioritized when “real work” piles up.
- Buy a platform — purchase an off-the-shelf solution and spend months customizing it to fit your actual process (if it ever does).
- Bring in specialists — work with a team that’s done it before, knows what pitfalls to avoid, and can move fast without the overhead of a full-time hire.
There’s no universal right answer — but there’s often a fast one. The companies that fix their workflows quickest are usually the ones that bring in outside expertise to diagnose and design the solution, then hand it off to their internal team to own. This avoids the 6-month internal project timeline and the over-engineered platform trap.
What to Do Next
Not sure which workflows to prioritize? See our guide to 5 Workflows Every $10M Business Should Have Automated — a concrete starting point for high-revenue businesses.
Start simple. This week, pick one process in your business that you know is broken — the one your team complains about, the one that relies on a spreadsheet it shouldn’t, the one that requires more manual steps than it should. Map it out. Measure the time cost. Then decide whether to fix it internally or get help.
If you’d rather skip the diagnosis phase and move straight to fixing, that’s exactly what our technology consultants at PLECCO Technologies do. We work with companies in fintech, rental operations, and complex business environments to identify workflow gaps, build integrations and automations, and eliminate the tech debt that’s quietly draining your team’s time and your company’s margin — without the overhead of internal hiring.
The broken workflows won’t fix themselves. But they don’t have to stay broken.
Reach out to the PLECCO team if you’d like a second set of eyes on your operations. No pitch deck required.
