Your modernization starting point is not a tool. It is the problem your team already feels.
A practical framework for choosing the right first fix, avoiding noisy projects, and building momentum one visible win at a time.
The starting point for small business modernization is the problem your team already feels every week. Not the tool a vendor pitched you. Not the platform your competitor uses. Not the project a board member nudged you toward. The problem your best employee will describe in 10 seconds when you ask them what wastes their time.
This is the conclusion of about a decade of watching modernization projects work and fail. The ones that work share a starting point. The ones that fail almost always started for the wrong reason. This piece is a longer write-up of the framework we walked through on last week’s Modernization without the chaos webinar, with the case studies and the practical 30-day plan.
Why the wrong starting point kills projects
A modernization project that starts for the wrong reason has a small problem and a big one.
The small problem is that the team does not feel the pain it is supposed to solve. If you fix something nobody noticed was broken, you get no advocates and no momentum. The next project then has to be sold from scratch.
The big problem is that the wrong starting point usually trains you to skip the diagnosis. You learn to start projects because somebody outside the business suggested them. That habit is more expensive than the failed project. It means every future investment is sized by sales pressure instead of business reality.
Three questions that find your real starting point
Use these three questions. Do not skip any of them.
Pain signals versus noise
A signal is operational, measurable, and recurring. Noise sounds like a starting point but is not. A signal is a system problem. Noise is a vibe. Modernize the signals. Ignore the noise.
Signals
- The same question gets asked every week and nobody has a reliable answer.
- One person leaving the company would surface a critical risk.
- A report takes longer to build than to read.
- Customers wait while you chase information.
- You cannot tell if you are profitable until month-end.
Noise
- You heard about a cool new tool.
- Your competitor is on a different platform.
- Someone at a conference convinced you.
- Your IT person wants something newer.
- You have a bad feeling about your stack.
What the first fix actually looks like
Three real examples from the last 18 months. Industries different. Sizes different. Framework the same.
40-person distributor in the Midwest
Sales reps were copying orders from email and re-keying them into the system twice a day. We built one order-entry form connected to the core system.
15-person professional services firm
Nobody knew what was actually invoiced versus what was outstanding. Their receivables spreadsheet was rebuilt by hand every week and nobody fully trusted it. We replaced it with a live dashboard.
90-person manufacturer running two entities
Month-end close took six days and three people reconciling intercompany transactions manually. We automated the intercompany piece.
Where Microsoft tools fit, and where they do not
The three case studies above used Microsoft tools. That is because we are a Microsoft consultancy and that is what we use. If you came to the webinar not knowing what Business Central or Power Platform or Copilot were, here is the short version.
Business Central
Microsoft’s accounting and operations system for small and mid-sized businesses. Fits businesses outgrowing QuickBooks.
Power Platform
Microsoft’s low-code toolset: Power Apps, Power Automate, and Power BI. Most small businesses start with one.
Copilot
Microsoft’s AI assistant inside Outlook, Excel, Word, Teams, and Business Central.
The full plain-English glossary is on our site. Eight terms, each defined in one paragraph, with who they fit.
Your 30-day plan
Write your problem in one sentence
My team loses [X hours] every [Y frequency] because [Z reason]. If you cannot fill in those brackets, you do not have a project yet.
Pick the champion
The person on your team who feels the pain most becomes the owner. Owners need to be close enough to the work to know if the fix is working.
Set a baseline
Time, errors, dollars, delays. Pick one. Write down the number. You cannot prove a win without a baseline.
Scope your first fix in one paragraph
Not a plan. Not a Gantt chart. A paragraph. If it cannot fit in a paragraph, it is too big and you need to shrink the scope.
The worksheet that walks you through this is on our site. Free, printable, fillable.
What kills momentum before it starts
What to take home
The cost of doing nothing is real, and it compounds quietly. Your starting point is the problem your team already feels, not the one IT recommends. Small, fast, and visible beats ambitious every time at the start. One win earns the next one.