Welcome to the April 2026 issue of the Latest News in Financial #AdvisorTech – where we look at the big news, announcements, and underlying trends and developments that are emerging in the world of technology solutions for financial advisors!
This month's edition kicks off with the news that Wealthbox is introducing new AI agents to make it easier for advisors to query and take actions based on the client data within their CRM – which could help make it more competitive with encroaching tools like AI notetakers or AI-native CRMs that threaten to shrink its role in the advisor tech stack or reduce it entirely. But the amount of time it took Wealthbox to actually launch its new AI tools means that it may have a long way to go to catch up with the newer AI-native startups that appear to be iterating more rapidly.
From there, the latest highlights also feature a number of other interesting advisor technology announcements, including:
- Jump has announced a significant expansion beyond its roots as 'just' an AI notetaker, introducing a suite of "AI Operating System" tools – but it's not clear yet how much value advisors will really see in those additional features (and might actually just prefer a better alternative to their current CRM solutions, which ironically is the one thing that Jump still insists that it isn't building)
- RightCapital has launched a new AI tool for extracting information from client documents to automatically populate and update data in the clients' financial plan – which is perhaps a bad omen for technology providers that do document extraction on a standalone basis (and many other standalone AI tools that risk being undercut if their main functionality ends up being released as a "feature" that's bundled into a bigger incumbent technology)
- The Google-backed startup RIA Range, after several years of building a technology-forward AI-driven firm with human advisors, has reiterated its plan to gradually eliminate its human advisor workforce – but it remains to be seen whether Range can continue charging human-level planning fees for AI-only planning, given the vastly different economics of serving clients who value working with a human advisor (and are willing to pay premium fees for doing so) versus running direct-to-consumer technology platform that primarily appeals to price-conscious DIYers
Read the analysis about these announcements in this month's column, and a discussion of more trends in advisor technology, including:
- A new technology provider called WealthStream has launched with the aim of training newer advisors to think and act like more experienced planners by ingesting data on the advisor's clients and highlighting particular strategies the advisor can recommend – which could be useful for bringing newer advisors up to speed on an advisory firm's planning process and philosophy (especially at bigger RIAs where it's difficult to train and supervising hundreds or thousands of advisors), though in reality it's most often the skills of client communication, and not technical planning, that advisors need the most training on early in their careers
- As more and more advisors have become specialists in equity compensation owing to the complexity of the planning issues involved and the high potential for business growth (since company stock liquidated by an employee can subsequently be reinvested and managed by the advisor), several new equity compensation-focused planning technology solutions have arisen in the last few years – showing that advisors are often willing to pay more for specialized software that can help them do deeper planning for specialized clients
And be certain to read to the end, where we have provided an update to our popular "Financial AdvisorTech Solutions Map" (and also added the changes to our AdvisorTech Directory) as well!
*To submit a request for inclusion or updates on the Financial Advisor FinTech Solutions Map and AdvisorTech Directory, please share information on the solution at the AdvisorTech Map submission form.


