
Sourcing the best IT solutions for UK businesses
31 May 2026
Technology reviews often begin with a straightforward objective: find the right solution for the firm.
The reality is usually more complex.
As technology markets continue to evolve, accountancy firms are often faced with a growing number of suppliers, competing approaches, and increasingly detailed product claims. What starts as a review can quickly become a significant piece of work involving multiple stakeholders, supplier conversations, demonstrations, and internal discussions.
While every supplier will naturally present their solution in the best possible light, there are some things firms should be able to expect throughout the process.
1. Understanding before recommendations
Good suppliers should spend time understanding your firm before recommending a solution.
That means taking the time to understand:
- Your strategic objectives
- Current operational challenges
- Existing technology landscape
- Future growth plans
- Regulatory or sector-specific requirements
Technology reviews should not start with product demonstrations.
The strongest suppliers focus on understanding the problem before discussing how they might solve it.
If a supplier is presenting solutions before fully understanding your requirements, there is a risk that the conversation becomes product-led rather than outcome-led.
2. Honest conversations about fit
Not every solution is the right fit for every firm.
A good supplier should be willing to discuss where their solution is strongest, where limitations may exist, and where alternative approaches may be worth considering.
Technology decisions are rarely short-term decisions. Many will shape the way a firm operates for years to come.
The most productive supplier relationships are built on transparency rather than salesmanship.
Firms should feel confident that suppliers are helping them understand the realities of a solution, not simply highlighting its strengths.
3. Clear and consistent communication
Technology reviews can quickly become difficult to manage when multiple suppliers are involved.
Good suppliers should help reduce complexity rather than create it.
That includes:
- Providing information when promised
- Responding clearly to questions
- Setting realistic expectations
- Keeping conversations focused and relevant
The review process should create clarity and confidence, not additional workload for already busy teams.
4. Evidence rather than claims
Most technology suppliers can make compelling claims about their products and services.
The more useful question is whether those claims can be supported by evidence.
Accountancy firms should expect suppliers to provide:
- Relevant customer examples
- Real-world implementation experience
- Practical outcomes
- Sector understanding where appropriate
Evidence helps separate marketing messages from genuine capability and allows firms to make decisions based on substance rather than assumptions.
5. Respect for the decision making process
Major technology decisions rarely involve a single individual.
Technology leaders often need to build alignment across operational teams, senior leadership, and other stakeholders before a decision can be made.
Good suppliers understand this.
Rather than creating unnecessary pressure, they should support the process by providing the information, context, and evidence required for stakeholders to make informed decisions.
The goal should be to help firms reach the right decision, not simply reach a decision quickly.
Creating confidence in the outcome
A successful technology review is not simply about identifying the best solution on paper.
It is about creating enough clarity and confidence to make a decision that stakeholders can support and stand behind.
The firms that navigate technology reviews most effectively are often those that focus on structure, evidence, and long-term fit rather than product features alone.
The right supplier can play an important role in that process, not just through the technology they provide, but through the way they support the journey towards the decision itself.
A more manageable way to approach major technology decisions
Most firms don’t need more supplier conversations.
They need more structure, clearer evaluation and enough internal capacity to think properly.
Because the challenge usually isn’t simply choosing technology.
It’s managing the process around the decision without it becoming a second internal job.
You can also read how Darwin supported PKF Littlejohn through a major technology decision process while reducing operational pressure on the internal team.
If your firm is currently reviewing technology suppliers, exploring a major project or trying to bring more structure to an upcoming decision, Darwin can help you work out the sensible next step.
