For most advice firms, EOFY doesn’t create problems, it exposes them.
As deadlines compress and volumes spike, the pressure of EOFY tends to amplify whatever structural constraints already exist inside a business. Bottlenecks become harder to ignore. Turnaround times stretch. Advisers get pulled back into execution. Teams work harder, but not necessarily smarter.
The good news is that EOFY also provides one of the clearest stress tests of an advice firm’s operating model. Firms that use this period deliberately, rather than just surviving it, can ease pressure now and build a more sustainable way of working for the future.
Why EOFY pressure reveals structural issues
Work queues not because people aren’t capable, but because decision rights, handovers and ownership aren’t clear. When visibility is low, issues are discovered after service levels have already slipped.
EOFY doesn’t cause these issues. It simply removes the spare capacity that normally masks them.
Capacity planning is not headcount planning
One of the biggest mistakes firms make heading into EOFY is equating capacity with headcount.
“How many people do we have?” is not the same question as “How much work do we need to deliver, by role, and when?”
Effective capacity planning starts with facts:
With that information, firms can pull work forward where possible, push non‑critical tasks out of peak windows, and rebalance work across the team. Without it, capacity decisions are reactive and late.
The danger of running too hot
Many advice teams head into EOFY already running at full utilisation. On paper, that can look efficient. In practice, it’s risky.
The Optimum Operating Models white paper is clear: sustainable capacity sits around 80–85% utilisation. Above that, teams lose the flexibility needed to absorb complexity, manage quality, handle learning, or respond to unexpected work.
At 95–100%, there is no buffer. Burnout rises. Errors increase. Work slows as rework and firefighting replace flow.
High‑performing firms monitor utilisation continuously and act early – before pressure turns into problems.
Where EOFY work commonly goes wrong
During busy periods, misallocation of work becomes especially costly.
In less structured firms, EOFY needs emerge reactively. Advisers rely on memory to identify which clients might need EOFY advice. They chase missing information, revisit past figures, liaise with accountants and follow up paperwork all while maintaining a full meeting load.
Associates and support staff respond to fragmented instructions. Modelling is requested late. Deadlines are unclear. Work stalls, not because people aren’t skilled, but because responsibility for deciding the strategy and executing the work is blurred.
In more mature firms, EOFY is sequenced deliberately:
The adviser remains focused on strategic advice and client conversations, not coordination.
The difference isn’t more people. It’s clearer allocation of work.
Why role clarity and documented workflows matter
Clear role design removes EOFY stress by preventing last‑minute “who owns this?” ambiguity. Documented workflows create a single entry point, visible ownership and consistent triage, so work is reallocated early, not after delays and rework appear.
Done well, this doesn’t add complexity. It reduces it. Fewer tasks bounce around. Less work gets redone. Momentum improves.
Knowing when the issue is structural, not resourcing
EOFY often triggers knee‑jerk solutions: hiring, short‑term outsourcing, or pushing teams harder.
The paper outlines clear warning signs that indicate a redesign is needed instead:
These signals point to structural issues, not individual effort. The fix is recalibration – balancing workload, refining process, or adding support deliberately, before performance declines.
The power of real‑time visibility
When leaders can see utilisation and work in progress in real time, decision‑making shifts.
Instead of reacting late, firms can reallocate work earlier, make targeted outsourcing decisions, and prevent bottlenecks forming. Even a short, focused workflow meeting can surface overload and redistribute tasks effectively.
Dashboards built from systems like Xplan, Salesforce or Power BI don’t just show how busy the team is. They show how well work is flowing and where intervention will have the greatest impact.
Turning EOFY into a catalyst
EOFY becomes a catalyst for long‑term improvement when firms pause after the pressure lifts and reflect on what happened operationally.
This turns EOFY from an emotional experience into useful data.
Timing matters. Act soon after EOFY, while the pain points are clear. Over time, this mindset shift breaks the cycle. Each year, fewer issues repeat, pressure reduces, and peak periods are managed deliberately, not survived.
How VBP supports deliberate capacity planning
EOFY is often when constraints are most visible, making it an ideal time to step back with support.
VBP works with advice firms to assess where work is backing up, how roles and workflows operate under pressure, and how capacity can be released through clearer design, not just more effort. This may be through consulting, working with Client Success Managers, or identifying where managed services or intelligent automation can remove low‑value manual work.
When capacity is treated as something to design, rather than endure, EOFY stops being a fire drill and starts becoming a turning point.
VBP’s Consulting team works with advice firms to redesign roles, workflows and capacity so peak periods are managed deliberately, not endured. Whether you need an independent operating model review, support rebalancing capacity, or help translating insight into practical change, our consultants can help you turn EOFY lessons into lasting improvement.
Get in touch with our consulting team to start a conversation.