Two people using a tablet with the Focal software interface in an office setting with a view of the Toronto skyline, including the CN Tower.
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PAID CONTENT

John L. Connell, Founder & CEO of Focal
John L. Connell,
Co-Founder & CEO of Focal

Compliant AI isn’t coming to Canadian financial planning. It’s already here, and leading firms are already using it to pull ahead.

Financial planners and advisors including Jason Pereira at IPC and Christian Battistelli at Assante Wealth Management have adopted AI within clear guardrails to save 10 to 15 hours per week, increase client capacity and improve the client experience.

At Focal, we help Canadian planners and firm leaders deploy compliant AI in the workflows that actually drive their day, from meetings and follow-ups to the repetitive admin work that steals time from being with clients. The firms winning right now aren’t waiting for a perfect moment. They’re rolling out AI deliberately, with the right controls, and turning time saved into faster service, tighter execution and more households served per advisor.

The uncomfortable truth is that your competitors using AI today are already moving faster, and running a tighter book, while others keep grinding through manual work. If you’re still treating AI as a “later this year” initiative, you’re already behind.

Start with time-to-value, not theory

The most successful AI deployments we see begin with a simple question: Where does the firm lose the most time today?

For most planners, the answer is consistent. Meeting preparation, documentation, follow-ups and internal coordination are essential, but they’re also repetitive, manual and largely disconnected from the high-value work clients actually notice.

That’s why many firms are starting with AI in meeting workflows. Automating transcription, summaries and task capture produces immediate, visible wins, without changing how planners engage with clients. When AI reduces friction in existing processes, adoption tends to happen naturally.

Time saved translates into capacity. Capacity translates into better planning conversations, more consistent service and ultimately, stronger revenue leverage.

“Focal resonated because it has the best infrastructure and started from a security-first standpoint,” said Pereira.

Compliance concerns are real—but solvable

Caution around AI is understandable, especially in Canada. Data privacy, sovereignty and governance are top of mind for both firms and regulators.

What’s often overlooked is that most compliance risk is derived from poorly designed tools.

When evaluating vendors, planners and CTOs should be asking critical questions, including:

  • Do you ever send customer data directly to foundation AI model providers?
  • Are your AI models hosted exclusively on Microsoft Azure Cloud?
  • Do you store audio or video?
  • Do you offer data residency in Canada?
  • Is your CTO and key personnel with access to PII infrastructure exclusively based in the United States and/or Canada?

At Focal, we designed our platform to address those questions head-on. Our models are stateless, meaning planner data is never used for training. We don’t store audio or video. Sensitive data stays within North America, with Canadian data residency available through Microsoft Azure. These guardrails are prerequisites for adoption in regulated environments.

Avoid the hidden ceiling–fragmented data

Another challenge firms encounter is assuming AI will magically connect the dots across disconnected systems.

In reality, AI can only be as helpful as the context it has access to. When client information lives across CRMs, planning tools, custodial platforms and scattered notes, AI remains confined to narrow tasks instead of driving meaningful workflow improvement.

True opportunity emerges when unstructured information becomes actionable. That’s when firms gain clearer visibility into client needs.

Ask better questions before committing

Which tools deliver measurable impact quickly? Which ones integrate cleanly into existing workflows? Which vendors understand the Canadian regulatory and operating environment, and which are simply adapting generic tools after the fact?

Solutions built with Canadian financial planners in mind, including Canadian data residency, bilingual capabilities, and familiarity with local terminology, tend to see faster uptake and stronger long-term value.

The cost of waiting is becoming clearer

The pace of AI advancements are moving much faster than traditional industry adoption timelines. Early adopters are already operating differently, setting the baseline for responsiveness, consistency and the client experience. Will you be the one raising the standard, or scrambling to catch up?

John Connell, Co-Founder and CEO at Focal, the AI-powered productivity platform and meeting assistant purpose-built for Canadian financial advisors and financial planners. For more, email info@meetwithfocal.com

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