Before committing to a new backbone for your operation, check these five boxes:
If the software forces your team to reconcile instead of originate, it’s a liability, not an asset.
Choosing loan management software isn't like choosing a CRM. If you make the wrong decision, you embed structural friction into underwriting, servicing, capital reporting, and compliance—and once your team is operating inside that system every day, the cost of undoing it is exponentially higher than the cost of getting it right upfront.
Pressure-testing a platform before you commit is operational due diligence. Here is how to do it—not during a guided demo, but under the weight of scale, exception handling, and capital scrutiny.
This is the most revealing test you can run.
Ask a vendor to move a deal from intake through underwriting and into funding while you watch for re-work. In many environments, the deal technically moves forward, but key elements are revalidated or re-entered along the way. Intake data might sync, but underwriting still verifies it manually. Approval terms may carry over, but funding confirms calculations in a separate spreadsheet.
If the context doesn’t travel intact, the system is just a collection of connected silos, not a lifecycle.
Inside Onyx IQ, for example, intake becomes a structured record immediately. Underwriting scorecards apply to that record, and funding actions execute within that same file. The deal progresses; it never restarts.
Tasha from Tekfi described this shift clearly when her team implemented Onyx IQ as a new funder entering a competitive market:
"As a brand-new funder entering a competitive market, Onyx IQ has been a strong foundation. We streamlined integrations across credit reporting and ACH processing, which eliminated the need to manage data input across multiple portals. The underwriting process is faster and more focused using the Scorecard."
Underwriting criteria change and risk appetite evolves. If every adjustment to a scorecard or a decision threshold requires a vendor support ticket, you have effectively outsourced control of your credit policy.
Ask who can modify scorecards and refine rules. You want your operators to control this logic so changes can be made and tested in minutes, not weeks.
The operational impact of that control is tangible. Caleigh Toye from Liquify Funding shared how that played out for her team:
"Underwriting time dropped by roughly 30% thanks to automation and having all relevant data in one place. Everything—from intake and deal management to reporting—now lives in a single system, which has eliminated manual work and improved deal visibility."
Want to run these pressure tests on Onyx IQ directly? Book a walkthrough. We'll let you test the lifecycle yourself.
Servicing is where fragmented systems reveal themselves. When a payment fails, your team needs to know why the deal was structured that way without switching portals. If payment activity lives in a separate processor dashboard, every exception requires manual coordination.
Ask to see exactly where a failed payment appears and if it’s tied to the original underwriting notes. At volume, coordination becomes drag. Payment activity should sync directly into the deal record, triggering structured workflows that keep collections disciplined instead of improvised.
Managing participation splits in a spreadsheet works until the book expands. If operational performance is tracked in one environment and capital allocation in another, someone must constantly bridge the gap.
Ask if syndicators are attached directly to deals and if participation percentages reflect the same performance data the servicing team sees. Choose a system where outstanding balance tracking and management fees are an extension of execution, not a separate reconciliation process.
This is the test many teams avoid because it forces an honest answer. A system that works at 20 deals a week can still strain under growth if its stages are loosely connected.
If submissions doubled next quarter, would your platform absorb the increase, or would manual coordination scale alongside it? Would underwriting queues remain structured, or would side-spreadsheets reappear? Infrastructure built for scale behaves differently under pressure. When the lifecycle is continuous, volume flows through structured workflows instead of multiplying handoffs.
Nick Lavoie from Lavoie Capital spoke about this kind of structural discipline from the beginning of his business:
“When I entered the MCA space, I was intentional about building the business with structure, compliance, and operational discipline from day one. I understood early that having the right systems in place would be critical to long-term success, and Onyx IQ quickly became a cornerstone of that foundation.
The platform gave me a professional, well-organized framework aligned with industry best practices, from legal compliance to streamlined application workflows. That structure removed unnecessary friction from daily operations and allowed me to operate with accuracy and consistency, even early on.”
Remember, infrastructure built for scale behaves differently under pressure.
Beyond the daily workflow, you must test the switching cost and the time to Value:
Use this table during your next vendor evaluation to identify red flags before they become structural risks.
|
Test
|
What to Look For |
Red Flag |
|
Lifecycle Continuity |
Deal flows intake → funding without rebuild |
Data re-entered between stages |
|
Credit Logic Control |
Operators can modify scorecards directly |
Changes require vendor tickets |
|
Payment Response |
Failed payments trigger structured workflows |
Manual reconciliation required |
|
Syndication |
Allocations embedded in deal record |
Participation tracked in spreadsheets |
|
Data Migration |
Full history transfers with context intact |
Context loss during migration |
Onyx IQ was designed to solve the exact breakpoints that cause lending operations to fracture under growth. We believe that for a lender to scale without losing control, their infrastructure must meet four specific operational standards:
If the lifecycle fractures between stages, your team will spend its time reconciling instead of growing.
Onyx IQ was designed to run the entire lifecycle inside one auditable system so the deal never resets as it moves forward.
Book a walkthrough and run these tests yourself. We’ll walk you through the lifecycle from intake to reporting and run these tests with you to see how Onyx IQ holds up under real-world pressure.