Conner Business Systems Family
Services

Three disciplines.
One ongoing relationship. Every client.

Every engagement covers the same three disciplines, led by the same role, supported by the same team, held to the same standard. The only thing that varies between clients is the operational scope — how much volume, how many departments, how often we're on-site. The work itself doesn't get smaller for smaller clients. It just gets right-sized.

Every client is supported by a Fractional Director of Information Management.

Most mid-market organizations can't justify hiring a full-time Director of Information Management. The role is too specialized, too senior, and too expensive for organizations that don't generate the document volume of a Fortune 500 company. So the work that should be done by a senior information management professional gets parceled out to whoever has time — the controller, the office manager, the IT person — none of whom have the training, the time, or the authority to do it properly.

The Fractional Director model solves that. You get a senior information management professional, dedicated to your organization, available on an ongoing basis — at a fraction of what hiring the role full-time would cost. The Director works with your team, reports to your leadership, and is accountable for the records and document side of the house the way your IT director is accountable for the network.

What the role covers
Owns your records and information management program end-to-end.
  • Establishes and maintains records retention schedules and classification standards
  • Designs and oversees document and data workflows across departments
  • Selects, configures, and manages the technology that supports the program
  • Coordinates with your IT, legal, finance, and operational teams
  • Reports to your C-level on records posture, compliance status, and operational improvements
  • Stays current on evolving technology, regulations, and best practices — so your team doesn't have to

The Director is supported by a dedicated team handling implementation, platform operations, document processing, and ongoing improvement. You're never depending on one person.

We don't replace your specialized systems. We work alongside them.

Your accounting system, your ERP or MRP, your CRM, your industry-specific software — these are the operational core of your business. They took years to implement, your team knows how to use them, and replacing them is rarely the right answer.

Our work happens in the connective tissue between those systems. We integrate with what you have. We capture documents and data at the front of your processes. We route information to the right destinations automatically. We move records between platforms cleanly. We make sure the systems you've invested in work together rather than in isolation.

This is one of the most important principles of how we operate. Improvement doesn't mean replacement. The investments you've made stay intact. The expertise your team has built stays valuable. We just make all of it more efficient.

In Practice — We Work Alongside
QuickBooks · Sage · NetSuite · Microsoft Dynamics · Acumatica · Salesforce · HubSpot · Microsoft 365 · Google Workspace · industry-specific MRPs and ERPs · and the hundreds of other specialized systems mid-market organizations rely on.
i.

Organize.

Get every department, every record, every workflow into a known and managed state.

Most mid-market organizations have never had a complete picture of their own records situation. Files are spread across paper archives, network drives, departmental folders, application databases, email archives, and personal computers. Some are duplicated. Some are obsolete. Some are critical and have no backup. Almost none of it is classified consistently or retained according to a defensible schedule.

The Organize phase fixes that.

What we do during the Organize phase

  • Conduct a complete inventory of records, documents, and data across all departments and systems
  • Identify what's there, where it lives, who owns it, and what condition it's in
  • Classify records into a coherent taxonomy aligned with your business and regulatory environment
  • Develop or refine retention schedules that reflect your obligations and operational reality
  • Identify duplicates, obsolete records, and material that should have been disposed of long ago
  • Surface gaps — critical records that don't exist, that exist only in one place, or that depend on a single person's memory
  • Bring the entire records footprint under a single, coherent system of management
In Practice

A typical Organize phase runs sixty to ninety days, depending on the size and complexity of the organization. It involves working closely with your department heads, IT team, and operational staff. We don't disrupt normal business — most of the inventory work happens in parallel with daily operations. By the end of the phase, your organization has something it has probably never had before: a complete, accurate, current understanding of its own records situation, and a system that keeps that understanding current going forward.

What you get out of it
  • Defensibility. If an auditor, regulator, or attorney shows up and asks where something is, you can answer.
  • Confidence. You know what you have, what you don't, and what's actually important.
  • A foundation. Everything else — improvement, automation, compliance — depends on knowing what's actually there. This phase makes the rest of the work possible.
ii.

Improve.

Apply the right technology for the right job to make records, documents, and data work faster, more accurate, and less expensive.

Once we know what's there, we improve how it moves.

This is where most clients see the operational return. The Organize phase produces order. The Improve phase produces speed. We look at the document and data workflows that touch every department — accounts payable, HR, contracts, customer onboarding, project documentation, compliance reporting, records requests — and we improve them one at a time, applying the right technology for each specific job.

What we do during the Improve phase

  • Identify the document and data workflows that consume the most time, generate the most errors, or carry the most risk
  • Apply automation where automation actually fits — typically structured, repetitive processes with clear rules
  • Apply AI where AI actually fits — typically extraction, classification, and routing of variable or unstructured documents
  • Apply better workflow design where the problem is process, not technology
  • Apply sharper records discipline where the issue is standards, not tools
  • Integrate documents and data with your existing systems so information flows automatically rather than manually
  • Build custom forms, capture interfaces, and routing logic where they're needed
  • Eliminate processes that should never have existed in the first place
The Principle That Guides This Phase

We don't apply technology because it's available. We apply it because it solves the right problem. Some workflows benefit enormously from AI. Some benefit from simple automation. Some benefit most from being redesigned as a human process with better records discipline. Our job is to figure out which is which, implement it, and measure whether it actually worked. This is also the phase where the integration principle does the most work — most of our improvement happens at the seams between your existing systems, not by replacing them.

What you get out of it
  • Hours back. Most clients see hundreds of staff hours per month freed up across departments once the right improvements are in place.
  • Fewer errors. Automated workflows don't lose documents, transpose numbers, or forget to route something. Error rates typically drop by an order of magnitude.
  • Lower costs. The combination of staff time saved, error reduction, and process efficiency typically saves clients thousands of dollars per month on the affected workflows alone.
  • A better experience for your team. Most of the work we eliminate is the work nobody wanted to do anyway — the manual entry, the routing, the chasing-down-of-missing-paperwork.
iii.

Maintain.

Keep the standards in place as technology evolves and people change roles.

This is the part most firms don't offer. They'll come in, organize the records, improve a few workflows, hand you a binder, and leave. Six months later, the binder is on a shelf, your IT environment has changed, three of the people involved have left, and the discipline starts to erode. Two years later, you're back where you started.

We don't work that way. The Maintain phase is the heart of what we do — and it's why every engagement is structured as an ongoing managed service rather than a one-time project.

What the Maintain phase covers

  • Keep retention schedules and classification standards current as regulations and operations evolve
  • Update technology platforms and integrations as new tools become available — and as old ones become obsolete
  • Onboard new departments, new systems, and new locations as your organization grows or restructures
  • Train new staff and re-train existing staff as roles change
  • Monitor the records and document environment for drift, errors, and emerging issues
  • Conduct regular reviews with your leadership to surface what's working, what isn't, and what needs attention
  • Stay current on regulatory, technology, and best-practice changes — and apply them on your behalf
  • Provide audit support, e-discovery support, and incident response when needed
The Principle

Records management isn't a project. It's a discipline that has to be sustained. The technology landscape changes. Your business changes. Your team changes. The standards have to evolve with them — and someone has to be responsible for making sure they do. That someone is us. The Fractional Director, supported by the team, stays engaged for as long as you want us. We treat your records program the way IT treats your network — as an ongoing operational function, not a one-time deliverable.

What you get out of it
  • Continuity. The discipline survives leadership transitions, staff turnover, system changes, and the passage of time.
  • Currency. Your tools and practices stay aligned with the latest available technology, without your team having to research or implement anything themselves.
  • Confidence. When something happens — an audit, a lawsuit, a key employee leaving, a system migration, an acquisition — your records program is ready, because it's been kept ready.
  • A relationship that compounds. The longer we work together, the more efficient the program becomes, and the more value the relationship produces.

The same standard of work for every client, regardless of tier.

The pricing tiers reflect operational scope, not service quality. Every client — from Essentials to Enterprise — receives the same level of professional attention, the same dedicated leadership, and the same access to our full capabilities.

What Varies Between Tiers

Operational scope, not service quality
  • Document and record volume capacity
  • Departmental and organizational scope
  • On-site cadence — quarterly, monthly, or weekly
  • Setup investment, scoped from the check-up

The pricing reflects the work, not the worth.

See pricing and tier details →

A real relationship, with a real team, doing real work.

We're not a chatbot. We're not a ticketing system. We're not a sales engineer who hands you off to an account manager who hands you off to a support team. The same Fractional Director who joined your engagement is the same person you'll be working with two years from now — barring the normal exceptions of life and career, in which case we'll handle the transition carefully.

The cadence is steady. Hybrid means we're on-site regularly — weekly, monthly, or quarterly depending on the tier — and accessible remotely the rest of the time. Most of the work happens in the background. You won't feel constant pressure to be "managing the relationship." When you need us, we're available. When the work is flowing well, we don't bother you.

We communicate directly and plainly. We don't pad reports. We don't oversell. We tell you what's working, what isn't, and what we recommend doing about it. If something's not worth doing, we'll tell you that too.

This service is for organizations that value long-term professional relationships. The kind of organizations that have been around for a while and plan to stick around. The kind of leaders who would rather build something durable than chase the next quick win. We work best with clients who recognize what we are — and we recognize them.

Every engagement starts with a conversation.

We'll listen to what's going on, ask a few questions, and figure out together whether what we offer is what your organization actually needs. There's no pressure, no pitch deck, no proposal until we both agree there's something worth proposing.

Built for the long record.