Trust the Process: Understanding that technology in mortgage is a process problem

By Frank Fiore and Jeremy Potter

“Technology adoption” and “mortgage” are still oxymorons in 2024 and

do not need to be. Digitizing a manual process is not synonymous with

being a tech company. Some companies have claimed “tech company”

status but the reality is that’s marketing and puffery. Our clients tend to

define themselves with another word – lender. You know you are a

lender.

A few years back, a IMB Owner said, “ We are a compliance firm that

does mortgages” and I would alter that sentiment where many of our

clients have morphed into over the past few years, which is, “We are a

tech company that does mortgages.”

You know what you are good at (and not good at) so let’s stop trying to

be something we’re not. Risk institutions like lenders are not tech

companies, but they do have to embrace technology to remain

competitive and viable in today’s market. With that said, they still

deserve technology that works and supports their business model.

The operative phrase is “that work” for you. By now, you likely have had

less than positive experience with some form of mortgage technology

and there are many reasons for that, which we will dive into, but the one

critical lesson we have learned by now: the critical aspect for any

technology is adoption.

To get to adoption, we need to discuss process. Mortgage is a complex,

process-driven industry.

Process is also the answer to one of the nagging questions for lenders,

consumers and venture capitalists alike: Why is technology within the

mortgage industry such a challenge?

The process remains dependent on the longest or the weakest

link. (Here, weakest is defined as least automated or least

controllable.) This is true in both a macro- and micro- way. In the macrosense,

Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac create a lot of complexity with myriad

loan products that all have varying degrees of technical roadblocks and

workflows. While we all want and assume we can build an assembly line

process, there are multiple examples of variances that force a loan to go

sideways, or backwards due to technical drawbacks. In the microsense,

there is a constant flurry of technology changes that trickle down

to the user level which often result in less than ideal integration use of

the respective software or application, often called workarounds and an

ultimate lack of adoption.

The goal of this paper is to focus on the micro-sense. Your business.

How do certain functions or products contribute to saving your people

time & energy; on the contrary, how much do you feel like you are still

working for the technology instead of having it work for you?

We will offer key takeaways for establishing the right process or making

changes to an existing process to guarantee cost savings and

operational success regardless of the tools & solutions that are chosen

to enable that process.

Quick Background to Set the Stage

For the last decade, our industry has gone through a technical

renaissance where many (mostly client-facing offerings) were brought

to the market and considered revolutionary at their introduction. While

still novel concepts in mortgage today, online applications, e-signing of

documents, and OCR reading of documents are commonplace in many

other industries. They are universally used, accepted, and supported by

all participants, where our industry have varying degrees of technical

acceptance and sophistication. Think Fannie, Freddie Ginnie, FHA, VA,

USDA, State Bond Programs, Warehouse Banks, Title Companies, and

Servicers.

For the last decade (or two), our industry is constantly implementing

technology. Fannie Mae has been working on eClosing since 1998.

We’re still working on it…together. The industry only moves as fast as

investor requirements dictate. Put another way, lenders will update

technology or tools when Fannie & Freddie require it. As a result, the

industry moves as fast as the slowest member.

This might seem counterintuitive or overly cynical because Rocket

Mortgage, Better.com and United Wholesale Mortgage (UWM), among

others, have been touting technology enhancements for years. In reality

though, those changes simply pad their margin by making them more

efficient than competitors rather than truly transforming the consumer

experience.

The rest of the industry is bound by platform partners like LOS

platforms or CRM/POS partners. This could lead to the belief that

technology controls your process.

• Technology does not dictate process.

• Culture controls process.

One common misconception we run into is that a new technology

partner or new product will improve the process. Surely, so goes the

belief, this new tech will make us faster, make us people feel more

efficient and overall save us money.

The reality is your people are the process and process is, by nature,

cultural.

Process is the order of the tasks necessary to complete a loan. The

decisions that direct these tasks determine the priorities of your

operations team. Some lenders are task-centric and assign discrete

tasks to team members that perform that same tasks on every loan in

the pipeline. Some lenders are loan-centric and assign a loan to a team

member who performs all the tasks necessary to prepare the loan for

underwriting or clear to close (or both). Other lenders are data-centric

and use attributes of the loan (e.g. milestones) to automate certain tasks

or arrange tasks in a preset order. Lastly, there are lenders that make

the loan officer or the underwriter the center of their loan universe and

this role-centric approach highlights service and manual

responsiveness.

Our point is that whether you are loan-centric, data-centric, task-centric

or role-centric you have made a cultural choice about the company.

• Efficiency is cultural

The type of company culture must make the process. Too often lenders

want to be task-centric but remain loan-centric and apply the wrong

approach to the process. Step one has to be accurately “owning” your

process choices.

Here are a couple questions to help you identify your current process:

1. How many applications are in your tech stack and what is their level

of integration?

2. How are roles and personas established in your LOS? Do you have

many instances of single personas for a specific person or branch?

3. Who has the authority to promote loans at which times in the

pipeline?

4. What metrics or measures are able to track operational success or

failure?

5. When you measure turn times and announce them publicly – what is

the trigger date and what is the data field used to measure complete?

6. What level of exceptions do you have (only 2% of all loans) and are

they usually blamed for lack of adoption?

Not all these answers are clear, just like not all processes fall into a

cleanly defined category. Hopefully this is useful directionally to

determine whether the existing process fits the tools & solutions you’ve

purchased or whether the process needs to change slightly to meet

your goals.

If the process remains the same, adding software to a misaligned

process can simply speed up the results of a bad process. You just end

up speeding up friction.

Lenders must focus technology application selection as a matchmaking

exercise to your culture.

For example, if you are an “underwriting is the center of the universe”

company, and you look to implement a system that will streamline

underwriting or underwriters, then how do you think it will be received

and ultimately adopted?

Whether you are evaluating an entire process overhaul or a specific

process update, it must be lender-led and not vendor-led to succeed.

You have probably heard that the best implementations start at the

top. There’s a reason it’s become almost cliche-level common. It’s

true. Many companies want to believe their team is different. Example –

“Everyone else’s people only change when forced to, but my team will

do the right thing if I ask them.” Herein lies the rub, it’s about right and

wrong. It’s about human nature versus something new. Everyone on

your team wants to be a good team member. But if you are asking them

to change how they think, work or operate, or possibly eliminate their

position, you are asking them to rewire some pathway in their

brain. That might sound like mumbo-jumbo but it’s what separates

some of the greatest companies from average companies. Be honest

about human nature.

The other common challenge in this process is that leadership makes a

process change or vendor decision at the top, perhaps including a

grand announcement about the selection, assuming everyone else will

be happy and supportive. After the announcement, leadership’s

involvement drops off until the users complain, generally at

implementation, leading to blame rather than evaluating the initial

decision-making process. Not surprisingly, from our experience, the

best projects are when the leadership team is fully involved and

supports the project throughout.

Leadership is best positioned to identify your culture-process

type. Once identified, the next question is how close the process is to

the one you want. Sometimes, if the change is a “nudge,” technology

can help facilitate change, but…


Software is not a process.

Process is about what you believe and who you are as a company. One

of the biggest mistakes we see is using a technology tool or piece of

software as the process.

Taking this a step further, we see many instances when a piece of

software that is built to support one type of product is then tried to

wedge other products under the same umbrella and when it does not

work, the technology is the problem. You don’t buy a treadmill to get

better at biking, or buy a performance car for better gas mileage; yet we

commonly see mortgage technology blamed for not supporting

commercial or bridge loans. If you start with a square-peg-into-a-roundhole

foundation, you are creating your own (future) issues.

Take your Loan Origination System, for instance. The users, workflow,

statuses, and available data fields can be configured to match almost

any process. Using default features or settings is not much help in

defining a process nevertheless your culture. Applying an intentional

design to your LOS is not only where operations teams get the most

efficiency but it lays the groundwork for success in adopting vendors or

other services within the Encompass Marketplace. When we hear a

client say “just give me setup that works” is not a good sign for cost

savings and efficient processes.

Ideally, you will be optimizing for the ideal process. The indicators of

the loan data – at a minimum loan purpose – drive the tasks, workflow

and review. This does NOT require a whole new set of vendors as some

might try to get you think. Rather, it is about approach and then

applying the technology to the right approach.

Key Takeaways & Practical Steps

1. Culture sets the tone. Tech is not always the answer. Evaluate the

process and even remove steps before contemplating more tech if it is

in service of your intentional approach.

2. Software is not a substitute for your company’s custom process. Let

your choices lead.

3. Consider where the friction lives and introduce the right process at

the right time.

Process leads. Software follows.

If you break down the mortgage process to its simplest of stages, it is:

• Gather information

• Validate and confirm that information

• Package that information to a potential buyer

• Confirm the purchase and various transfers

These simple stages can involve more than 1,000 clicks within a loan

file, including interacting with over 50 outside sources, and sending

data and documents to various counterparties that can vary on each

loan.

The future is doing as much as possible with fewest steps and fewest

resources. There are multiple avenues to use technology to simplify

process and the current landscape. Task-based workflow is the newest

craze and has value when the right process and technology is in place.

At the same time, it can result in large invoices for loans that did not

close if thousands of services were auto-ordered. In some models, it

works as intended and provides a big lift. In others it can be costly.

One example of parallel processing in the mortgage ecosystem would

be ordering vendor items, property-related tasks (like appraisal and title)

and final underwriting all at the same time. One milestone to many

resulting tasks commencing.

Conclusion

Your company already has a culture and, likely, a strong culture. We can

state this because you are still around and empowered to continue to

grow. We know this because you are reading this paper. If your culture

was broken or your company did not have a future, you would have

much more to worry about than process improvement in advance of the

next interest rate change.

Working with someone who understands that mortgage is a complex,

process-driven manufacturing industry is critical to solving the

fundamental friction in your business. Yes, technology is an amazing

tool for people and for process. Technology should be treated like a

tool. Used by experts to enable the best outcomes for customers, teams

and investors alike.

As the mortgage industry prepares for an uncertain year, we know that

it will come with rate volatility but companies can be prepared

regardless of what happens. When rates remain high, identify the

friction and address the process to solve for it. When rates drop, the

work you have just done will allow speed and scale.

Lead with culture that informs process and then accelerate your

process with the right tools and technology solutions.

matchbox hot takes

Encompass web is a hot topic and we have a full conversion

plan available for your review. Contact us to discuss further.

Secondary Technology is going through a lot of changes and

challenges. We are here to help you navigate the technology

challenges on the Secondary side.

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