Solifi Taps Two Implementation Specialists to Smooth Cloud Moves and Cut Manual Work for Clients

3 min read
Solifi Taps Two Implementation Specialists to Smooth Cloud Moves and Cut Manual Work for Clients

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This article was written by the Augury Times






A clear push to speed deployments and ease cloud moves

Solifi announced a new set of partnerships with Liventus and Consult Disrupt aimed at helping its clients get live faster and move systems to the cloud with fewer headaches. The deal bundles Solifi’s lending and leasing platform with partners that focus on implementation, automation tooling and cloud migration. In plain terms: customers should see shorter project timelines, less manual heavy lifting, and clearer paths off old on-premises systems.

The announcement promises faster go-lives and more of the routine work being automated so staff can focus on higher-value tasks. That outcome is the main news for customers who have been weighing the time and cost of modernizing loan and lease systems.

What each partner brings: practical skills for implementation, automation and cloud moves

Liventus is presented as the implementation engine. It has hands-on experience mapping legacy processes into modern platforms and running the day-to-day project work that turns software from a plan into a working system. That typically includes data conversion, testing, and training — the messy but essential steps that determine whether a new platform actually delivers.

Consult Disrupt contributes automation and cloud migration know-how. Their role, as described in the announcement, is to build repeatable automation that cuts manual steps in operations and to create secure migration pathways that move customer data and services to cloud environments. For clients, that means fewer manual reconciliations and a smaller chance of disruption during the cutover.

For Solifi, the value is twofold: implementation muscle that reduces rollout risk, and automation plus migration tooling that helps preserve service levels while shifting to cloud infrastructure. Together the partners are pitched as filling the common gaps customers face when adopting modern lending platforms.

Concrete benefits for clients: faster launches, less day-to-day friction

The announcement lays out a short list of expected client outcomes: quicker project timelines, reduced manual processing, clearer migration roadmaps, and smoother updates after go-live. For banks and finance companies using Solifi’s software, the most tangible gains will likely be fewer manual reconciliations, less time spent on routine exceptions, and shorter waits to launch new products.

Mid-sized lenders and captive finance businesses that run complex legacy systems are the most obvious beneficiaries. These organizations often delay upgrades because conversions look costly and risky. A tested implementation partner plus automation tools lowers both the sticker price and the execution risk of a migration project.

The partnership also suits customers who want a staged path to the cloud: keep critical functions running while moving non-critical workloads first, then migrate the rest as automation proves itself.

How this fits into the wider fintech shift to cloud and automation

This move by Solifi echoes a wider industry pattern. Many fintech and payments vendors are pairing platform software with specialist partners to offer end-to-end migration services. The reason is simple: vendors that only sell software leave a big gap in value if customers still struggle to migrate or automate operations.

What Solifi is doing is not unique, but it is practical. The market is maturing away from single-vendor promises toward combined offers that include implementation, automation and cloud expertise. That model shortens sales cycles for vendors and reduces churn for customers who get successful outcomes faster.

Leadership signals: pragmatic goals, focused execution

Executives in the announcement framed the effort as pragmatic rather than flashy. The partners emphasized delivery and repeatability over bespoke projects. That background gives the plan credibility: it sounds aimed at scaling implementations instead of tackling one-off, expensive transformations.

Given the stated goals, early focus areas are likely to be repeatable tasks — data conversion templates, automation of common workflows, and standardized migration checklists — rather than custom feature development. That approach tends to produce faster wins for customers.

Rollout and how clients can engage

Solifi said the partnerships are available now and will be rolled out across its existing client base, with phased support by geography and product line. Prospective customers and existing clients can explore packaged services and request demos or discovery workshops through Solifi’s sales channels.

The practical takeaway: organizations considering a move to a modern lending or leasing platform should expect clearer, vendor-backed paths to migration and automation from Solifi and its new partners. For customers, the promise is less time in transition and more time using the platform to run their business.

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