Changelog: April 2026 — OCR for sales invoices, new dashboard
Eleven shipped improvements you can use today.
For most of the last decade, UK practice management software has been a category that nobody loved. Firms tolerated it the way you tolerate an old printer — necessary, unreliable, vaguely embarrassing in front of clients. Something has changed in the last eighteen months, and it has changed quietly.
Why this matters now
A new generation of practitioners is taking over from the partners who bought the original practice management stack in the early 2010s. They were raised on Notion, Linear, and Stripe. They expect software to feel honest. They expect it to be opinionated. They expect it to respect their attention.
That expectation is not a luxury. It is the difference between a practice that grows from 80 clients to 200 and one that quietly stalls at 110 because the partner stopped sleeping.
The quiet shift
The shift is not louder dashboards or more notifications. It's the opposite. The best new tools are quieter than the spreadsheets they replace. They show you what is due, who is doing it, and what needs your attention — and they hide everything else.
"Software for an accounting practice should feel like a clean desk on a Monday morning. Not a feed."
Three operating principles
- One source of truth for every deadline, regardless of submission type.
- Automated communication that the firm controls, end-to-end.
- A clear separation between what owners see and what members see.
A weekly playbook
We've watched dozens of practices move from spreadsheets to a modern tool. The ones that succeed do three small things every week, without fail:
- A 30-minute Monday review of every overdue and at-risk submission.
- A Wednesday morning re-balance of workload across assistants.
- A Friday close-out where every "waiting on client" is nudged.
Tools that respect the work
We built Sovillio because we wanted a tool that respected the work. Submissions live in one board. Reminders send themselves. Clients upload through their own portal. None of it shouts.
The quietest tools are the ones that let the practitioner be loud where it matters: with clients, with the team, with the work itself.
Closing thoughts
We are at the start of a quiet revolution. It will not look like a launch. It will look like a firm somewhere in Bristol or Manchester or Leeds that suddenly stops missing deadlines, stops working Saturdays, and stops apologising to clients in January.
That firm exists. We hear from them every week. We hope you become one of them.