One registry owner described migrating from their previous platform in one sentence: "We had to put that in manually all ourselves. They didn't help us with any of that."
Two to three weeks of manual data entry. While still running a registry, still answering phones, still matching caregivers with clients. That experience is common enough that it stops a lot of owners from switching at all even when they know their current setup is not working.
That is a costly place to get stuck. Here is how to make the move without it becoming your story.
The Caregiver Registry Model Explained
Before getting into how to switch, it is worth naming what staying actually costs.
Most registry owners tolerate a bad platform because switching feels risky. But the platform they are tolerating is already costing them — in hours of manual work every week, in payment errors that take days to untangle, in records that are not organized enough to hand to an auditor, and in a team that has quietly adapted their entire workflow around a system that does not work the way a registry should.
The question is not whether switching is disruptive. It is whether the disruption of a two-week migration is worse than the slow drain of a platform that was never built for your business. For most registries, it is not close.
Is Ally More or Less Expensive Than In-House Processing?
The hesitation is almost always the same: what happens to the data? Caregiver profiles, client records, payment history, visit logs — how does any of that move, and what gets lost in the process?
The honest answer is that migration takes effort. But how much effort depends on two things: how organized your current records are, and whether the platform you are moving to actually helps you get set up — or just hands you a template and steps back.
The registries that have the worst migrations are usually the ones that show up with records scattered across spreadsheets, old email threads, and paper files. The ones that go smoothly are the ones that did a week of prep work before the migration started.
Do this before you contact a new platform, not after. It takes about a week and cuts your migration time significantly.
The goal is to arrive at your new platform with organized information to transfer, not raw chaos to sort through. That distinction determines whether your migration takes a week or a month.
What to Look for in Registry Software
Not every software company will help you migrate. Some hand you an import template and wish you luck. Ask these questions before you sign anything:
A platform that understands registries will have clear, specific answers to all five. Vague answers about “onboarding resources” and self-serve documentation are a signal worth taking seriously.
For most registries, the active migration window runs one to two weeks with proper support behind it. Michael Assimon at Griswold Care Pairing of Central New York went through the process and came out the other side with this: “It took a day, and it was smooth sailing after.”
That is not the exception. It is what migration looks like when the platform has a real process and the registry shows up prepared.
The first few weeks after go-live will feel slower than the last few weeks on the old system. That is normal and it does not last. Familiarity with a bad system is not the same as the system being good. Erica Assimon described what life looked like on the other side: “We now have our Mondays back, and have more time to spend developing new business.”
That outcome does not happen on day three. It happens after the team has settled in, the workflows click, and the hours that used to go to manual processes start going somewhere useful.
Every week on a platform that was not built for the registry model is a week of manual work, inconsistent records, and audit exposure that did not have to be there. The migration is finite. The drag of the wrong platform is not.
If you want to understand what switching to Ally actually looks like — what we handle, what we need from you, and how long it takes for a registry your size — we are happy to walk through it.