Best for
RIA teams that already use OnceHub and Wealthbox, but still manually create tasks, tags, notes, or workflows after meetings are booked.
OnceHub to Wealthbox
Connect OnceHub booking pages, routing forms, and advisor calendars to Wealthbox so every scheduled meeting becomes useful CRM activity.
Why this matters
Most advisor firms do not need a giant technology overhaul. They need the meeting details to land in the right place every time, without creating duplicates or leaving the team to clean up the CRM after the fact.
What gets built
| Step | What happens | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Booking | OnceHub captures the meeting type, invitee details, and intake answers. | The workflow starts with structured data instead of a vague calendar event. |
| Matching | The automation checks whether the person already exists in Wealthbox. | This reduces duplicates and keeps history attached to the right contact or household. |
| CRM update | The event, tags, notes, custom fields, or tasks are created in Wealthbox. | The advisor and ops team can see what happened without searching email or calendar history. |
| Follow-up | The right task, workflow, or exception alert fires based on the meeting type. | Prospects and clients do not fall through the cracks after they book. |
RIA teams that already use OnceHub and Wealthbox, but still manually create tasks, tags, notes, or workflows after meetings are booked.
Zapier or Make when the workflow is straightforward. Custom Python when matching logic, volume, or reliability requirements justify it.
I monitor errors, adjust fields when the process changes, and handle the boring edge cases that usually get ignored until something breaks.
Pricing
Most OnceHub to Wealthbox builds fit the Core package unless there are many advisors, calendars, or routing rules.
Questions
Sometimes. The template is usually enough if all you need is a basic event. It gets harder when you need contact matching, household logic, meeting-type tags, workflows, cancel/reschedule handling, or exception alerts.
Usually yes, at least temporarily. I can work with a screenshare or restricted access if your compliance process requires it.
That is what the monthly maintenance is for. I sign up for error alerts, review failures, and fix issues caused by expired connections, changed fields, renamed meeting types, or API quirks.
It can be, especially when routing forms, booking pages, and multiple calendars are involved. The CRM automation needs to preserve that routing context instead of flattening everything into one generic event.