Big learning potential for smaller teams
Transform your business with an industry-leading LMS
Help employees grow with robust AEC & M assessments.
Supercharged features for next-level learning.
By submitting this form, you agree to the collection and processing of your personal data by Eagle Point Software. We value your privacy and will only use your information to provide the services you request, as outlined in our Privacy Policy. From time to time, we may send updates about our products and services, but you will always have the ability to opt out of these communications.
When Autodesk releases a new version of Revit, most organizations focus on the technical steps: upgrading central models, managing linked files, coordinating teams, and validating project health.
With the recently announced changes to Revit and Revit Cloud Models, those tasks matter more than ever. But the bigger opportunity often gets missed. A version upgrade isn’t just a software event; it’s a process event. If that process isn’t documented, standardized, and reinforced, teams end up reinventing it every single time.
The Hidden Risks of an Inconsistent Upgrade Process
In many organizations, upgrades are handled by a few key people, typically BIM, CAD managers, technology leaders, etc. They know the steps. They manage the sequencing. They troubleshoot when something breaks.
Then, 12–18 months later, a new version arrives, and the process starts over.
Questions resurface:
If the process lives in someone’s head or in scattered notes, consistency suffers. That introduces risk into active projects and creates unnecessary friction during an already sensitive transition.
Version Changes Are Operational Workflows
The organizations that handle upgrades best treat them as operational workflows, not one-time events.
That means:
This is where Pinnacle Series becomes more than training. It becomes infrastructure.
Document Once. Reuse Every Time.
With Pinnacle Series, you can:
The result is simple: the next time a Revit release arrives, you don’t scramble. You execute.
Make Version Transitions Predictable
Every upgrade cycle is an opportunity to strengthen how your organization manages change.
Instead of reacting to version releases, you can:
Version changes will continue. The question isn’t whether you will upgrade; it’s whether you’ll have to reinvent the process each time. By capturing and standardizing your workflow in Pinnacle Series, you turn a recurring disruption into a controlled, repeatable system. If you’d like help aligning your Revit upgrade timeline with documented workflows and internal training, we’re here to support you.
The latest posts on our blog, updated regularly with product tips, news, and industry advice on employee retention, reducing the skills gap, and more.