Wealth management: meeting high client expectations

The wealth management landscape is constantly evolving. Alberto Velasco, head of wealth management propositions - EMEA, Thomson Reuters, outlines some key considerations

TRWealthReport

Today’s investors have high expectations, demanding anytime, anywhere access to accounts and information, while expecting frictionless speed of updates and requiring greater transparency. To meet these increasing demands, wealth managers must stay informed and connected, while exercising critical time management to service their clients.

Technology needs to support and enable advisers to do their jobs more effectively. Firms must decide which technologies are worth the necessary investment in time and money, and those which are not.

To better understand the real-life impact of these shifting sector trends on organisations as well as on individual advisers, Thomson Reuters commissioned Forbes Insights to survey wealth advisers and executives around the world.

Client acquisition and retention

Of the 200 respondents, 65% of wealth managers spend most of their time on client acquisition and onboarding. This is followed closely by providing advice, and client objectives and risk tolerance. Many wealth managers believe technology can aid efficiency in these tasks.

Wealth managers cite a combination of factors essential for attracting and retaining clients: the ability to provide advice beyond the portfolio; connecting with the next generation; and the use of digital tools for communication.

Advisers report that the advice they provide and the time they spend with clients plays a major role in retention. They add value by helping clients stay on track to reach their goals. Automation can help advisers customise client outreach in less time, resulting in more time to spend where they can add the greatest value.

Half the advisers surveyed said a top factor in retention is the ability to generate personalised outreach on events relevant to a client’s holdings. So is staying relevant to the next generation of investors – 69% of wealth managers indicate they are concerned about staying relevant to millennial investors.

What next for relationship building?A large proportion of advisors — 72% — see artificial intelligence as an opportunity. No one sees it as a threat.

This is highly encouraging, as wealth managers see the advancements as an enabler to help with time-sensitive and time intensive activities rather than a disruptor. And 41% believe that advanced analytics and cognitive technologies will have the greatest impact on the wealth management sector over the next three years.

Personalisation becomes more complex in the age of digitalisation — and something that millennials and many others take for granted.

Wealth managers need to use technology, data and digital tools to better understand and manage their clients’ unique needs and make the relationship personal on their clients’ terms.

In recent years, wealth management practices have concentrated investments in big data and advanced analytics. This is particularly the case as a means to prioritise and analyse all data related to financial goals (demographics, weather, political risk as well as financial) and to analyse client data over time and in relation to other proprietary data. They have focused on applying those findings to offer relevant products based on demographics and goals. In future, cognitive capabilities and advanced analytics to enhance decision-making and portfolio management top the list for future investment.

The future of wealth management

The role of the wealth manager could change dramatically in the next few years. Not only do clients expect better tools of engagement, but advisers will be serving ever more clients and for lower fees. They will need to ‘know’ their clients with the same speed and precision of machine learning.

At the same time, wealth managers will need to constantly bridge the digital divide between their less tech-savvy clients and the digital natives who will control more of the world’s wealth in the decade to come.

Read and download the full Digitalization of Wealth Management report

Published: 20 Mar 2018
Categories:
  • Wealth Management
  • Operations
Tags:
  • Thomson Reuters

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