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āEngagementā an Issue with Advisors, Next-Gen Clients
RIA leaders speaking on a panel at the UHNW Summit at Wealth Management EDGE said there is a pressing need for financial advisors to engage with their clientsā second-generation family members, rather than just pay lip service to the idea.
Cameron Rogers, partner at Angeles Wealth Management, said financial advisors can benefit by engaging clientsā second-generation family members early. She said advisors need to realize that families are getting more complex in their makeup, and issues of inheritance and support may veer more toward ātherapy.ā
āYes, itās about investments, and yes, itās about growth of principal, but itās as much about managing these conversations,ā she said.
Tiffany Tocco, business development risk advisor at Starkweather & Shepley Insurance, said advisors need to stop using complex investment terms and acronyms with younger generations. Instead, she recommended financial advisors seek to āeducate the next generation in terms they can understand and relate to.ā
She also said advisors should stop asking whether the next generation wants to work with them more through technology, and just assume that they do.
āThey donāt want to hear that you are working to offer technology optionsāthey expect you to be using them,ā she said.
Jason Borek, chief growth officer, The Pinnacle Group, said he sees among advisors āa little bit of an engagement problem.ā
āThe question I think most advisors are going to ask is, āAre we wanting to engage through the lens of preparation, or are we wanting to engage through the lens of a family crisis?ā,ā he said. āIf this conversation hasnāt happened, youāre already too late if an advisor is stepping into the room with the next generation during a crisis.ā
Borek said that the āfirms that are getting it rightā have committed to working with the next generation and have set up a system to support it, including hiring next-generation advisors.
Small Firms Neednāt Be Left Behind in AI Race
Large firms arenāt the only beneficiaries of advancing artificial intelligence. In fact, according to Adam Moseley, Charles Schwabās director of artificial intelligence consulting, small firms may have a tactical advantage as they āhave far less red tape to work through.ā
During a discussion at the AI Assembly Summit at Wealth Management EDGE, Moseley and other AI industry experts expanded on how AI-enabled firms will change over the next 12-24 months.
According to Mark Swan, the CEO and co-founder of Nevis, the industry is seeing a shift from systems to agents, meaning AI tools will no longer be considered a supplement to advisor tasks and will move further toward completing tasks āend-to-end.ā While firms typically spend about 30% on operations, Swan expected big reductions, whether through cost savings or scale.
Allworth Financial Chief Marketing Officer Brad Boekestein noted that during that firmās recent recapitalization (the third since its founding, led by Integrum Holdings), AI was the top focus. According to Boekestein, potential investors wanted to know whether AI would make firmsā current models more efficient or change them āaltogether.ā
āItās to be determined, and itās probably what every industry is struggling with,ā he said. āThere are pockets of folks who think itās only going to be an efficiency shift, and Iām not sure.ā
More AI Solutions Than Problems
Mazi Bahadori, CCO and executive vice president of operations at Altruist, argued that there are more artificial intelligence solutions out there in wealth management than there are problems.
Almost every company raising venture capital funding has an AI mandate, and these companies are raising āstupid sums of moneyā to build things that will become commoditized and that you can build yourself using tools like Claude.
As a result, advisors are constantly getting sold on stuff that doesnāt really add much value.
āThey look really cool; they look really flashy,ā he said.
The best way to address this is to identify what problem youāre trying to solve in your advisory business.
Firms Find Themselves at Different Heights on the ‘AI Pyramid’
Zoe Financial CEO and founder Andres Garcia-Amaya wants firms to ask themselves where they are āon the AI pyramid.ā
During an opening session at the AI Assembly Summit at Wealth Management EDGE, Garcia-Amaya said that most firms have reached the base of the pyramid, which he deemed āsearch and discovery,ā which he described as āessentially replacing Google Searchā (it could also include doing basic tasks like improving copy and checking for errors).
Firms are trying to build their ability to use AI to develop ārepeatableā skills that automate common tasks within the organization, saving hours per week. Garcia-Amaya surmised that this was the stage where many wealth-focused firms āwant to become efficient.ā
The final step of the pyramid is āagentic,ā though Garcia-Amaya stressed that there were very few companies worldwide operating on agentic strategies and tools. However, he stressed that there was only one way to reach the tip of the pyramid.
āYou need to get there by building skills and tasks,ā he said. āIt gives you a visual understanding of the promise of AI.ā
According to Garcia-Amaya, you can build skills in your organization that can attract clients, and that firms are āsitting on an amazing amount of information on what your ideal client is.ā
āPatrick Donachie
UHNW-Focused Advisor Sees āFundamental Shiftā In Client Expectations
Heather Pelant, a managing director and wealth advisor at Cresset, said the wealth management industry is grappling with whether, and to what extent, advice is broadening beyond investment management and financial planning.
āAre we amidst a short-term demographic shift as the great wealth transfer happens, and the next generation comes online, or are we amid a fundamental redesign of our industry?ā she asked during the UHNW Summit, kicking off the Wealth Management EDGE conference.
Pelant made the case for the latter, saying this change is being driven by three key areas: the increased complexity of portfolios and investment products, shifting client expectations toward broader life advice and guidance, and the impact of technology for both advisors and clients.
āThe aperture for wealth management is getting wider and deeper at the same time,ā Pelant said. āI think that the goals are not necessarily about maximizing return, but we are also supposed to be having a hand in āwhat does multigenerational stewardship look like, how does capital align to what is of most importance to me and my family? What does governance look like?ā … And I donāt think this is happening in five years. I think itās happening now.ā
āAlex Ortolani
Where Does Growth Break?
Client and prospect relationships go through a lifecycle, from attraction through retaining a client and having them give you referrals. But there are points along that lifecycle where it stops working because growth breaks down.
Robert Sofia, CEO of Snappy Kraken, outlined the five most common places where growth breaks down. Mishandling leads is the first place. He said 68% of advisors are competing for the same leads, so youāve got to work fast. And 78% of clients choose the first responder.
The second area is working with the wrong leads. Leads require different handling, and advisors need a place to see all lead sources and track those leads.
Third, growth can break if thereās no strategic, short-term follow-up. The vast majority of leads arenāt ready right away, but advisors need to stay visible without becoming noise. Advisors can build trust by staying relevant. āYou canāt have one generic path for everyone, because humans arenāt generic,ā Sofia said.
Fourth, there can sometimes be a lack of long-term follow-up. āLong-term nurture drives more engagement, which leads to more clients,ā he said.
And finally, growth can break if thereās no behavior-based handoff to advisors. When advisors get leads, itās hard to know where to focus their energy. But firms can help by providing qualified, high-intense leads. That will result in higher conversion rates.
āDiana Britton
