Surveys
Advisor Characteristics Vs Digital Delivery: Which Is Most Important To The Future-Wealthy?
The future-wealthy - those “at the front of a global charge up the wealth curve” - tend to place less of an emphasis on digital delivery than certain advisor attributes, according to The Futurewealth Report 2014: Upgrading the Service Delivery, published by SEI, Scorpio Partnership and NPG Wealth Management.
The future-wealthy - those “at the front of a global charge up
the wealth curve” - tend to place less of an emphasis on digital
delivery than certain advisor attributes, according
to The Futurewealth Report 2014: Upgrading the Service
Delivery, published by SEI, Scorpio Partnership and NPG
Wealth Management.
The paper includes survey responses from 3,025 global
respondents, with an average net worth of $2.9 million. It looked
at the factors that matter to wealthy individuals when making a
transaction with a firm and, crucially, the role digital
technology plays in that experience. The report is the second in
a four-part series of the Futurewealth Project.
The headline finding was that, when asked to rate the importance
of various factors of a “great experience” during a transaction
with a wealth manager, respondents focused largely on advisor
attributes.
Specifically, the three highest-rated characteristics were the
advisor’s level of experience (65), market knowledge (65) and
understanding of individual needs (65) - all of which received
the same rating on the “importance index,” which has a scale of
1-100.
By contrast, a wealth manager's ability to stimulate portfolio
strategies online, their ability to customise online reporting
and the extent to which their website is “navigable” all scored
lower in importance than did an advisor’s characteristics, at 39,
38 and 37 respectively.
While the report noted that digital technologies “complement”
human interaction, it emerged that those in the under-40 age
bracket are in fact “re-orienting” toward digital solutions.
Somewhat surprisingly, then, the youngest group gave the
experience of their advisor a score of 58 out of 100, compared to
79 among the oldest respondents.
The report said that the importance of digital access “should not
be underestimated,” describing the future-wealthy as “online
enthusiasts”. Indeed, 92 per cent of them use online tools to
support their wealth management activities, according to the
survey. Meanwhile, even Generation Y are “still logging on,” with
around half of this cohort checking their tax efficiency online
every month.
Digital of course plays a valuable role
Ryan Hicke, senior vice president of the SEI Wealth PlatformSM,
said it was unsurprising that an advisor’s knowledge, experience
and understanding of an individual were cited by respondents as
the most important factors in the client service experience.
“However, it’s not as simple as finding the right professional
companion for a particular customer,” Hicke said. “Across the
board and especially among those under 40, digital plays a
valuable role in their experience when you consider the amount of
time they spend online and their reliance on digital for a
variety of information. The sticking point for this segment,
though, is that many of the digital tools are not engaging.
Wealth managers may need to consider upgrading their technology
to ensure customers are fully engaged.”
Looking at advisor performance - rather than what is deemed most
important - the survey revealed that 63 per cent of respondents
believe their advisor delivers a good performance with their
website, while 61 per cent are happy with their advisor’s ability
to create portfolio strategies online and 58 per cent are content
with their advisor’s ability to customise online reporting.
However, higher performance scores were allocated to the human
contact aspects, with over four in five respondents saying their
wealth manager delivers a good performance in their knowledge of
the market (85 per cent); understanding of individual needs (83
per cent); and level of experience (82 per cent) - an encouraging
finding given that wealth management has long been perceived as a
“people's business.”
Jaroslaw Knapik, senior analyst of financial services technology
at the global research firm Ovum, recently spoke to our
sister publication Family Wealth Report about how
the intensity of focus on information technology in the financial
services industry is among the highest compared to other sectors.
Knapik raised an interesting point, saying that, for some
advisors, digital enhancements may be disruptive as they fear
that technology may claim some parts of their business.
In other significant findings from the latest product of the
Futurewealth Project, it transpired that clients with over 75 per
cent of their cash with a single provider place the highest value
on their advisor when making purchasing decisions. Among these
respondents, an advisor’s maturity and level of market knowledge
were rated at over 70 on the 100-point importance index. This
finding certainly makes sense, as those clients who are almost
“putting all their eggs in one basket,” will of course want to
ensure that their primary advisor is up to speed on a range of
factors.
“The advisor is clearly the linchpin of the service delivery
experience, but that doesn’t mean they should discount the value
of digital tools in supporting their clients’ needs,” said Kevin
Crowe, head of solutions at SEI Advisor Network.
Crowe added that digital interaction is the “new normal,” so
advisors need to ensure they “have the technology solutions to
compete.”