SEI White Paper: Wealth Managers to Become More Like Financial Quarterbacks
On-Demand Data and Real-Time Decision Making Will Be Essential for Next-Generation Wealth Managers
OAKS, PA -- (Marketwired) -- 09/25/14 -- As the financial industry faces changing consumer desires and expanding digital offerings, bank and trust wealth management firms are at a crossroads in how to best bring young wealth managers into the fold, while simultaneously ensuring they have the support needed to succeed with the new breed of investor. According to an SEI (NASDAQ: SEIC) white paper released today, firms can help their wealth managers optimize performance, productivity, and client satisfaction ratings by improving their infrastructures. The paper, "Creating the Next Generation of Wealth Managers: The Financial Quarterback," explores what the wealth managers of the future will look like, and the role leadership plays in fostering employee and client growth.
"Through our research, we've discovered that wealth managers are most productive and add the most value to a firm when they're working with clients to develop effective strategies to achieve life goals. With the abundance of digital strategies, pure investment and return advice is not enough -- wealth managers must leverage the human factor to stand apart," said Al Chiaradonna, Senior Vice President, SEI Wealth Platform(SM), North America Private Banking. "But, we've found that many firms are struggling to help wealth managers focus primarily on client-facing work because administrative and operational tasks get in the way. This points to a fundamental problem in an evolving industry like ours. If firms don't analyze what makes a wealth manager productive, how can they expect higher productivity?"
The paper reveals that the next generation of successful wealth managers will be more like financial quarterbacks versus traditional wealth managers. No longer will they set long-term strategies and evaluate them quarterly or annually, they will evaluate situations in real-time and make changes where appropriate. Tools and on-demand data that help them better understand the entire client relationship, not simply transaction-based systems, are the keys to the future.
Similarly, investors are changing as well, especially in the way they talk about their money. As such, goals-based investing has become an industry buzzword and a favored method to determine how to invest. That, in turn, alters the way wealth managers need to interact with their clients. The paper encourages senior management to help wealth managers cut down on non-client-facing activities in order to manage a more effective and comprehensive communication process.
To set wealth managers up for success, the industry should heed sports science, reveals the paper. Game film, data, good coaching, and a quality supporting cast all combine to put superior athletes in positions to win every day. This model translates well for wealth management firms. Firms looking to move from good to great need to better utilize the technology and information at their disposal to determine how the business model and company environment impacts wealth manager effectiveness. Only then can they work to correct any irregularities and improve performance.
"Just like a coach spends extra time molding a player, senior management needs to take the lead in turning wealth managers into the firm's all-star financial quarterbacks," said Chiaradonna. "That takes more than just a pep talk here and there; it involves digging into the psyche of a wealth manager and creating best practices and strategies that help differentiate the firm from others."
The paper, published by SEI Executive Connections, is the fourth in a four-part series, titled "SEI Insights: The Future of Wealth Management," which explores four key areas outside of the financial industry that offer opportunities for transformation in the wealth management industry. The first three parts of the series examined the benefits of employing a unified platform to overcome legacy system issues, embracing business model reinvention to improve enterprise risk management, and challenging traditional thinking around asset-based segmentation. SEI Executive Connections is a community for bank executives and industry experts which provides business intelligence and opportunities to interact on banking topics and trends. To request a copy of the full paper, please visit http://www.seic.com/enUS/banks/14683.htm?cmpid=pr-925-advproductivity-wp.
About the SEI Wealth Platform(SM)
The SEI Wealth Platform (the Platform) is an outsourcing solution for wealth managers encompassing wealth processing services and wealth management programs, combined with business process expertise. With the Platform, SEI provides wealth management organizations with the infrastructure, operations, and administrative support necessary to capitalize on their strategic objectives in a constantly shifting market. The SEI Wealth Platform supports trading and transactions on 115 stock exchanges in 48 countries and 33 currencies, through the use of straight-through processing and a single operating infrastructure environment. For more information, visit: www.seic.com/wealthplatform.
About SEI
SEI (NASDAQ: SEIC) is a leading global provider of investment processing, investment management, and investment operations solutions that help corporations, financial institutions, financial advisors, and ultra-high-net-worth families create and manage wealth. As of June 30, 2014, through its subsidiaries and partnerships in which the company has a significant interest, SEI manages or administers $602 billion in mutual fund and pooled or separately managed assets, including $249 billion in assets under management and $353 billion in client assets under administration. For more information, visit www.seic.com.
Company Contact:
Dana Grosser
SEI
+1 610-676-2459
dgrosser@seic.com
Media Contact:
Alex Dalgliesh
Braithwaite Communications
+1 215-564-3200 x 116
adalgliesh@gobraithwaite.com
Source: SEI
Released September 25, 2014