Coronavirus will test your firm's tech

Coronavirus will test your firm's tech
Clients don’t need to be sick to feel the impact of the epidemic, and that goes beyond market volatility
MAR 06, 2020

One of the great virtues of modern, cloud-based adviser tech is the ability to continue running a business in the event of an emergency. But until now, when thinking of emergencies, most of us probably thought of natural disasters, like fires and floods that might threaten localized data, or slow foot traffic by rendering clients physically unable to reach the office.

We think of these emergencies as one-and-done events. Disasters present a serious disruption, but ultimately in our minds catastrophe can be avoided and clients can still be served. We can go back to our normal.

But what happens when an emergency crisis lasts a lot longer?

As the coronavirus epidemic continues its global spread, news of new outbreaks are reported daily. National and regional health departments have framed the epidemic in terms of when, not if.

Responses have ranged from level-headed hygiene checks and calls for preparedness, to price gouging and a panicked run on emergency supplies that prompted Surgeon General Jerome Adams to tweet: “Seriously people - STOP BUYING MASKS!

https://twitter.com/Surgeon_General/status/1233725785283932160

All of this is to say that we have a great deal of uncertainty around a serious health care threat that is already disrupting the day-to-day lives of millions. The truth is, you or your clients don’t need to be sick to feel the impact of this epidemic. And that goes far, far beyond the volatility spikes challenging the assets you manage.

Japan has closed all of its schools until at least April, for example. Can your office, or your clients, handle childcare for an entire month? Businesses are implementing work-from-home strategies out of an abundance of caution, and the resulting demand for grocery delivery has overwhelmed online grocery deliveries. In short, your clients’ financial lives are about to become even more complicated during a period of tremendous market uncertainty.

In emergencies like this, it's important to be able to access everything you need to run your business from anywhere, at any time. Communicating effectively to clients during these times can make a big difference.

Then there is the practical aspect of continuing to provide service through a disaster. Does your tech stack support screen sharing and video conferencing? Can your clients contact you whenever they need to? Can they access a dashboard of key data from any device at any time?

There is no telling how profoundly the coronavirus will impact our lives and livelihoods. It is hard to compare this outbreak to past epidemics, because our world is more interconnected than it was 10 or even five years ago.

What we do know is that we're already starting to feel the impact.

Kyle Hiatt is chief revenue officer at Orion. Connect with him on LinkedIn.

Latest News

Advisor360, Willow Wealth tap seasoned veterans for C-suite roles
Advisor360, Willow Wealth tap seasoned veterans for C-suite roles

The two wealthtech platforms name new C-level executives as AI-native strategy and private markets growth accelerate across the advice industry

Western Asset agrees to $100M SEC penalty over cherry-picking scheme
Western Asset agrees to $100M SEC penalty over cherry-picking scheme

Franklin Resources' fixed-income unit settles SEC charges and closes firm-level DOJ and regulatory probes, but Kenneth Leech's criminal case continues.

It’s the age of risk, and the financial advice industry is blowing it
It’s the age of risk, and the financial advice industry is blowing it

“Wall Street is building dynamite and charging clients a fortune when they buy it,” one executive said.

Where investment returns meet tax returns: Why integrating wealth management and tax services matters
Where investment returns meet tax returns: Why integrating wealth management and tax services matters

Beyond rising client demand, firms and advisors with a focus on delivering tax alpha are in a better position to compete and thrive in the face of growing industry challenges.

PDT rule removal opens active trading to millions of retail investors
PDT rule removal opens active trading to millions of retail investors

Brokerages roll out real-time risk frameworks as $25,000 equity barrier falls after 25 years.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.