How can advisers continue to differentiate in an increasingly digital world?

How can advisers continue to differentiate in an increasingly digital world?
Having the technology isn't enough anymore
APR 09, 2019

One of the best things about financial technology is how it has helped level the playing field for advisers. With so many vendors offering technologies for every possible use and price point, registered reps at a big Wall Street firm can no longer claim a digital advantage over a Main Street solo practice. Anyone can go out and find a financial planning tool or CRM or client portal that works for them. On the other hand, now everyone has access to more or less the same quality of technology. Fintech that just a few years ago was a major differentiator for a firm is now table stakes across the industry. "Most technology is available to any adviser at a reasonable price," said Ryan Marshall, a partner with ELA Financial Group. "We use MoneyGuidePro, Morningstar and Riskalyze, and so can everyone else." But if this is the case, how do firms show clients or prospects that they offer anything different from the adviser down the street? This is why advisers today hear so much about "client experience." Advisers may all have digital tools, but the key is turning that into something of value. "Technology can help firms more effectively deliver on their value proposition, streamline processes and workflows, and scale their services. However, the value proposition, processes and services must already exist," said Brandon Garrett, president and chief investment officer of Snow Garrett Wealth Management. "A redundant process that is now a workflow in a CRM or an irrelevant service that has now become a digital marketing campaign is still redundant and irrelevant." For Mr. Marshall, it's about focusing on the service and support the firm can provide. "We try to distance ourselves from what we can't stand about customer service, which is press one for this and two for that," he said. "When [clients] call they know they are going to speak with one of our team members who will ask how the grandkids are doing or catch up on where the family just got back from vacation." Allan Katz, president of Wealth Management Group, a solo practice in Staten Island, N.Y., said his focus is on having specialized knowledge not yet delivered by any of the technology products. For him, it's being an expert in funding college. Another idea is using the underlying client data, unique to every firm, to find new ways to bring clients help they can't get from anyone else. For example, Captrust chief technology officer Jon Meyer, said his firm developed an analysis of retirement plan fees to make plans more efficient for participants. This will only become more important for firms as adoption of technology increases. Aaron Schaben, Carson Wealth Managment executive vice president, said technology can still play a role in differentiating firms, as few firms are successfully putting the pieces together so clients get something more akin to the experience of shopping on Amazon or watching movies on Netflix. "That's where the biggest competition is — integration, and doing it so that our clients aren't going to a bunch of different websites," Mr. Schaben said. Again, it all comes back to client experience. It's not really the technology that matters. It's how you use it.

Latest News

Slow advisor transitions are costing RIA firms money and talent, and the industry is starting to act
Slow advisor transitions are costing RIA firms money and talent, and the industry is starting to act

Operational drag between an advisor signing and accounts going live is emerging as a competitive liability for wealth management firms.

M&A on course for second-highest year ever as megadeals surge and AI complicates the deal equation
M&A on course for second-highest year ever as megadeals surge and AI complicates the deal equation

Bain says companies face a "winner's paradox" as AI transformation collides with complex integrations.

Rumor confirmed: Corient expands with European acquisition
Rumor confirmed: Corient expands with European acquisition

Deal lifts global assets to roughly $523 billion under management.

What wine culture can teach investors about decision-making
What wine culture can teach investors about decision-making

Choice anxiety, prestige bias, and the temptation to make selections based on outsourced confidence are just some of the parallels between investing and the world of wine tasting.

Merrill Lynch, BofA's brokerage arm, hit with $7.5M SEC fine over missed suspicious activity reports
Merrill Lynch, BofA's brokerage arm, hit with $7.5M SEC fine over missed suspicious activity reports

Regulators found Bank of America's monitoring software had a known flaw Merrill left uncorrected for years.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.