Face-to-face fades away

Face-to-face fades away
The shift to virtual may have been messy, but new ways of working and communicating have become the norm
AUG 09, 2020

If the pandemic experience of the past several months has confirmed anything, it’s that humans are remarkably adaptive.

Face-to-face human interaction has always been a core aspect of the financial advice business. Selecting an adviser, discussing financial and life goals, and regularly reviewing progress traditionally have involved in-person meetings. These interactions helped create the human connections that are the foundations on which advisers have built practices and businesses.

Similarly, visits from wholesalers have been the way advisers and clients learn about new products — as well as the way the creators and packagers of investments market their offerings.

The shift from in-person to virtual communication and work arrangements may have been abrupt and messy, but in a very short space of time the new ways of working and communicating have become the norm. Should virtual interactions remain the default mode of client and work life interaction in the future, which seems entirely possible given the current course of events, the impact on advisers would be far-reaching and profound.

For advisers, a Zoom-based world would mean many practice changes. Marketing, operations, human resources requirements, cybersecurity and even real estate would all be affected.

MASSIVE EVENTS

Consider the massive events held by custodians and broker-dealers, as well as the smaller, more specialized live meetings conducted by organizations — including InvestmentNews. They will continue, but they will change. Even before the pandemic, online versions of adviser-client, adviser-vendor and adviser-adviser interactions were becoming more popular.

New business development in an environment where face-to-face contact is limited translates into the need to create opportunities for interested prospects to find and be attracted to an adviser online. That means advisers will have to become more proactive in creating helpful content that demonstrates the expertise that prospective clients are seeking.

Office operations and the human resources needed in a virtual world demand staff members who excel at self-direction and time management, as well as being able to use all the tech tools in the advisory arsenal. More remote work will speed the transition to digital documentation and the elimination of paper — as well as increasing opportunities for cybersecurity breaches, making cybersecurity even more of a priority.

OFFICE SPACE REQUIREMENTS

Finally, with employees doing more work remotely and fewer clients coming in for consultations, office space requirements will change. Some advisers may find that renting a meeting room on an hourly basis could suffice.

As the past shows, once our behaviors and habits change, we rarely return to our old patterns, even if we recall them fondly. While many advisers were working online and expanding their electronic footprint before the pandemic, the current shift seems more quantum than gradual. If so, future advisers may come to refer to 2020 as the year the business went virtual. 

And to be sure, all these important forms of human interaction are likely to return once restrictions are lifted. But if history is any guide, they are likely to return in echo form, as a complement to the new, virtual norm.

Latest News

Dump investment banks, buy alternative asset managers, says Oppenheimer
Dump investment banks, buy alternative asset managers, says Oppenheimer

"Shares of alternative assets managers have lagged this year as investors grow wary of private-credit exposure."

TaxStatus rolls out rules-based tool to flag advice gaps
TaxStatus rolls out rules-based tool to flag advice gaps

The fintech platform is touting a new AI-free Planning Observations feature, which draws on IRS tax records to uncover opportunities for advisors.

Carson Group deepens Colorado presence with Arvada advisor deal
Carson Group deepens Colorado presence with Arvada advisor deal

The Omaha, Nebraska-based RIA's latest acquisition expands its Rocky Mountain footprint after two prior Colorado deals last year.

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.

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.