What will it take to become a great advisor to wealthy families in the future?
According to Family Office Exchange's managing director David Toth, three areas are shaping what the advisor of the future will look like: how talent is sourced and developed, influence of technology and services that will be offered.
In the past, advisors serving wealthy families were drawn mainly from financial or investment firms, law firms and accounting firms. The new generation of talent may come from a wider array of backgrounds.
Toth notes that members of FOX — a peer-to-peer network for ultra-wealthy families and their family offices — are looking for advisors outside the financial industry, including hospitality and social service, and are increasingly recruiting from college campuses.
A FOX white paper, citing Labor Department data, showed that a labor generation gap has appeared because not enough Gen X workers are replacing retiring baby boomers. While the proportion of baby boomers in the workforce will fall to 22% in 2020 from 37% in 2015, Gen Xers' numbers will remain virtually unchanged at 20%. Millennials will comprise 58% of the labor force, up from 42%.
Many family offices have established their own development programs in response to the talent shortage, recognizing that they may not be recruiting the level of experience that they had in the past, according to Toth. An increasing number also want to train people into the client experience that they want to provide.
Toth writes that more and more advisor firms are investing in technology to advance the client and employee experience.