The 2020 Technology Tools for Today (T3) Advisor conference — held in February in San Diego — attracted about 100 technology companies that showcased their RIA-focused innovations and offered some dynamic presentations. For instance, long-absent advisor-tech entrepreneur Reed Colley took to the main stage to launch his latest technology platform — Summit Wealth Systems.
Colley first appeared at T3 more than 12 years ago with the rollout of the cloud-based performance reporting platform Black Diamond, which is known for its elegant interface, ease of use and service excellence. It is a case study in how a young startup can become a leading player in the advisor technology space in only a few years; its platform now has over $1 trillion in assets.
In 2011, Colley sold Black Diamond to Advent Software for $73 million. Four years later, SS&C bought the company for $2.3 billion.
To lay the ground for his new platform, Colley and his team interviewed more than 100 advisors and uncovered their main complaint: Much of their "tech stack," meaning their "tech pile," is cumbersome, has multiple systems cobbled together and suffers from feature bloat — making their systems difficult to use and limiting the adoption of most of their key capabilities.
To fix this problem, Colley introduced Summit Wealth Systems — a modern wealth management platform that includes portfolio accounting and reporting, wealth modeling, rebalancing, and client communication capabilities all housed in one unified system.
Built on advanced "cloud-native" technology that includes "micro-services, atomic design and single tenancy," its novel systems architecture and development methodologies mean Summit Wealth can provide RIAs with their own unique database and each investor client of the RIAs with a "hyper-personalized" experience.
Cloud-Native Tech
Another returning star was Oleg Tishkevich, CEO of cloud-native platform INVENT, which he introduced at last year's T3 gathering. It now boasts impressive growth numbers: over 10,000 users and $260 billion on the platform.
Tishkevich detailed the many ways cloud-native technology should modernize legacy systems. To fully realize these cloud-native capabilities, though, INVENT needs the cooperation of the gatekeepers in advisor tech — the custodians.
He made the case that the wealth-tech industry needs to come together and support the major players and custodians controlling innovation in wealth management and encourage them to prioritize resources, foster a sense of urgency and accelerate change — leveraging the promise of cloud-native technologies.
Because every custodian has a different agenda and competitive appetites, getting agreement in operating methodologies, data standards and open application programming interfaces (or APIs) is nearly impossible. For innovation to flourish, it needs to come from the ground up.
The T3 discussion upped the noise and collective worry of the advisor tech industry, which is highly concerned that — with Charles Schwab's looming acquisition of TD Ameritrade and Schwab's favoring of its legacy platforms over TD's — this opportunity will become more and more remote. TDA has been a leader in open architecture with its award-winning and tech-vendor- friendly Veo Open Access initiative.