How Envestnet Is Powering a New Approach to Serving Wealthy Clients

Analysis January 31, 2024 at 10:32 AM
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What You Need To Know

  • Many advisors are focused on winning affluent clients while needing to meet very high service expectations.
  • Delivering significant personalization at scale is made easier with good technology and solid partners.
  • One trend is to use outsourcing for more straightforward aspects of account management.

How financial advisors are winning and serving their most affluent clients represents one of the most exciting and innovative areas of ongoing disruption in the wealth management industry.

According to Dana D'Auria, co-chief investment officer and group president at Envestnet Solutions, the question of how to provide greater personalization at scale for such clients is among the most important considerations for advisors working in this space — and indeed for advisors working with all manner of clients.

To this end, D'Auria said, Envestnet has invested heavily in its own approach to supporting advisors as they serve the high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth client segments. To summarize the work, she said that Envestnet is willing and able to do "a lot more" of the needed oversight and client hand-holding, thereby freeing up wealth professionals to focus on the core tenets of relationship management and business development.

Another related trend, according to D'Auria, is advisors' growing willingness to use different service models depending on the exact needs and expectations of their clients. In many cases, advisors are finding they can focus more internal staff and resources on their more demanding clients, and they can lean more on technology and third-party outsourcing to manage more straightforward cases.

"We are actually seeing a lot of demand for client service support at both ends of the wealth spectrum," D'Auria said. "So in that sense, it's almost a barbell of automation that is emerging."

'Personalization' Isn't New, but 'At Scale' Is

As D'Auria recently told ThinkAdvisor, "there is obviously a lot of focus on customization" in wealth management.

"The way I think about it is to remember that personalization itself is nothing new," she said. "It's the 'at scale' discussion that is new. … Today, it goes without saying that someone who is paying for the services of an advisor is going to expect some level of personalization."

As an example, D'Auria noted that advisors have been making an effort to link their clients' investment approach with the tax management effort for many years. In the past, however, advisors could support a more limited number of highly wealthy clients with this type of service, because they would have to run complex calculations about portfolio positioning and the best method and timing of rebalancing.

"Today, technology is front and center in this effort, and we are working toward a point where we can have a universal tax overlay on the advisor's platform," D'Auria said. "We can do algorithmically what had to be done by hand on a spreadsheet in the past, and that fundamentally changes the advisors' ability to deliver these services at scale."

As noted, this approach frees up advisors' time to focus on growing their business and deepening existing client relationships with discussion focused on goals and aspirations — not the minutia of tax transitions.

"They aren't spending so much time on something that is better done by a computer anyway," D'Auria said.

This state of affairs, according to D'Auria, allows advisors to ask big questions about the best ways to organize, package and deliver services across different client segments, especially at the higher and lower ends.

A Barbell of Automation

D'Auria said Envestnet is directly responding to these trends in its own ongoing platform development and integration work.

"We now have a service where the advisor can effectively outsource oversight of their UHNW accounts to us, and then they focus on maintaining the relationship," D'Auria pointed out. "The advisor will gain access to two portfolio managers on their accounts, whose job is to manage the portfolio around the customization parameters set up by the advisor. Given the trends, that service is growing really well for us."

A similar type of service outsourcing is also growing in popularity as a way for advisors to engage with and serve clients who aren't yet highly affluent but who represent promising prospects. Many advisors want to work with these clients, but they worry about the time and resources that may be needed to serve them effectively enough to keep them happy as their wealth grows and their financial situation becomes more complex.

"There are always advisors who are going to want to do things manually, but many of them are coming to see that they don't have to take that approach, especially in this segment," D'Auria said. "Once we can show them a different way, many advisors jump right on board. … Even if they choose to still manually handle everything for the top 5% or 10% of clients, many advisors have a big part of the book where they could put smaller or simpler accounts on our system."

D'Auria said that some advisors have come to see that their automated clients are doing just as well (if not better) than the clients who are served in a more bespoke manner — and that itself raises further questions about the best service approach.

What's to Worry About?

Asked whether any factors could derail the firm's progress or the rosy outlook of many advisory industry leaders, D'Auria said there are a few things she can think of.

"One thing we need to think about is that, as technology gets better and better and as individuals access capital markets much more easily and directly, people could misunderstand the value of the advisor," she warned. "I believe the best outcomes are achieved by the interaction of human and technology elements."

D'Auria noted that what many people think they need to hire an advisor for — such as pursuing excess returns over an index, for example — are not particularly good reasons to work with an advisor.

"It's not about beating the market and getting an edge like that," D'Auria said. "Working with a wealth advisor is about planning, having goals and assessing where you are in relation to your goals. The advisor helps you stay disciplined via education and by working with you in a personalized way. That's not going to change."

Pictured: Dana D'Auria

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