Strategy
BREAKFAST BRIEFING: Measuring The Impact Of Technology On Wealth Management
Wealth management industry professionals recently gathered in London to discuss how to deal with the impact of modern technology on the sector, particularly at a time when regulatory costs and challenges continue to mount.
Wealth management industry professionals recently gathered in
London to
discuss how to deal with the impact of modern technology on the
sector,
particularly at a time when regulatory costs and challenges
continue to mount.
Under the title, Mobile Demand
And Regulatory Change - Are You Riding The Modernisation
Wave? the event,
which was held at the Carlton Club in London’s St James’s
district, examined
how the sector is continue to embrace the digital age. Speakers
were Nigel
Tranter, who is chief architect of Europe retail and business
banking at
Barclays Bank; Veronique Ummels, vice president, strategy and
development for
private banking international, ABN AMRO; David Poole, head of
Citi Private
Bank, UK & Ireland, Shaun Crowley, UK sales director, Objectway
Financial
Softwareand, and Cath Tillotson, who is managing partner, Scorpio
Partnership.
The panel was chaired by Stephen Harris, publisher of this
website. Objectway
sponsored the event. (To view full details of speakers, click
here.)
Barclays’ Tranter looked at his company's recent
achievements and goals in terms of digital strategy for the
European retail
mass-affluent customer. His central message was that the digital
strategy is
helping relationship managers better meet customer expectations
and ambitions.
"We started our digital strategy for Europe 12 months
ago as a solid project. Investment is one key path for us and we
set up with a
real simple vision so the vision was - the customer. In retail we
had a
mass-market and a small mass-affluent segment in Europe and we
are now moving
towards broadening and growing our retail mass-affluent customer
segment.
That's the target area for us. As a bank in Europe, we're
building on our brand
and using our digital strategy to continue to do this. We are
seen as a niche,
so that's the direction we're heading...focusing on the more
mass-affluent
customer – contrasting with our Wealth & Investment Management
business,
where the focus in on high-net and ultra high-net worth clients
globally,” he
said.
Tranter said his bank's mass-affluent customers in Europe
demand "superior service and flexibility around multi-channel
offerings.
Our mass-affluent customers are very tech-savvy and very mobile.
They want
customer service that comes to them. We have to target our
offerings and
technology at that”.
He listed Barclays 'success factors' as "removal of
paper and straight-through processing.”.
Looking at the digital landscape in Europe amongst Barclays'
competitors, he noted: "One Spanish bank had a video service
capability
online which increased their product sales by 25 per cent almost
overnight.
Another in Portugal launched an innovative asset management
trading platform
that was an immediate success. One bank in France had a
personalised digital
assistant that appears to help you on any customer journey you
want.”
"In terms of digital strategy for the customer, this is
a revamping of our online channels. It entailed a complete
re-branding, with a
partner, in Europe,” he said.
“We've developed a true multi-channel strategy where we can
start and stop a customer interaction in any channel and the
context of that
conversation will flow between channels. So whether they're
coming through the
self-service, whether it's through a tablet, whether it's through
a smart
phone...you could actually go into a branch and have a one-to-one
with the
relationship manager (RM). The context moves, so it's really and
truly multi-channel,”
he added.
He was enthusiastic about the application of surveillance
techniques to ordinary banking: "In Wealth & Investment
Management, we
use biometric signatures and enrol customers when they call in.
All of this happens in the background in a
non-obtrusive way and from a customer standpoint, is simply a
conversation
between them and their RM. We only
require between 40-60 seconds of customer speech to complete the
enrolment.
"Next time a call comes in, it automatically recognises
the biometric voice and who the customer is. So there is no IVR
(interactive
voice response)– it just goes straight to the conversation with
the customer.
And we've driven those kind of validations and authentications
with our
security teams to make sure that we don't breach any compliance
or regulatory
requirements that we have to be very mindful of. The journey for
the customer
is a very easy interaction,” he added.
Expectations
The panellists were asked how HNW clients' expectations are
changing in relation to mobile communications and banking.
“Because many clients are in their 60s, there is often an
assumption that a digital strategy is not relevant to them. But I
think we
really need to ask if senior managers know what it is that their
clients want,”
Scorpio’s Tillotson said.
“We know because we research what high net worth clients
around the world are looking for from their wealth manager. Last
year, we
focused our Futurewealth research exclusively on digital wealth
management and
what is absolutely clear is that the richer clients are, the more
digitally
engaged they are, “she continued. “They can afford the
technology. They
play with the technology. They are up to speed with what they can
do with it
and what they can't do. If they can't do it with a private bank,
they'll do it
with a premier bank. You just have to remember that HNWs are
early adopters of
all technologies,” she said.
“From a private bank’s perspective there is a cost
implication, because delivering a high level of wealth management
service
digitally can mean a significant investment different channels.
And therefore
it is absolutely crucial that we know what our clients want
before we make that
investment,” she said.
Crowley
spoke about how “silver surfers” know how to use applications:
"It's not
just the younger generation who are engaging digitally. The older
generation
are among the largest up-takers of iPads and it's not because
they're
tech-savvy, it's because they don't need to be tech-savvy.
They've got time on
their hands and they're on Facebook."
Poole agreed, noting that
private banks and retail banks had to follow different models
when it came to
technology. "We're not 2,500 to 1, we're 25 to 1. It [mobile
banking]
absolutely needs to be a core strategy. The silver surfers are
absolutely...on
the ball. I think that's the way the world is going," he said.
Veronique Ummels added weight to the argument that HNWs were
“tech-savvy” by mentioning a client who "skipped the online phase
and
moved on directly from the personal contact to mobile”. There was
no
indication, however, that relationship managers or RMs were in
any danger of
being replaced digitally.
"We've found that they [the clients] want to speak to
the RM rather than take a do-it-yourself approach,” she said.
The elephant in the
room
Harris asked whether “the elephant in the room the fact that
technological advance at some point will replace RMs totally?"
The answer was a resounding 'no'. Tranter called it
"the Arnold Schwarzenegger Terminator scenario”.
Tillotoson said: "What
if you step onto an aircraft? The aircraft may be
able fly on autopilot, but would you step onto an aircraft that
didn’t have a pilot at all? In a wealth
management relationship, you're putting your life and your wealth
into someone
else's hands. While the technology is there,
we're still reliant on trust between two human beings and that
cannot be – yet
– a virtual experience."
Citi’s Poole thought that
the retail market might sustain automatic advice, but not the
wealth market.
"We're a long way from that. It's too complex. We can't
have a robo-advisor yet, but we can have a hybrid model, pushing
information to
the HNW and allowing him to do his own research within the
framework that you
set up,” he said.