Family Office
Real wealth managers make more than "generalists"

Two times more, according to a Dow Jones-sponsored study by CEG
Worldwide. "Real" wealth managers blow "traditional" financial
advisors out of the water in terms of client assets and income,
according to a new study sponsored by Dow Jones.
On average, advisors with rigorously consultative approaches --
backed by repeatable and scalable processes -- and who make a
point of nurturing client relationships control twice the client
assets and pull in three times as much in annual income as
"investment generalists."
Substance
"A defined process and a high level of client communication
differentiate the highly successful group of wealth managers,"
says Simon Alterman, head of strategy and business development at
Dow Jones' Enterprise Media group. "By understanding their
clients' their investment and personal interests, wealth managers
provide the customized service clients require. As a result,
[their clients] entrust them with a larger percentage of their
assets and provide more referrals for new high-net-worth
clients."
The study Best Practices of Elite Advisors: The Wealth
Management Edge, says that wealth managers control an average
of $645 million in client assets; generalists manage $308
million. Wealth managers have an average net annual income of
$881,000; generalists take home $279,000 on average.
Only 6.6% of the financial advisors surveyed use the consultative
approach that Dow Jones says defines a wealth manager; no
less than 42.5% of those the media company view as investment
generalists described themselves as wealth managers.
"For all of the talk and promotion focused on wealth management,
we found that only a small portion of the financial-advisory
industry is practicing true wealth management," says John Bowen,
CEO of CEG Worldwide, which conducted the survey underlying the
Dow Jones study. "But for those who do, the benefits are
tremendous."
For the study, CEG polled nearly 2,100 U.S.-based financial
advisors with at least $50 million in assets under administration
and five years of experience.
The comparatively small number of "wealth managers" polled
contact their top clients three times more frequently than their
generalist counterparts -- on average 15.4 times a year. In
addition, 87.7% of wealth managers cite client referrals and
81.9% cite professional referrals as sources for new clients
compared with 78.9% and 26.2%, respectively, for investment
generalists. Findings from wealth-management practitioners show
that 85.5% of them engage in a formal review process with
clients, 81.9% provide clients with formal plans and 76.8%
provide clients with written analyses of their situations.
You can get a copy of the study with this online form.
-FWR
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