Greg Moss, Chartered Financial Planner, discusses the rise of technology in the financial industry
You can’t pick up an industry publication without being told professional services are in their death throes and that millennials – in those brief gaps between eating smashed avocados and killing the napkin industry – are barricading themselves in their bedrooms against waves of attacks by sinister men in charcoal suits representing traditional advice channels.
Conventional wisdom would have it that young people don’t want face-to-face advice of the crusty old kind their forebears enjoyed, be it from financial planners, private client lawyers or accountants, and even if they did they wouldn’t want to pay for it. Instead they want everything on an app, on a watch, for free, with haptics.
Well, as anyone decent in the financial planning industry knows, that’s a load of old smashed avocado. The real problem is that the industry as a whole, in its failure to articulate where it adds value for clients, and its sharp practices, has lazily allowed a generation of people who desperately need (and, in my experience, want) proper, high touch advice on their finances (and tax and legals), from real people, to get away with thinking it isn’t for them.
Robo shmobo
Here’s the thing. Advisers of all stripes get it wrong when they think about technology as the enemy of traditional face-to-face advice. Automation and systemisation are fantastic tools in the hands of the right adviser. Cashflow modelling software allows some incredible work to be done on the planning side and clients love it. Platforms and smart beta portfolios have added sophistication on the product side while driving costs down and helping investors get more of what they deserve from the markets. Advisers, meanwhile, can offer repeatable, evidence-based product solutions which mesh with and support all the good work they do on the strategic planning.
So what’s wrong with all that? What’s wrong is that so many firms and advisers are still stuck trying to operate a busted, old skool proposition where all the value is added by products and the picking of products. Millennials, like right-minded people of any generation, can see that under this model advisers exist as a kind of inconvenient and costly add on, a pile of misfiring wetware in the corner of your dining room slurping its tea, or stapling ten pound notes to trust deeds in dark corners of 1960s office blocks.
Wake up and smell the cold brew
The professional services industry’s dirty secret is that it loves wasted time. Inefficiency means busy people, which means more ‘utilisation’ and less time for practitioners to consider the profound pointlessness of their existence.
Meanwhile, good advisers, who get it, are embracing technology on the basis that the less time they spend on product selection, on nuts and bolts portfolio administration, the more time they get to spend on the stuff that really adds value.
Like, actual face-to-face time with actual clients. To stay close to the stories that should be steering the strategy. And not just at the beginning of the process, because it changes the whole way along. To work on and update the strategy together, using their skills and experience and the benefit of being a step away from the decisions to bring invaluable impartiality to the table. To coach through market turbulence, helping clients avoid the behavioural finance tics and irrational decisions that can act as a profound drag on long term investment performance. To listen to clients when they explain what they actually want, rather than trying to tell them, so that firms can innovate and evolve propositions to fit the way new generations make sense of the world.
Selfie stick
So back to millennials and whether they want or need advice, where the evidence so often cuts across the assumptions: