Practice Strategies
FWR Reports: Lessons From The Pandemic

This news service talks to some of the top people in North America’s wealth sector about what COVID-19 has changed in the industry, what lessons should be learned and how advisors should adapt. We capture their views in a video presentation.
A host of prominent figures in the North American wealth
management industry, well known to many of our readers, comment
about lessons that must be learned from the COVID-19
pandemic.
The coronavirus crisis has massively accelerated the
digitalization of wealth management, changed how clients and
advisors interact, and forced businesses to reconsider their
value propositions.
Family Wealth Report gathered industry figures to
comment on video about these issues, and we hope readers agree
that this is a valuable overview of the territory.
It is introduced by Adriana Zalucka, business development director at Family Wealth Report.
Speakers in the video are Joe Calabrese, national head of
investment, Fiduciary and Banking Services at Key Private
Bank;
Michael Zeuner, managing partner at WE Family Offices;
Joseph W Reilly Jr, CEO and founder of Circulus Group;
Chris Martinez, managing director, Oakbrook Solutions;
Steve Prostano, partner, head of Family Advisory Services at PKF
O'Connor Davies, LLP;
Tania Neild, CTO, owner, at InfoGrate;
Doug Fritz, president and founder, F2 Strategy; and
Charles Lowenhaupt, chairman & partner, Lowenhaupt &
Chasnoff.
Additionally, here are comments from a number of other senior
figures in text form about the same topic:
Buzz Bray, principal, Bray Executive
Search
The industry will certainly recover, but probably not 100 per
cent until after a vaccine [is discovered].
Leadership has been tested in new ways, from day-to-day
management to financial administration, client experience, and
technology. Some firms will do better during this time than
others and that will usually be through the strength of their
leadership talent. It will be interesting to find out what
changes and improvements will have been made as a result of all
this, which we may not know fully for at least a couple of
years.
Martha Pomerantz, partner, investment portfolio manager,
Evercore Wealth Management
Wealth managers need to keep close to their clients, in good
times and in bad. Everything we’ve learned in this pandemic has
only reinforced that view. We help our clients best by assessing
their goals and their risk tolerance in the context of family and
business circumstances (such as planning for a blended family or
a concentrated stock position), incorporating our best thinking
on the investment outlook - and setting their asset allocation
accordingly. It doesn’t stop there. We stay close to our clients,
through all market conditions, to keep them on track to meet
their goals.
We have always encouraged our clients to keep sufficient cash and
high quality short-duration fixed income investments to remain
confident investors in assets with longer-term horizons,
including growth stocks and illiquid investments. And we
rebalance, while remaining mindful that that most high net worth
investors, including those in retirement, have long-term horizons
that may extend to future generations. This approach has served
our clients well.
It's worth noting that active management will likely play a
bigger role at this juncture, with certain stocks and industries
in a better position to take advantage of changing dynamics.
Susan Winer, chief operating officer, Strategic
Philanthropy.
This is a complicated time for everyone - the rollercoaster
economy globally, the lack of consistent policy to contain the
pandemic, and systemic racism being challenged vigorously all
contribute to creating a new normal that is both challenging and
requiring new tools and resources to address. Whether an advisor
or a client, a family or their family office, we are all, for the
most part, working virtually which requires a new set of skills:
the ability to exude warmth and professionalism and interest over
video or a phone, finding ways to remain connected when everyone
we’re connecting with is distracted by being at home; children,
the house, and multiple priorities.
This is a steep learning curve for many advisors who are used to
more traditional environments and ways to communicate.
Knowing that it’s not going to necessarily go back to the
way it was at the beginning of the year means settling into the
new way of doing business. I think it is harder for older
advisors who may not be as computer savvy and who have relied on
business lunches or breakfasts or sitting behind their desk to
establish and control the narrative with clients.
I think we are all listening more, we’ve had to learn patience
because of the shelter-in-place requirements, we are far more
aware of the heightened anxiety everyone (not just us) is
experiencing about health, money and the future. These are
actually positives and provide new ways to connect with our
clients, our colleagues and our professional circle. This is
actually an incredible opportunity to build new and different
kinds of relationships with clients and peers.
Amanda Anderson, chief administrative officer, Ascent
Private Client Management
The pandemic has put renewed energy for investing in technology
that may future-proof family offices and wealth management firms.
Instead of thinking of recovery, I look at it as renewal. The
industry will not be the same. The pandemic has demonstrated that
in spite of the best business plans and investment strategies,
what the future holds can often be beyond our control. The wealth
management industry may renew itself by becoming more agile in
responding to changes at an ever increasing rate.
I will not diminish the horror that has been bestowed upon our
country in 2020. The more than one hundred thousand lives taken
by the virus and the deaths of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and
Breonna Taylor should not have happened and cannot be forgotten.
We need to do better. To that end, let us take this momentum and
use it as force for good. Our industry can invest a portion of
our resources to making the world a safer, healthier place.
In a few days from now, FWR will also publish a video, with a selection of written comments alongside it, about the qualities this publication’s judges seek from entrants to its annual wealth management awards for North America.