Family Office
Talent, Pay And Work: Family Offices Under Microscope
The family offices study was based on responses from 347 firms around the world.
Single and multi-family office executives and staff based in the
Middle East and Europe enjoyed the largest percentage gains in
salary and bonuses in the past 12 months. And “hybrid” working
patterns that were prompted by the pandemic remain in place –
albeit with some wrinkles – a study shows.
SFOs and MFOs continue to wrestle with acquiring top-notch
talent from a limited pool and demands for a more flexible
working environment. These are among takeaways from Botoff Consulting
in its 2024 Compensation and Talent Planning Report.
Producers of the report collaborated with Linda Mack, of Mack
International, and Mark Somers, of the Somers
Partnership. The study was based on responses from 347 firms.
The lion’s share of responses (75 per cent) were from the
Americas (mostly the US, but also those from Canada, Mexico,
Central America, and South America); Europe (22 per cent),
Asia-Pacific and Middle East (both 3 per cent).
There is a spread in bonuses for executives, depending on
the region. For example, 80 per cent of Asia-Pacific family
office executives had or are about to get a higher bonus; 67 per
cent of those in the Middle East were paid a higher bonus. For
the US and Europe, the figures are 26 per cent and 32 per cent,
respectively.
Executive salaries in family offices rose strongest in
Asia-Pacific – surging 50 per cent over the past 12 months, with
Middle East organisations in second place (40 per cent); Europe
up by 17 per cent and the US rising 15 per cent. Among staff in
family offices, the Middle East logged the largest rises for
salaries, rising 20 per cent; APAC was 17 per cent; Europe up 11
per cent and the US was up 16 per cent.
Looking forward, 60 per cent of Asia-Pacific family offices
expect to boost executive salaries by 5 per cent or more, while
40 per cent of Middle East respondents aim to do so. Some 58 per
cent of European family offices expect to make such a change.
These findings show how the family office sector is rising fast
in Asia and the Middle East on the back of new wealth and a need
for structures to handle generational wealth transfer. Singapore,
Hong Kong, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi, for example, are competing as
family offices/wealth management hubs, taking the fight to
traditional centres such as Switzerland.
Home or office?
In Europe, 73 per cent of organisations said staff work in an
office at least three days a week; in the Americas (mostly the
US), the figure is 76 per cent, and the Middle East and
Asia-Pacific, 75 per cent go for a hybrid approach of in-office
and work-from-home, and 25 per cent compel people to work in an
office.
Family offices know they must set attractive working conditions
if they want to get the best talent, Mark Somers (mentioned
above), told this news service.
“A point to consider is that family offices don’t have brands;
they are discreet, often rather nebulous organisations –
candidates will know little to nothing about them before we fully
brief them after signing an NDA. To differentiate
themselves in this competitive family office talent market,
we help family offices think about and articulate thoughtful
working conditions. This is their ‘employer value proposition –
EVP',” Somers said.
An important finding from the report was that just under half of
family offices said they faced challenges recruiting staff. In
today’s industry, “talent is very international,” Somers
said. Another concern for family offices is the location of
talent and the challenge of finding people in specific regions of
countries – a talent and geographical challenge requiring a
specialised retained search firm. Somers gave the case of his
firm concurrently working for two family office mandates, one
based in Monaco and the other in the West Midlands.
Regional details
In other details, the report showed that in the Americas, 48 per
cent of family offices raised executives’ salaries by 5 per cent
or more; 41 per cent said staff received pay rises. Some 27 per
cent said bonuses would be higher in 2024 than a year ago;
55 per cent reported no significant changes. In Europe, 58 per
cent reported executive pay rises of 5 per cent or more. Some 54
per cent of European executives said they expected pay rises to
be comparable with those in 2023.
Within Asia-Pacific, 60 per cent of family office executives
reported pay hikes of 5 per cent or more; the same share of staff
in family offices gave the same result. In the Middle East, 40
per cent of executives said there were 5+ per cent pay hikes,
with the same figure applying to staff.
Elsewhere, 36 per cent of respondents in the Americas said they
have faced challenges in hiring staff; in Europe, the result is
45 per cent; in Asia and Middle East, the result is also 45 per
cent.