Technology
Voice-Driven Tech Is Wealth Industry Game-Changer

The industry is going to see a big rise in use of voice-controlled technology between now and the end of the decade, a study of five major markets finds.
Voice technology is changing wealth management, with new evidence
showing that 14 per cent of high net worth investors
globally regularly use a smart speaker for their financial
matters, and that share surging to 50 per cent by 2020,
according to a MyPrivateBanking
report.
The Swiss research company's study, “Smart Speakers,
Smarter Wealth Management - How voice technology is changing
wealth management”, is drawn on a survey
of 1,000 affluent and HNW investors in the US, UK,
France, Germany and Switzerland. (The report did not cover Asia,
but given that region is often ahead with digitalisation of
financial services in some ways, the report's findings are likely
to be relevant to this part of the world also.)
The survey shows that the main users of voice-controlled wealth
management are millennials - those aged 18 to 34 - with a 17 per
cent usage; respondents from the wealthiest segment with more
than $1 million of investable assets (21 per cent), women (16 per
cent) and respondents from the UK, being the country that shows
the highest usage rate (23 per cent) of the five countries
covered in the study. The researchers expect that the
market for voice-controlled financial services will grow
substantially, because of increasing market penetration and more
forms of devices as well as improved technology and client
acceptance of such channels.
Additionally, the study said banks should start pilot projects
for voice-controlled wealth management. And some banks and
wealth managers have already adopted voice recognition for their
client services. Types of use range from biometric authentication
with in-app voice technology to the first steps towards smart
speaker integration.
The analysts see, among others, the following areas for wealth
managers to develop voice-controlled technological solutions
are:
- Biometric authentication - Voice biometrics is already
implemented in many banking apps, ensuring a high level of
security and maximum convenience for clients;
- Personal financial management - Potential use cases in this
area are numerous – from basic checking of accounts and
transaction histories to analysing the spending behaviour of the
previous month, wealth managers have many possibilities for
adding value for their clients;
- Portfolio management - It is a promising area that can be
covered by voice- controlled technology;
- Information about products and services - People use their
smart speaker to get information about the weather, news,
restaurants, etc. Therefore, using these devices to obtain
information about wealth managers’ products and services is only
one of many possibilities from which clients can
benefit;
- Contact – Asking Amazon’s “Alexa” to call the financial
advisor is an opportunity for triggering an increased
communication level and, ultimately, client loyalty;
- Investing – It eliminates the need to manually enter security
information, search for market updates to make informed
decisions, and tap or click through complicated menus and trade
order entry masks; and
- Advanced AI capabilities - AI capabilities offer a personal
experience, e.g. through a virtual assistant that is capable of
understanding and processing personal financial data to give
valuable recommendations.
“By 2022, there will be more than 70 million households using
smart speakers in the US alone, and these devices are already
playing an important role for wealth management clients”, Steffen
Binder, research director of MyPrivateBanking, said. “Voice
recognition systems like Alexa, Google Home and Apple’s HomePod
are meant to break down the walls between the real and the
digital world. They will wipe away the need for manually
controlled interfaces such as smartphones, desktop computers or
tablets or wearables in the client and wealth manager
relationship.”