Strategy
GUEST ARTICLE: Why Investment Managers Need To Act Like Content Publishers

Wealth managers must consider new ways to win clients, retain those already with the business and improve the bottom line. One way is to start thinking like content publishers.
The following article is by Mark Trousdale, who is executive
vice president and chief marketing officer at InvestCloud, a digital
platform for wealth managers, family offices, private banks and
financial institutions. Trousdale has been with that company
since 2012. In this item, he discusses the need for investment
managers to become content publishers in their own right, and
considers the effect this will have on the bottom line. As with
other contributed articles, the editors at this news service are
pleased to share insights with readers; they don't endorse all
views of outside contributors and invite readers to respond.
Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
In the US alone, there is $100 trillion at stake for investment
managers.
With the oldest of the boomer generation now in their 70s, wealth
is undergoing a transfer between generations, falling to their
generation X and millennial descendants. How wealth managers will
deal with this long-term trend will determine which succeed and
which are left behind.
The danger for managers is in treating these clients who are
inheriting assets in the same way they are used to working.
Emails, quarterly reports and meetings over lunch simply will not
cut it with the next tech-savvy generation used to on-demand
services. Nearly 85 per cent of ultra-high net worth individuals
are already using three or more digital channels.
Digital has changed the game. Your customers will expect instant
updates and communications. Every other aspect of their lives is
now run in real-time, from their food delivery and shopping
orders to how they communicate with peers. It is not just the
“how” - their interests and lifestyle are also radically
different from their parents.
Investment managers need to play by these emergent asset owners’
rules. They need to engage in different ways to ensure they can
win new clients, retain those already with the business and
improve the bottom line by selling new plans. One way is to start
thinking like content publishers.
Not just nice to have
Everyone knows content is king. It is what gets attention, and
makes people engage. Many consumer brands have already adopted
this thinking through content marketing - creating videos,
articles or other pieces of content to draw audiences in. But
content serves a dual purpose. Besides bringing in audiences, it
allows you to align your brand to a specific demographic and its
values.
In an industry where many services are almost identical, content
provides a key differentiator. Financial services providers,
especially retail banks, have made progress in using content to
boost engagement, hiring teams of journalists and filling pages
full of stories.
This is also applicable for investment managers. By appealing to
the unique needs of the client, it demonstrates that the manager
understands the client and his or her lifestyle - helping to
differentiate their firm from the competition.
With only a third of UHNIs saying that they would recommend their
investment manager, it is crucial to put these tools in place to
ensure greater customer loyalty. It is no longer just a “nice to
have” function.
Unique tailoring
Many investment managers don’t have the spare capital to invest
in pulling together a large team of journalists or writers to
generate unique content. The good news is that they don’t have
to.
Technology can provide the functionality that enables investment
managers to generate tailored content without requiring much
input from managers. For this to happen, there are two things
investment managers need to put in place - an online platform and
true, accurate, centralized data.
The platform will be a hub for the client - where they go to view
their wealth and interact with the business. Therefore, the
online platform needs to be an extension of the firm’s brand,
creating a seamless experience from the website and where
applicable from the brick-and-mortar experience.
This platform needs to be applicable to clients’ lifestyles. It
should be available any time, from any place and on any device.
It also needs to be tailored with functions directly applicable
to the client. News and content is one such function, but this
needs to be combined with other capabilities such as real-time
investment data, report generation, insight and
recommendations.
To provide all this, investment managers need to be able to plug
all their data through to the platform. Investment managers
already have access to a vast amount of data, but it is often
locked away in various spreadsheets and cannot communicate with
other pieces of information. Instead, data needs to be
centralized in one place to enable a single version of the
integrated truth (SVOTIT).
This means that portfolio information can interact with market
data and other assets such as property, giving clients and
managers a complete picture of wealth.
Establishing a digital warehouse also allows investment managers
to automate content. For example, a client may have investments
in automotive companies. The digital warehouse can then pull
through specific content from third-party news websites that
relates directly to this – such as stock results for Ford or the
latest development news from Tesla. This lets clients get the
latest news they want without ever having to leave the online
platform.
This type of tailored content means that the investment manager’s
website can become the first port-of-call when a client is after
information. But what does this mean for the bottom line?
Selling up
More and more clients are looking at non-traditional portfolio
setups. Goals-based planning, alongside impact or purpose-driven
investing, has become very popular with the latest generation of
investors. Within this generation, portfolios are also
increasingly constructed around interests.
This is evidenced by the uptake of such personalized investing
among robo-advisors, which through technology-driven platforms
and automation, can cater to these types of investments. But the
ability to service this need only solves half the problem
- managers need to be able to identify the need.
This is where content comes in to its own as a sales tool. By
linking the digital platform to an integrated CRM system,
advisors and managers can track which content the client views
and for how long. This provides unparalleled insight into the
client’s interests, enabling managers to predict needs and help
them to “up-sell” other services and plans.
Content creates new levels of engagement between the manager and
client, and aides in inspiring loyalty. It allows clients to
think and interact more about their wealth, and for managers to
sell new strategies and obtain greater insight. For those
investment managers who act like content publishers, the benefits
are clear.