Strategy
INTERVIEW: Citigroup Aims To Enhance Wealth Business With Wharton Training Programme

The US banking giant has told this publication what it intends to achieve with a training programme recently announced with a major business school. The programme starts in China and the US.
Citigroup’s new wealth management education initiative with the
Wharton School is another twist in the story of how some firms in
this sector are trying to raise their talent management game and
do so to win and retain more clients. And significantly, the
programme launched by these institutions kicks off first in
mainland China as well as the US. If you want to make a big
impression, it seems, you need to get the launches done in
Asia.
Enhancing the quality of relationships between client and
relationship manager is one of the chief benefits expected
to come from the programme, Amit Sah, head of retail and cards,
including wealth management, in Citi's EMEA consumer
business, told this publication recently. (The wealth management
business caters to mass affluent and high net worth individuals
- not ultra HNW individuals, who are served by Citi’s
private bank.)
The Citi Wharton Global Wealth Institute aims to provide the
bank’s global advisor community with business and executive
training and an intake of around 500 RMs – around 10-15 per cent
of the total working at Citi – are due to enter the programme,
which lasts for three years, Sah said. The Citi Wharton Global
Wealth Institute’s curriculum will be led by Christopher Geczy,
academic director of the Wharton Wealth Management Initiative.
(See
here for the original story.)
“Wealth management is becoming more complex and it is not only
about product selling now. Many players are exiting the lower end
of the affluent space because of the costs of training
[RMs]….there is a huge investment in people and in doing
business,” Sah said. “Any bank or other institution that wants to
stay in the space has no choice but to train people better.”
“The objective is to produce people who are highly competent and
able to build on relationships with clients; the improvements in
productivity – and revenue generation – are natural benefits that
we will derive as well,” he said.
Net promoter score
Sah did not give out other specific targets for the programme but
said one benefit should be an improvement in customer advocacy of
Citigroup’s wealth offering as measured by the net promoter score
(NPS). Citigroup derives the NPS on a scale of one to 10,
where nine or 10 means the customer is a net promoter for
the bank and between one and six means he or she is a
net detractor; the net figure is arrived at when subtracting
clients’ promoter score from detractor score. In other words, the
hope is that the training work means clients are more likely to
stay with the bank and recommend it to others.
A number of banks have training programmes of different types for
staff (there is a list that can be viewed of various courses
here), with firms such as UBS, Credit Suisse and BNP Paribas,
among others, engaging in such activity.
The shortage of trained RMs, given the rising complexity of
the industry, remains a talking point in wealth management. This
publication has been told on numerous occasions that there is a
need to keep pace with demand for private bankers and other
wealth managers. Consider Asia: Credit Suisse, for example, said
earlier this year that there are an estimated 7 million
millionaires in the region. On the assumption that a banker can
on average handle 35 clients, that would translate into a need to
have 200,000 private bankers. But at the moment there are only
around 10,000 such people.
Citigroup’s Sah said that the investment of time and resources
into RM training and development will not just improve client
relationships, but strengthen employee loyalty to the bank over
the long term. And the association with a renowned business
school such as Wharton doesn’t do any harm either in encouraging
students to think about wealth management as a career.
This publication asked Sah what is the situation with RMs who are
not chosen for the course and whether they might be demotivated.
Sah replied: “The selection of RMs for this programme is on
merit-based criteria which is similar to other merit-based
rewards and recognition programmes. All RMs are familiar with
this underlying philosophy of performance management and
understand that they have an opportunity to improve and join the
select group in future.”