WM Market Reports
Talent Battle Vexes Family Offices, Many Lack NextGen Succession Plans

A study of family offices – almost of all of which are North American – sheds light on their hopes, fears and situations, whether on costs, compensation, the fight for talent, or cybersecurity and operational risks.
Family offices are highly focused on winning and keeping talent,
with 70 per cent of them struggling to acquire people and almost
two-thirds (65 per cent) concerned about holding on to talent.
And there’s a wide variation in the relative costs burdens of
small and large family offices, a new study shows.
The results come from the inaugural Family Office Operational
Excellence Report, developed by AITi Tiedemann
Global, the multi-family office, in partnership with
Campden Wealth.
In broad terms, the findings on talent chime with those of other
organisations, such as Botoff Consulting,
a US-based business, which issued a study earlier
this year in conjunction with Somers
Partnership, a UK executive search firm.
Yesterday’s report, meanwhile, took responses from 98 family
offices, primarily based in North America, managing an average of
$1.4 billion in assets. That average masks a wide range: the
asset figures range from less than $150 million assets in some
cases to more than $10 billion.
Among other areas, the study said that family offices are behind
on tech adoption. While all family offices polled have made major
investments in their tech stack, only a quarter (26 per cent)
claim to have leading-edge solutions for investing and
operations. (To see a related article on fintech and family
offices, see
this report here following this news service's fintech
event in New York.)
Nearly half of family offices don’t have a plan in place for the
next generation, the study found. While the majority of families
want their family office to persist for many generations to come,
only just over half of them (57 per cent) have succession plans
in place and many of these are incomplete, not documented and
only informally discussed and agreed on.
This finding suggests that for all the talk about
intergenerational wealth transfer, planning and the need to get
prepared, there’s a gap between talk and action.
On costs – even more evident as a concern as inflation rose
post-Covid-19 – the report noted that investment management
accounts form about half of the total costs for small family
offices.
Average operational costs (excluding investment-related fees paid
to third-party managers) of family offices participating in the
survey is $5.2 million. But this figure disguises a very broad
range running from $0.7 million to $24 million. Small family
offices have, on average, costs of around $1 million. For large
family offices, the ratio of costs to AuM averages 0.2 per cent
compared with 0.7 per cent for the midsize group and 0.6 per
cent for the small cohort.
Compensation
The range of costs also varies for compensation, depending on the
size of a family office, the study showed.
“Interestingly, compensation levels for C-level executives are
significantly lower than those offered by large family offices
for the same roles – average compensation for a chief investment
officer is $337,000 for small vs $821,000 for large family
offices,” it said. “For large family offices, investment
management accounts form around a quarter of total costs,
allowing them to build out administrative functions, governance
and family services.”
Staying on the costs theme, the report noted that large family
offices benefit from economies of scale, with total costs
averaging 0.2 per cent of assets under management compared
with 0.6 per cent for their smaller peers.
(The dynamics of scale and efficiency will not be lost on AlTi
Tiedemann Global, which itself is the product of a big
multi-family office merger, involving a US and UK business, more
than a year ago. It has about $70 billion in AuM. To take another
case, Stonehage, an MFO, merged in 2014 with Fleming Family &
Partners, to create the London-based Stonehage Fleming
organisation which has an international footprint, and £29
billion ($36.4 billion) in AuM.
Operations, outsourcing and more
In other details, the report said that most employees and family
members who work in their family office are satisfied with
operations. But satisfaction levels are “noticeably higher” among
employees than family members. Family members working in a large
family office (AuM greater than $1 billion) are much more likely
to be satisfied than those working in a small family office (AuM
less than $250 million) where dissatisfaction levels are
highest.
On financial reporting, the study suggests that the vast majority
– 80 per cent – of family offices are satisfied with
their ability to get data to decide action rapidly, but about 40
per cent of them are concerned about still relying on
spreadsheets and pulling together data manually.
The report said it was “encouraging” that more than two-thirds of
family offices have acted to cut operational risks, for example
making use of back-up servers, introducing dual
authorisation of payments and controlling remote-access working.
Even so, there is a wide gap between small and large family
offices. Most of the larger offices have adopted five or more of
the eight risk reduction strategies that were presented to them
by the authors of the report. But the majority of small family
offices have adopted just four or fewer of such
measures.
The report said that cybersecurity is the operational risk that
bothers family offices the most.
However, only 43 per cent of them are confident or extremely
confident of their ability to prevent cyber attacks causing
serious damage, leaving the majority worried and uncertain.
Editor’s note: The business of producing reports and surveys
about family offices is becoming crowded, potentially leading to
a law of diminishing returns in their impact. By our reckoning,
the following reports exist.
-- UBS Global Family Office Report;
-- BlackRock Global Family Office Survey;
-- Citi Report – Direct Investment by Family Offices;
-- Dentons Family Office Direct Investing Report;
-- Goldman Sachs Family Office Survey;
-- North America Family Office Report – RBC (& Camden);
-- Morgan Stanley Single Family Office Best Practice;
-- PwC Family Office Deals Study;
-- The Global State of Family Offices – Cap Gemini;
-- KPMG/Agreus;
-- Botoff Consulting/Somers Partnership;
-- Ocorian;
-- AITi Tiedemann/Campden.