WM Market Reports
New Research: An Update On Family Office Efficiency In Accounting, Investment Analysis
This news service is joining forces again with FundCount to examine how technology is making family offices' work processes more efficient and effective.
This publication has proudly partnered once again with FundCount to offer the
industry an update on family offices’ progress in efficiency in
their accounting and investment analysis work.
Back in 2019, Family Wealth Report/WealthBriefing and
FundCount conducted a ground-breaking study of family office
efficiency in accounting and investment analysis. Our 2022 update
indicates that a great many challenges remain – and
that the manual workload facing institutions may have actually
worsened quite significantly where technology, not designed
specifically for the sector, is still in place.
Family Office Efficiency in Accounting and Investment
Analysis: Industry Update is based on surveys and
wide-ranging interviews with professionals from institutions
which, in over half of instances, represent assets under
management in excess of $1 billion. Despite this, 53 per
cent of respondents use non-specialist general ledger
accounting software, alongside 54 per cent using generalist
tools for partnership/investor accounting.
The toll this is taking is clear. On average, the family office
professionals who participated in this year’s survey said that
they believe 42 per cent of the 40-hour week is wasted
on manual processes across all personnel, whereas previously
respondents had estimated that only a fifth of the week’s working
hours were being expended in this way.
As so many firms struggle with tools that are not designed for
the nuances of family office business, those complexities have
continued to compound. Almost a quarter (22 per cent) of
institutions that are serving just one family have over 26 legal
entities in play. For multi-family offices, the challenge is
obviously very much larger and commensurate with client numbers,
with more than 1,000 entities across 100 families being far from
unusual among the biggest institutions we spoke to.
Meanwhile, as investors seek ways to achieve greater
diversification and returns, investment tastes continue to trend
toward alternatives. Family offices are piling into private
equity or hedge funds, direct investments and digital assets
– with allocations of 5 per cent to the latter now
seeming to be very much the norm. The challenges of accounting
for and reporting on non-traditional assets with software not
designed for the task will grow dramatically, our contributors
have confirmed.
Our study also explored the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
family offices are using to ensure best response to clients; what
the key strengths and weaknesses of their most critical systems
are; and what their one “wish list” improvement would be. All in
all, this report represents an invaluable benchmark for the
sector and an exciting indicator of where technological advances
will be taking the sector in the years to come.
Family Office Efficiency in Accounting and Investment
Analysis: Industry Update is available for download
now.
Get your complimentary copy here.