Compliance
EXCLUSIVE: International Perspectives On Client Onboarding: Takeaways From Thought-Leadership Roadshow - Part 1

Here we present reflections from the recently issued WealthBriefing research report on onboarding - produced in conjunction with Appway, SIX Financial Information and KPMG.
WealthBriefing recently partnered with Appway, KPMG and SIX
Financial Information to produce a wide-ranging research report
on client onboarding trends in wealth management, which was
accompanied by an international roadshow of thought-leadership
events. This is the first part of a feature pulling together key
insights which emerged from this fascinating project.
The research reports produced by WealthBriefing cover a
wide range of the strategic and operational issues wealth
managers face. However, they all share the same broad aim: to
gauge where the industry currently stands and to signpost where
it should be heading by gathering best practice insights from
senior executives and consultants at leading firms
internationally.
Synthesising these views, along with those of front-line
professionals, is always a fascinating task, and particularly so
when the subject is as wide-ranging and topical as client
onboarding. We pride ourselves on providing the industry with
research that is both broad and deep, and on shining a light onto
previously under-investigated areas. As such, it very quickly
became apparent that client onboarding was an ideal candidate for
a new piece of in-depth research.
In many ways, the topic of improving client onboarding captures
the zeitgeist of the wealth management industry, since it is
where some of its most pressing concerns intersect. Given the
intense scrutiny institutions are being subjected to by
regulators internationally, demonstrating immaculate compliance
is clearly top priority for all firms. At the same time, wealth
managers are under pressure to deliver a really slick client
experience during onboarding. They need to differentiate
themselves by showing that they have put real thought into making
a notoriously “sticky” process go as smoothly as possible. More
broadly, wealth managers need to ensure they can stand up to
service comparisons both in and outside of the financial services
sector. And, as if that wasn’t enough, wealth managers then need
to serve both these masters as efficiently and cost-effectively
as possible to protect their profitability in what continue to be
straitened times for many.
Competing priorities
Even at first glance, it is clear that there are huge inherent
tensions within the onboarding piece. On the one hand wealth
managers need to onboard clients as quickly and painlessly as
possible, but on the other they must be absolute certain of
fulfilling the letter of the law on a vast range of compliance
requirements at the national, regional and supra-national level.
Furthermore, these requirements are increasing all the time.
Witness, for example, the recent moves towards a “mini-FATCA”
being made by the UK tax authorities, adding even further to what
could fairly be described as an alphabet soup of new rules to
have hit the sector in recent years.
Yet while mitigating business risk has to be wealth managers’
absolute priority, most firms will also be feeling an urgent need
to stem spiralling compliance costs: PwC has predicted that
compliance is going to account for 7 per cent of annual wealth
management revenues globally by next year. However, on the
side-lines of the events which formed the international client
onboarding roadshow, senior executives were often very frank in
telling us that at their firm compliance costs were accounting
for a far greater proportion of revenues – to quite a shocking
degree in some cases.
With new regulations coming thick and fast, even just keeping on
top of the compliance requirements for each market and client
segment a firm operates is a significant task. It is little
wonder that compliance is starting to look like a dark hole for
some firms, siphoning off ever-greater amounts of money, time and
energy. Coping with the compliance burden is undoubtedly a big
distraction from wider strategic efforts at many wealth managers
today, and a significant bar to innovation.
Top of the “to do” list
Many of the executives we spoke to, both in producing the report
and during the roadshow events, shared the view that client
onboarding is really the last piece of the puzzle when it comes
to what we might call the digitisation of wealth management.
Client onboarding is a lower volume process than others and it
seems to have been the case that in the past management teams saw
better candidates for automation and straight-through processing
elsewhere in their businesses. While there was lower-hanging
fruit, and a less pressing need to make enhancements, onboarding
just wasn’t a priority for investment, it seems.
Attitudes appear to be changing quite rapidly now, however. While
enhancing onboarding still seems to be very much on the “to do
list” of the industry generally, during the roadshow we
encountered executives from firms in the UK, the US and in
Switzerland who have earmarked serious budgets for investment
into onboarding. Indeed, we heard that a number of firms – some
top five international names and other smaller boutiques – had
already ploughed very significant resources into completely
revamping their onboarding processes.
Digging deeper into the business case arguments which had got
each of these institutions over the line revealed an interesting
picture. While risk mitigation and cost control were, of course,
usually mentioned in the first breath, the potential for enhanced
onboarding to act as a differentiator was never far behind in
these conversations. This recognition that wealth managers can
stand out from their peers by developing truly modern onboarding
processes - and tackling common pain-points for clients head-on –
marks a real sea-change in attitudes, we believe.
Potential to differentiate
Even quite recently, onboarding was little appreciated as a
front-office differentiator. In a 2011 study, Aite Group found
that only around a quarter of US wealth managers regarded
onboarding as a competitive differentiator, with the vast
majority instead seeing it as a back-office function which needs
to be cost-contained. While cost control is still clearly a
primary motivator to put more automation and integration in
place, the picture revealed by our research efforts suggests
attitudes are shifting towards the “softer” side of onboarding
and how it really can create “wow” moments for clients.
While carrying out primary research for our report, and
throughout the roadshow, we asked a wide variety of senior
executives what they would mostly be looking to achieve through
enhancing their onboarding systems and processes. Cutting costs,
reducing the number of staff involved, taking on assets faster
and being able to adapt to new regulations more quickly were all
there as options and figured highly in the debates. Yet, by a
quite a wide margin, the most popular option was boosting
referrals by providing a better client experience – and it is
easy to see why from the survey results.
Some 54 per cent of the participants in our study believe the
extended questioning and evidencing necessary today has
negatively impacted the client experience during onboarding; a
similar proportion believe the additional regulations which have
come in over the past five years have significantly slowed
conversion times. Tackling a process which is slow and entails
increasing amounts of “back and forth” between client and
institution, seems to be an ideal way for wealth manager to
showcase their commitment to an excellent client experience - and
to win those all-important referrals by making clients feel sure
their friend or colleague would have a great first experience of
the institution too.
In the past, the business case for improving onboarding processes
and systems may have been somewhat obscure. Now that wealth
managers are simultaneously chasing the highest standards of risk
management, operational efficiency and client service, we see the
argument for improving onboarding becoming ever stronger for all
manner of firms. The executives who were able to tell
WealthBriefing about their own firms’ onboarding overhauls all
had powerful statistics around cost and time savings at hand.
Most striking, however, was the sense that improving onboarding
systems and processes had driven through all manner of other
positive changes, from fostering greater collaboration between
RMs and compliance through to forcing firms to rethink their use
of client data. It would seem that an onboarding overhaul is a
real opportunity for wealth managers to get their houses in order
and tackle several weak points at once.
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Round Table
On 24 October 2014, leading industry experts met at Vestra Wealth's offices in the City of London to discuss the findings of this exciting new research report and to discuss the many challenges onboarding has for both the advisor and the client.
In Cooperation with: