Posts Tagged high net worth clients

Even Online, Keeping It Simple Brings The Clients

Third in a series of advisor perspectives on marketing and technology

Michael Lynch has been courting high-net-worth clients, and now he feels like the campaign has been successful enough to take on a new partner and kick the process into an even higher gear.

Part of the process entailed taking a hard look at his website and ripping it out — more than once. The process took years.

“In 2000, it was a good website,” he tells me. “By 2006, it was old.”

Unfortunately, a year-long redesign process ended in what Lynch calls a “dismal” failure. Then he brought in a client who happened to know something about marketing, only to find out that the new design was too programmatic and too complicated.

Now, he says, 30% to 40% of the more than $12 million in new assets that have come into his firm finds him through the website.

Keep it simple

What he learned from the process is literally simplicity itself.

“On my new site, it’s easy to find stuff,” he explains. “It’s easy for a client to make an appointment for an introductory meeting or financial review. It’s easy for them to start a relationship.”

Advisors tend to think in complicated terms. While that’s fine when you’re crunching market numbers, it can be lethal when you’re explaining your value proposition to a prospect who may be very successful, but doesn’t know much about the industry.

You don’t have to dazzle them with jargon and statistics. And with the wealth of bells and whistles available online, the challenge is making sure you cover the essentials without leaving your prospective clients more dazed than dazzled.

Now, Lynch finds high-net-worth investors flocking to his site via Google searches or NAPFA’s advisor recommendation tool — a great lead generator for members, by the way.

Yes, even HNW clients use the Internet

Lynch has a piece of advice for advisors who say high-net-worth investors are not spending a lot of time online.

“I started my practice in 2001, when that might have been true, but now I’m getting $1 million clients through the website and they love communicating via email,” he says.

“We just did an online meeting for a retired client whose wife can’t travel. Instead of being afraid that older clients don’t use technology, we — and they — see this as a real opportunity.”

The reason the Web works for these clients is not because they’re young and hip. And there’s nothing intrinsically magical in the dot-com format.

Advisors like Lynch are seeing results because the site lets them “touch” a prospect without scheduling a face to face meeting, or even being awake.

“A very narrow way of marketing is one to one,” Lynch tells me. “That’s the best way to market to current clients, but prospects are a different type of relationship that might benefit from the social media broadcast aspect.”

Simplifying relationships as well as the site

Lynch seems confident that his technology can help him hit aggressive goals for 2012: 50% revenue growth.

One last tip there: he’s started charging on all assets, whether they’re actively managed at his firm or held away.

After all, he’s watching those accounts, so he deserves to be compensated for that.

And once his clients appreciate that, they recognize immediately that it makes things simpler — and cheaper — to consolidate their holdings under his umbrella.

Michael Lynch, MBA, is the founder of Lynch Financial Advisors, a privately-held financial, tax and life planning company serving clients throughout California. Lynch Financial Advisors’ client base includes individuals, couples, and small business owners. Lynch Financial Advisors provides comprehensive, fee-only financial planning – taking no commissions from the purchase or sale of products. The firm focuses on a range of clients including those with a negative net-worth of more than $10 million in assets. Lynch Financial Advisors’ philosophy is to help clients understand what is important to them, set reasonable goals, and hold them accountable to achieve their goals.

Cynthia Stephens, contributor, The Trust Advisor.

Permalink: http://thetrustadvisor.com/wealth-tech-news/simple ‎

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Help Wanted: Salesmen Preferred

Looking for a job in the trust industry with a high base salary and lots of perks? Jobs are abundant once again, but product knowledge and sales skills are essential.

The long recession froze hiring budgets throughout the financial industry, but now the trust business is thawing as firms staff up for the growth cycle.  Positions are opening, offers are getting made and compensation is on the rise—as long as you’re the kind of candidate that trust companies are hunting.

“We’re seeing more demand for upper management and sales types, anyone who can drum up business,” says Maggie Cunningham, a partner in Tulsa-based national recruiting firm BancSearch and a specialist in filling trust company jobs.

So far, regional trust companies have been fastest to staff up through the recruiter channel, Cunningham told me.

Saturna Trust, based in Reno, is one such expansion-oriented outfit. President Ken Cain told me that his company is taking on new talent at a pretty fast rate. In the last few months, he hired someone to sell into the philanthropic channel and a new wholesaler to cover the Midwest.

“As we bring in new business, we need new bodies,” he says.

The big boys are staffing up too, but as yet they’ve been hiring through their in-house departments instead of going through recruiters.

Wilmington Trust, in spite of  reporting a loss yesterday in the first quarter this year, remained positive about its wealth management and trust businesses. The firm added a total of 18 new wealth managers to its Atlanta team in the last six months. More hires are on the way as the gigantic trust company looks for opportunities to cross-sell its trust and investment services to high-net-worth clients throughout the Southeast.

Relationships are Everything

Significantly, Wilmington is looking for people who not only know how to crunch the numbers but can manage client relationships. Most of the recruiters I talked to for this story confirm that relationship managers are in and traditionally paperwork-oriented administrators or fiduciary staff are out.

“We’re just not seeing a lot of call for pure trust administration,” Cunningham told me.

While a lot of managers admit that they need to hire administrators, she says, not many are pushing the button.

Instead, they’re betting that better back office technology will help their existing support teams handle more accounts. And they’re routing more of their basic service requests away from trust officers and to front-line support, Cunningham says.

“Some of the larger banks now, if there’s under $3 million in the account, it goes straight to the call center now,” she told me. “Smaller organizations will still assign a trust officer to relatively small accounts, but even there, under $1 million can go to the call center instead.”

Other recruiters agree that you need to be able to do more than run the numbers to get a job in the trust business right now.

“You’ve got to have the interpersonal skills to deal with clients,” David Glaser, president of New York headhunting firm EGC Resources, told me. “There’s just not a real home anymore for somebody that’s just a strong technician like there was years ago.”

Glaser says the way it usually works is that trust companies wait until the rainmakers prove they can front new business, and then they bring in the support. But because the typical trust operation runs lean anyway, that could take awhile.

What People Are Making

In any event, the days when a trust department ran on commissions seem to be over as well. Instead, more managers are offering new trust officers that can bring in business a relatively high base and a performance bonus.

Saturna’s not paying anyone on commission. “We just don’t do it,” says Ken Cain.

As for base and bonus, Glaser estimates that the typical split probably breaks down into 70/30. On a plain vanilla trust officer compensation package, that translates to a base that starts at around $80,000 a year.

That fits the offers Maggie Cunningham is seeing. She says that bank trust departments tend to pay higher salaries in order to keep people aboard through boom and bust. But even trust officers getting jobs at RIA firms are working on salary now—although it’s likely to be a smaller one.

“They’re still in a different type of world because a lot of them got started in the wirehouses and so have that performance-based compensation model in their heads,” she told me.

Packages vary widely depending on where you are. High-growth markets like Nevada are competing harder for relatively scarce talent, but in the Midwest, years of bank mergers have brought trust company compensation down.

“Here in the auto belt, there’s been a real compensation reset,” notes Hunter Judson, who heads a banking-focused recruiting firm based in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

“Other markets are less affected, but in places like Detroit, you’re having people take 20% lower salaries than what they got at their old bank before they got consolidated out,” he told me.

People are settling because even though new jobs are finally opening up again, there’s still a lot of competition for each spot. Cunningham says she’s finally placing people who were laid off seven months ago, and even those who kept their jobs are getting restless.

“There’s a lot of dissatisfaction out there,” she told me. “If bonuses don’t pick up this year, a lot of people will start looking to move if they haven’t already.”

What’s the best advice for these people? Brush up your interpersonal skills so you can prove you can deal smoothly with clients. And don’t get hung up on your title, Judson says.

“It’s gotten impossible to generalize in the trust business from company to company and even from position to position within a department,” he told me.

“What a title means at one bank is very different from what you’ll end up doing at another bank, and if you go to a smaller outfit you’ll almost certainly have to do more things. Don’t get stuck on your old title. You can’t eat it.”

Scott Martin, contributing editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes contributed to the research.

Permalink: http://thetrustadvisor.com/news/jobs

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