RETAIL REPORT: 9 in 10 High Net Worth Investors Are Happy with Their Advisor

Its a good time to be an advisor.

The stock market is chugging along. Volatility is high enough to maintain sufficient liquidity and interest rates are low. Wealthy individuals are feeding into the markets and committing funds to work and keeping their advisors busy.

But how can the advisor stay busy? Or better yet, grab more clients?

To that end, the Investments & Wealth Institute (formerly IMCA) released the research findings from its latest study, 2019 High-Net-Worth Investor Study, at the Annual Conference Experience (ACE) that took place in Las Vegas, NV, May 5-8, 2019. The research was designed to assist advisors is attracting new High Net Worth clients as well as keep existing ones in a marketplace where high client satisfaction and loyalty is not enough to set them apart from the competition. The study also examines how articulating the value of advanced, credentials can provide meaningful differentiation among discerning HNW Investors.

The research, fielded by AbsoluteEngagement.com, gathered input from just over 1,000 high-net-worth investors across North America. The study highlights several key capabilities that distinguish exceptional advisors from their peers. The research built upon the findings of previous studies conducted in 2017 and 2018. Of the current studys respondents, 578 investors reside in the United States and 425 are based in Canada. All respondents worked with a financial advisor and met specific household investable asset criteria (at least $500,000 in investable assets).

According to the survey, 91% of clients are somewhat or very satisfied and 89% of clients are somewhat or extremely likely to continue to work with their advisor. According the research, the vast majority of advisors are providing a high level of satisfaction with their HNW clients. While those findings are good, the research suggests that having satisfied and loyal clients isnt enough to set the advisor apart from the vast majority of other advisors available to clients.

The study highlights several key capabilities that distinguish exceptional advisors from their peers.

Drivers of HNW Client Engagement, Satisfaction and Willingness to refer Not surprisingly, the foundational requirements of all client respondents are that their advisor is trustworthy (87% percentage rating 5 out of 5 on importance), has high ethical standards (80%), always acts in my best interests (80%), and is knowledgeable (77%). Beyond these foundational capabilities, the research identified four additional drivers that engaged clients rate significantly higher than all clients: In order of relative importance (from lowest to highest) they are: taking a personalized approach, demonstrating advanced capabilities, delivering exceptional service, and providing meaningful guidance. Client engagement is the key goal of every successful advisory relationships said Julie Littlechild, founder of AbsoluteEngagement.com and author of the research. However, advisors must first establish a foundation of expertise and ethics, the two most important things to clients beyond the over-arching attribute of trust. The study provides actionable steps advisors can take to communicate their value and measure their success.

HNW Clients Rank Investment Management as the Most Important Service At the highest level, high-net-worth clients turn to advisors to provide a range of services. When asked to rank four services in order of importance, investment management tops the list (38% of HNW clients rank it as most important), followed by financial planning (29%), wealth management (21%), and retirement solutions (12%). However, while investment management is most important, two-thirds of investors say that investment performance is just one of the things for which they pay their advisor. The top three things HNW investor say they pay their advisors for are: on-going guidance/advice to help reach their goals (90%), help in avoiding costly financial/investment mistakes (84%) and on-going monitoring of their goals (81%).

High-net-worth clients believe in the importance of voluntary designations for their advisors. With Ethics and expertise being ranked as foundational capabilities, and strong technical expertise and advanced capabilities being ranked as differentiating factors for exceptional advisors, the value and importance of designations were explored as an are the primary way that advisors demonstrate all of these capabilities. Seventy-three percent of high-net-worth clients say that designations and credentials are an important way to demonstrate technical expertise. In part this is because clients define expertise as going above and beyond the basic requirements of licensing or registration.

Nearly 70 percent of high-net-worth clients saying it is important that their advisor achieve advanced certifications or voluntary education and three quarters of high-net-worth clients say that voluntary designations and certifications would be important to decision making if they were choosing an advisor today. High-net-worth clients expect their advisors to have advanced ethics and expertise to drive tangible outcomes, said Sean Walters, CAE, chief executive officer, Investments & Wealth Institute. This study illustrates that for high-net-worth clients, advanced capabilities mean knowledge and application of strategies and expertise they could not get from other advisors. Voluntary, advanced designations provide those capabilities.

Communicating Ethics and Expertise: Aspects of Professional Designations that are Most Important to Clients Clients have low unaided awareness of all professional designations. When communicating with clients and prospects about designations, there are specific messages that are more important than others. The following were identified as the most important aspects of how an advisor obtains his or her designations.

  1. My advisor would lose his/her credentials if he/she failed to meet ethics standards. (89% said this was important)
  2. My advisor must meet ongoing standards in order to maintain his/her credentials (e.g., annual continuing education, adherence to ethical standards). (89% said this was important)
  3. My advisor met a rigorous set of standards to be certified (e.g., ethics, experience, education, examinations). (87% said this was important)