The November 2023 edition of the latest in financial #AdvisorTech kicks off with the news that Practice Intel has launched a new “growth platform” centered around quantifying the quality of an advisor’s client relationships with an all-in Relationship Quality Index, which while potentially valuable in helping advisors understand and improve their client experience (and subsequently improve client retention and boost the lifetime value of each client), also raises questions about whether advisors will be willing to invest in tools to improve their client experience given their already high average client retention rates, as well as what really is the best metric for measuring satisfaction in the first place, since other platforms also purport to quantify customer satisfaction (some of which are notably less costly than Practice Intel’s suite of practice management tools).
From there, the latest highlights include a number of other interesting advisor technology announcements, including:
- FinanceHQ has launched as a new digital lead generation platform for financial advisors that takes a more niche-focused approach to matching prospective clients with advisors — representing a bet that capturing prospects seeking help for specific problems (whom it can then refer to an advisor specializing in that problem) will reduce the costs of bringing on new clients and help it grow and scale among a crowded market for lead generation services.
- Technology-focused RIA startup Farther has announced a $31 million Series B funding round at a whopping $131 million valuation. While that’s reflective of its rapid growth in assets and revenue in recent years, it also raises questions about whether its innovative technology offering will really create enough value to fulfill its investors’ expectations, or if it will need to instead focus on simply bringing in more advisors to justify its valuation.
- Fidelity has stopped giving screen-scraping data aggregators access to its client information, requiring them instead to go through its sanctioned direct data feed — which, while done in the name of ensuring more stable data connections and better account security, also highlights the business opportunity for data platforms and institutions that own and provide access to client data.
Read the analysis about these announcements in this month’s column, and a discussion of more trends in advisor technology, including:
- Two new AI-driven compliance technology solutions, Avery and Hadrius, have launched. On the one hand, that could represent a significant step forward in automating and streamlining the time-consuming, repeatable processes of following compliance procedures, but on the other, raises questions about whether AI technology itself is really ready yet for the highly technical, low-margin-for-error domain of compliance.
- Morgan Stanley has introduced a new AI tool for its 16,000 wealth management advisors, which notably doesn’t give financial advice — but does create the potential to streamline advisor processes from investment research to meeting follow-ups and even possibly generating potential planning ideas.
Be certain to read to the end, where we have provided an update to our popular Financial AdvisorTech Solutions Map and also added the changes to our AdvisorTech Directory as well!
AdvisorTech companies that want to submit their tech announcements for consideration in future issues, please submit to [email protected]!
PRACTICE INTEL LAUNCHES TO HELP ADVISORS GO DEEPER IN MEASURING DEPTH OF CLIENT RELATIONSHIPS
Financial advisors have incredibly high client retention rates, with most industry benchmarking studies showing approximately 95% retention rates in the standard AUM model. Of course, individual advisory firms can and do vary in how successfully they retain clients, but among firms working with ongoing clients and managing their assets, the difference between “good” and “bad” firms in this regard amounts to only around 5 percentage points. More specifically, even bad advisory firms may still have retention rates of around 92%, while firms that are the most successful at retention can be as high as 97% or more.
Notably, though, even though these differences in client retention may be small on a year-to-year basis, they’re far from trivial when viewed from a long-term perspective. A 92% versus a 97% retention rate, despite being a difference of only 5 percentage points of client retention each year, is really the difference between the average client sticking around for just over 12 years and staying for more than 30 years. That means that a 5% swing in retention rate can result in more than doubling the lifetime value of each client.
One issue is that most financial advisors don’t necessarily have a good way of measuring whether they’re closer to the 92% or the 97% group, other than calculating it after the fact. But there are few leading indicators for financial advisors that can help them understand how satisfied and happy their clients are (or aren’t) — which would come in handy, since knowing whether a client is dissatisfied before the client breaks the news that they’re leaving gives the advisor the opportunity to address any issues and potentially convince the client to stick around.
In recent years, a number of providers have begun to emerge that aim to fill this gap by helping advisors distribute client surveys to understand how satisfied their clients really are. In many cases, these tools utilize metrics that are common in many industries such as the Customer Satisfaction Score, or CSAT, which measures overall client satisfaction, or the Net Promotor Score, or NPS, which provides an indicator of how likely the customer is to “promote,” or refer, the business to others — an approach taken by tools like Nexa Insights, which can send out standardized NPS, CSAT, and similar surveys to an advisor’s client base. Other tools, such as Julie Littlechild’s Absolute Engagement, seek to go even deeper in understanding whether clients are not just “satisfied,” but actually meaningfully engaged with the advisor and their services — driven by Littlechild’s research showing that while satisfied clients tend to stay with an advisor, “engaged” clients are the ones who will actually refer other clients to the advisor.
Following in this vein of seeking to measure not just the overall satisfaction of clients but the actual engagement and depth of the advisor-client relationship itself, this month a new solution, Practice Intel, launched with a tool that’s built specifically to help advisors measure the “relationship quality” that they have with each and every client.
Although Practice Intel’s description of itself as a “growth platform” echoes the branding of risk tolerance/proposal generation/sales enablement tool Nitrogen, the “growth” that Practice Intel seeks to facilitate is in the quality of the client experience, by in its own words, helping advisors “align their practice with what clients value most,” In practice, Practice Intel’s tools include a survey that can be sent to every client to measure the clients’ satisfaction in several aspects of the client experience (including whether they receive comprehensive advice, whether the advisor understands their values and goals, and whether the advisor places the client’s best interests first), ultimately rolling these individual scores into a single Relationship Quality Index metric, or RQI.
From an advisor perspective, Practice Intel makes it possible for advisors to understand which clients may be less than satisfied with the firm and thus may be at greater risk of attrition, or conversely, to understand which clients are most deeply committed to the firm (and perhaps more likely to refer it to others). Perhaps most importantly, however, the tool provides in RQI an actual metric for relationship quality that advisors can then try to improve over time — because as the saying goes, you can’t manage something if you’re not first measuring it. All of which could be appealing to many types of advisors seeking to improve their client relationships, but especially so for midsize to large multi-advisor firms where it’s more difficult for firm owners and managers to know which advisors are doing the best job building relationships with clients, and which may need further training and support.
From an industry perspective, Practice Intel, along with its competitors like Nexa Insights and Absolute Engagement, have arisen to fill an area where many advisory firms are lacking by providing actionable data on the quality of client relationships — a gap that arguably exists because advisors have been so used to having year-over-year high retention rates that they’ve historically invested little or nothing toward improving those rates, or even understanding what their own retention rates are (even though, as noted above, the difference between a 92% and 97% retention rate has an extraordinary economic impact over the long term).
At same time, when financial advisors aren’t used to using tools to track client satisfaction, it isn’t clear whether they’ll be willing to pay for solutions to start doing so. Also uncertain is whether advisors will pay more for financial advisor-specific solutions like Practice Intel (which charges $195/month per advisor for its tools), when they can alternatively use a general purpose NPS survey app like Delighted for less than a tenth of that cost.
Nonetheless, the core point remains that relatively small incremental shifts in client retention rates can produce outsize long-term returns for advisory firms (albeit ones that they’ll most likely only see years, or even decades, down the line). Meaning there really is the possibility of a strong ROI for advisory firms that invest in better understanding of their clients’ satisfaction. The question is simply which form of measurement — traditional CSAT and NPS, Absolute Engagement’s engagement metrics, Practice Intel’s RQI or something else entirely — is actually most predictive of client retention and referrals to generate that ROI in the first place.
FINANCEHQ LAUNCHES AS NICHE-FOCUSED PAY-PER-LEAD GENERATION PLATFORM
The last decade has seen a proliferation of technology platforms dedicated to providing leads for financial advisors. Notably, lead generation itself is not a new service — financial advisors have long had their pick of methods to generate leads, ranging from direct mail to seminar marketing to even tear-out postcards in magazines. But the current wave of providers, rather than using “analog” marketing strategies that were predominant in the past, instead are focused on digital lead generation, seeking to gain visibility by using digital ads and SEO to capture people already searching for financial advisors and match them with the “right” advisor.
In a world in which the average client acquisition cost for financial advisors is thousands of dollars per client, there’s a lot of money to be made for a platform that help advisory firms with their challenges in bringing in new clients. And those challenges have only seemed to become more acute in recent years, as firms’ organic growth rates have slowed to the mid-single-digits (averaging 6.2% per year from 2018 to 2022, according to Schwab’s annual Benchmarking Study), while the increasing number of comprehensive financial planning firms in the marketplace makes it harder for any one firm to differentiate on comprehensive planning alone. All of which has led to lead generation becoming one of the fastest-growing categories of providers on the AdvisorTech Map.
But the issue that many advisors run into with lead generation services (which led to the category ranking dead last among all categories in average advisor satisfaction in the most recent Kitces Research on Advisor Technology) is that the leads provided by the services often simply aren’t very good. The tools often allow prospective clients to filter and browse for advisors based on criteria like geographic area, asset minimums and increasingly also by client reviews and ratings — yet those attributes by themselves arguably aren’t enough to determine whether an advisor is actually a good fit for a given client. In practice, lead generation tools often send prospects to advisor who might nominally “match” with the advisor based on the tool’s criteria, but whose problems don’t align at all with the advisor’s specific skills or expertise. And while many of these tools only charge their fees when a prospect actually becomes a client, there’s still a material cost to the advisor in the time they spend vetting the prospects sent by the lead generation service, and the expense can add up quickly if the leads prove to be low in quality.
It’s notable, then, that in October FinanceHQ officially announced its launch as yet another competitor seeking to disrupt the advisor lead generation space. FinanceHQ takes a slightly different approach from other lead generation platforms by asking advisors first and foremost what their niche or specialization is. It’s a feature that could both help advisors differentiate from other advisors on the platform itself (which could prove especially helpful if the platform becomes successful and each advisor needs to stand out among a sea of other advisors), and potentially more significantly, allows FinanceHQ to more directly target leads who are looking to solve very specific, actionable challenges — whom they can then match with an advisor on the platform who might actually be uniquely suited to solve those challenges.
FinanceHQ follows the path of lead generation platforms like Smart Asset that charge a pay-per-lead arrangement for each prospective client the advisor receives, regardless of whether the prospect actually closes (as opposed to many other lead generation services that charge a percentage of revenue earned only after a prospect becomes a client). For advisors, paying a flat fee for leads could conceivably be a much less expensive source of organic growth than other channels that charge based on revenue. But then again, FinanceHQ’s pay-per-lead model also puts the onus on advisors to proactively follow up on and close the leads they receive, or else risk losing both the prospect and the fee since FinanceHQ gets paid either way. This arrangement also creates the potential that advisors will need to compete with each other for the same leads: Because FinanceHQ charges per lead rather than for converted clients, they have an incentive to hand off leads to multiple advisors, who would need to compete among themselves for a common pool of prospects.
From a broader perspective, though, the real question isn’t so much about the pay-per-lead versus pay-for-success fee models in advisor lead generation — it’s simply about whether FinanceHQ can find and source an ongoing flow of interested leads who are actually ready to take action to hire an advisor, and how it can scale its platform for an ever-growing number of advisors who want an ever-growing number of leads. Because as noted earlier, client acquisition costs average out to several thousand dollars for a single client, meaning that lead generation can be extremely capital-intensive for platforms to build, and the risk is always that it will become even more expensive as other lead generation platforms proliferate and compete for the same pool of advisors and clients.
In other words, FinanceHQ’s prospects for success are ultimately tied not only to the experience it creates to match prospects to advisors, or to the particular way it charges (as long as its fee model adds up to enough revenue to keep its business operating); rather, the question is whether FinanceHQ’s more niche- and orientation-focused sales funnel allows it to find a better flow of prospects — i.e., those seeking specialized advisors who solve specialized problems — that FinanceHQ itself can acquire in a cost-effective manner to then re-sell to financial advisors.
FARTHER CLOSES $31M SERIES B ROUND FOR ITS DIGITAL RIA — BUT CAN IT ACHIEVE TECH MARGINS?
The typical scaled-up advisory firm spends around 35% of its revenue on overhead expenses, which include compensation for administrative and support staff, compliance and legal services, office (or virtual team) expenses, and technology. In recent years, however, there’s been a growing focus on how firms leverage technology to become more efficient in the hopes of reducing overhead costs and improving profitability. That seems simple enough in theory, but in practice, the ever-growing (and sometimes overwhelming) number of technology solutions — some of which integrate with each other in some way, but many of which don’t, at least to the level that most advisors wish that they would — can just as easily serve to hinder efficiency as it does to help it. Such that in the latest Kitces AdvisorTech Research study, the average financial advisor rates their entire technology “stack” lower than the individual technology solutions they use; in other words, the whole is valued less than the sum of the parts!
Over the past decade, two approaches have come along to try to solve the challenges around technology integration for advisors. One has been the emergence of all-in-one technology solutions, which effectively seek to fill every role (or at least the core functions) of an advisor’s tech stack, ensuring that the most important pieces will work together seamlessly without any need to worry about their integration capabilities (because they’re all built under one roof by the same provider in the first place).
More recently, however, another trend has started to emerge: Startup RIAs that eschew third-party technology altogether and instead build their own in-house advisor tech stack from the ground up. Typically these so-called “digital RIAs” raise outside capital to cover the significant upfront cost of building their native technology, with the hopes that their better (and better integrated) technology will allow them to reduce their overhead costs and thus operate more profitably than a traditional (analog?) RIA, winning out their long-term valuation with superior profit margins.
In principle, the prospect of unlocking value by cutting down on tech-related inefficiencies makes sense; in practice, though, there’s really only so much in overhead expenses that can reasonably be saved through better technology. Because in reality, the bulk of the expenses for advisory firms come not from administrative costs that could be lowered by improving efficiency, but from the direct costs of the financial advisors themselves who generate the firm’s revenue. And while efficiency is still a fine goal to strive for, it won’t necessarily be achieved by investing heavily in technology: In the 2022 InvestmentNews Benchmarking Study, the top-performing (i.e., most profitable) advisory firms spent less as a percentage of revenue on both administrative support staff and technology than the median firm on their path to achieving profit margins that were 9% better than the average firm. The top firms are simply more profitable because their advisors take on more clients than other firms, and meet with each of them slightly less often (because there’s only so much time), allowing the firms to have better economics driven by a focus on charging full value for their fees and on not “overservicing” clients — not necessarily by investing heavily in technology to reduce overhead staff costs.
All of which makes it notable that this month Farther Finance, one of the new crop of digital RIA platforms aiming to build its in-house technology to optimize the efficiency of its advisors, announced a new $31 million Series B funding round on a whopping $131 million valuation as the firm approaches $1 billion in assets under management four years after launching in 2019.
On the one hand, Farther’s somewhat eye-popping capital raise shows the sheer appetite that private equity firms have for investing into opportunities to find new paths for building RIAs that are even more profitable than the existing model. If Farther charges fees at an average of 1% on its approximately $1 billion in AUM, then the $131 million valuation of this fundraising round represents more than 13x its run rate revenue (and an even higher multiple on its trailing revenue, as the firm started the year with a much lower asset base). That indicates that Farther’s investors are very excited about its recent “booming” AUM growth (which at the aforementioned $1 billion is a 48% increase from the $675 million it reported in April 2023, which itself was reported to be a nearly 500% increase from the beginning of 2022).
On the other hand, it’s worth recalling that the key feature of digital RIAs like Farther isn’t advisor recruitment or asset gathering, per se, but technology — namely, the streamlined efficiency that allows it, as it purports, to pay its advisors a higher share of the revenue they produce than other RIA aggregators do. And yet, as noted above, there’s only so much potential improvement on margins that technology can create through reduced overhead costs. Even a mega-firm with 30% profit margins that is valued at 15X its earnings (already a premium valuation for most RIAs) would amount to a 0.3 x 15 = 4.5X revenue multiple, and a super-profitable tech-savvy firm with 40% tech-enabled margins might get to stunning 0.4 x 15 = 6X revenue — which makes it hard to see how Farther’s more-than-13X-revenue valuation is in any way connected to the operational efficiency that its in-house technology might provide … at least not unless it can sustain an absolutely extraordinary growth rate in its assets and advisor head count, which suddenly makes Farther less a story about the tech efficiencies of RIAs and more simply about its ability to acquire or recruit advisors quickly.
Which helps to explain why advisor recruiting seems to be an effort that Farther is now emphasizing, as the firm has gained headlines in recent weeks for recruiting a slew of former Goldman Sachs Personal Financial Management advisors in the wake of the former United Capital’s sale to Creative Planning.
The challenge, though, is that recruiting and acquiring advisors in high volume becomes increasingly capital-intensive in the current advisor landscape, amid heavy M&A activity and high competition for talent. At some point, investors may ask what magic Farther could have that allows it to recruit advisors or acquire them at typical industry multiples of 2X to 3X revenue, and then claim the same revenue is now worth more than 13X to its investors when even a 10% improvement in profit margins due to self-built digital RIA technology can’t possibly justify nearly that much of a valuation lift.
Nonetheless, the opportunity does remain for RIA platforms to improve their efficiency by building in-house technology to solve for the problems of managing and integrating technology. Still, though, technology alone can only do so much to improve the margins, and valuation, of an advisory firm whose costs are still driven first and foremost by the compensation costs of its advisors themselves (not its overhead and administrative staff that technology tends to automate). Such that digital RIAs like Farther have to build such a tech-savvy platform that advisors flock to it without high recruiting or acquisition costs — and become an engine that attracts advisors unto itself — to be able to grow into tech-style valuations. And even then, if digital RIAs offer higher payouts to their advisors to attract them — and share the cost savings of their self-built technology — then such firms still aren’t more profitable than the traditional RIA, they simply try to grow faster by recruiting advisors faster by offering a better payout. Which means, ironically, that the success or failure of digital RIAs like Farther may simply follow the path of any RIA aggregator: Can the firm find a capital-efficient way to acquire and recruit advisors to ever-larger size and scale (regardless of its actual technology)?
WILL FIDELITY BLOCKING SCREEN-SCRAPING DATA AGGREGATORS HINDER OR ACTUALLY CATALYZE BETTER ACCOUNT AGGREGATION FOR ADVISORS?
The 2006 debut of Mint.com (RIP) provided one of the first successful examples of automated data aggregation: a continuous feed of data from multiple sources into a single aggregation platform, making it possible for someone to view their whole financial picture in one place and to track their progress over time. The early success of Mint (which within a few years was acquired by fintech giant Intuit) spawned a host of imitators that sought to provide the same holistic data aggregation capabilities to financial advisors, who recognized the opportunity in automating much of the time-consuming process of gathering and inputting client data. One of the earliest successful versions of a “Mint for advisors” was eMoney’s Financial Dashboard, but today there are numerous AdvisorTech tools that rely on account aggregation, encompassing not only financial planning but also other functions like performance reporting and fee billing.
In the early days of account aggregation, many financial institutions didn’t have ways to externally share customer data, and furthermore had few incentives to invest in the capability to do so (since many of the parties they would be sharing the data with could very well be competing with the institutions for their own clients’ business). So instead of going through the financial institutions directly, the early data aggregation platforms used technology that came to be known as “screen scraping”: A client would provide the platform with their login credentials for an institution’s website, allowing the platform to log into the client’s account, view the account balances as they appeared onscreen, and “scrape” the key information into the platform.
While screen scraping proved effective enough to become the predominant method for account aggregators to collect client information for close to a decade, in practice the technology had some significant drawbacks. First and foremost was the fact that account connections tended to break frequently — either because the client changed their password or added multifactor authentication (interrupting the data connection until the client could reenter their authentication information into the aggregation platform), or because the financial institution changed its website or user interface in some way so that the screen scraper didn’t know where to find the data it needed.
Another challenge that arose around the use of screen scraping was that, as Mint and other aggregation tools increased in popularity, the sheer number of logins that any institution’s website needed to handle increased exponentially. Normally, a typical customer might log into an institution’s website only once per week or month (if that) — but an account aggregation provider might log in each day to collect updated balance information. When multiplied across a significant chunk of the institution’s customer base, that could strain its servers and create a material cost associated with supporting the infrastructure needed to handle that many logins.
So starting in the late 2010s, the industry began to shift to address the issues created by screen scraping technology. Institutions began to offer direct API feeds that account aggregators could connect to for direct access to the data they needed, for which the client needed to provide only a one-time authentication that didn’t require further updating. The result was a more stable data feed with fewer breakages.
From the financial institutions’ perspective, direct data feeds also had the benefit of easing the crush of logins created by screen scrapers, which meant that many institutions that had previously been loath to share customer data externally were now happily willing to create and provide the data feeds for free, since the cost of doing so would be more than made up for by the reduction in infrastructure costs associated with handling screen scraper logins.
In this context, it’s notable that as of Oct. 1, Fidelity has gone so far as to cut off screen scrapers’ access to client accounts entirely, forcing account aggregation tools to use a direct API data feed to collect client information. According to Fidelity’s explanation, the move was intended to ensure more stable data connections, reducing the burden on customer support, and providing more security for client data (being that screen scrapers, after all, had access to clients’ login information and at least had the potential to gather — and potentially sell — client data that it found while nominally logged in for account aggregation purposes).
Fidelity’s decision to end access for screen scrapers represents another milestone in the large-scale shift toward direct data feeds. On the whole, that’s a good thing, since it gets nearer to fulfilling the original promise of account aggregation by finally providing account connections that don’t routinely break. There’s also a benefit in the creation of consistent data standards that can be established and maintained at the API level rather than needing to be shoehorned in around the financial institution’s user experience and requiring updates every time that UX changes — which in conjunction with cooperative efforts among financial institutions around setting data standards like FDX, further increases the potential for more stable data in the long term.
One wrinkle that has emerged, however, is that because most financial institutions and account aggregation providers don’t necessarily want to enter into individual data-sharing arrangements with every single one of the thousands of other institutions and aggregators that exist, most of the connections have been consolidated into a small number of middleware providers like Akoya (which itself was spun off from Fidelity), which serve as a central hub by establishing core data connections to financial institutions and licensing those connections to account aggregators. That adds a layer of fees to the data-sharing setup and raises the potential of increasing the cost of any tech stack that relies on account aggregation.
In Fidelity’s case, Akoya — in which Fidelity still has a minority ownership stake — is the only licenser that will have access to Fidelity’s data feeds. And while Fidelity has stated that it will cover Akoya’s licensing fees and provide aggregators with “free” access to Fidelity data, the fact that data aggregators can only access data from Fidelity and its 86 million or so client accounts through Akoya means that they may be pressured to use Akoya for all of their data feeds, unless they want to sign agreements with multiple data licensors. In other words, if Fidelity’s size and influence coerce data aggregators to set up all of their data feeds with Akoya, the added revenue through Fidelity’s investment in Akoya might make up for the cost of providing their own data to aggregators for “free.” (The arrangement has aroused the interest of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for its anti-competitive potential.)
Ultimately, however, it does seem as though direct-feed APIs really are the better solution for data aggregation, since they allow for more a consistent data flow, stable connections and better security of client information — all of which can help account aggregation live up to its original promise as it pertains to financial advisors. The caveat, as with many advances around data in technology, is that direct data access hands more power to those who own and control the data — and so the question remains whether the cost of account aggregation will increase over the long term as providers like Akoya build and grow businesses around managing the flow of data — and whether the benefits of data aggregation are worth that cost in the first place.
AVERY AND HADRIUS STEP UP WITH NEW AI-DRIVEN COMPLIANCE TOOLS, BUT HOW DO ADVISORS DUE DILIGENCE THEM EFFECTIVELY?
Financial advisory firms have an obligation to ensure that their advisors are doing the right thing for their clients, or at least have reasonable policies and procedures in place that would be likely to detect and capture any wrongdoing before it causes harm to clients. Historically, compliance oversight occurred by having compliance personnel review advisors’ activity, from advertisements and marketing, to communication with clients and prospects, to their own personal securities transactions to ensure that advisors weren’t front-running trades in their clients’ portfolios.
However, the challenge, especially for midsize to large advisory firms, is that even if only a random sampling of advisor communication is reviewed, it’s a very time-consuming manual process for the people doing the reviews. On the plus side, though, most compliance processes, by nature of their occurring regularly on an ongoing basis, also happen to be very systematized and repeatable — or in other words, conducive to at least some layers of automation through technology.
As a result, the industry has seen what historically was a cottage industry of compliance consulting services bloom into a growing array of compliance technology solutions — and although the consultants still exist and can provide value in solving for more complex compliance problems, they are increasingly supplemented with technology to automate the more systematized parts of compliance. Meanwhile, compliance software offered directly to advisors — the pure technology itself — has become an increasingly hot business, with notable capital raises for companies like SmartRIA, and M&A transactions for RIA in a Box (which was acquired by ComplySci), BasisCode (which was acquired by Orion to become Orion Compliance) and Schwab Compliance Technologies (which was acquired by MyComplianceOffice). All of which underscores the idea that, with compliance procedures tending to be very repetitive and with set compliance calendars needing tasks to be completed periodically at regular intervals over time, technology providers recognize the opportunity that can exist in providing ways to automate repeatable compliance tasks and lessen the compliance burden on midsize advisory firms.
Over the past year, however, a new angle has emerged on compliance technology: Where and how artificial intelligence, including platforms like ChatGPT, can further improve, expedite and automate advisory firms’ compliance procedures. While AI has found its way into AdvisorTech tools across many domains, it’s especially interesting to see AI crop up in the context of compliance, since it has such important ramifications for an RIA’s status in the eyes of state and federal regulators.
Accordingly, it’s notable that in the news recently has been the launch of not one but two new compliance vendors, RegVerse and Hadrius, that in competing with the other technology solutions that aim to help streamline compliance, are both leaning heavily into the fact that they are leveraging AI to make advisors’ (or at least their chief compliance officers’) compliance lives easier.
In the case of RegVerse (which calls its compliance tool Avery), the AI’s function is to help summarize key regulations that may apply to the advisor, and generate action plans to complete compliance tasks, as well as offering a ChatGPT-style chatbot as an “intelligent chat assistant” to navigate various aspects of its compliance software. The impression, then, is that Avery’s AI does little to automate the compliance work itself, but rather focuses on making information more digestible for the person doing the compliance work to help facilitate their decision-making.
Hadrius goes one step further in the way it deploys its AI. According to the vendor, the AI tool can be used for monitoring client communications and identifying items to flag for review, as well as for reviewing marketing materials before they are sent out, leveraging its ComplianceGPT technology to try to spot problematic phrases and conversations (such as making unrealistic promises or guaranteeing certain outcomes in various communication or correspondence to clients) … in theory using GPT’s language capabilities to detect more efficiently than the already common approach of just doing keyword searches for compliance-problematic words like “guarantee.” Which still isn’t quite doing the work of compliance personnel per se, but can significantly aid the staff in pointing out specific areas to look at when performing reviews of advisor advertising and communication.
From an advisor perspective, arguably anything that expedites repetitive manual compliance procedures is helpful, especially as advisory firms grow to be multi-advisor and have increasing oversight obligations over marketing, client communications, trading practices and other areas. And at least in theory, AI technology could be especially promising for compliance applications that often involve going through reams of information to try to find concerning patterns or data points, whether it’s the sheer volume of email communication in a midsize advisory firm or the reams of advisor trading data at a large advisor enterprise that needs to watch for front-running or potential trading by rogue advisors against its own clients.
At the same time, as with almost any scenario where advisors rely on AI to solve not just for rote tasks but for those that require “intelligence” to accomplish successfully, the question remains whether AI can be trusted yet to handle tasks requiring technical knowledge in specific areas like advisor compliance. Can ChatGPT-like tools such as Avery can actually sift through complex regulations and provide actionable recommendations for advisors that are on point regarding sometimes very technical details in a particular regulation … especially when the actual ChatGPT has been found to have invented fake legal citations when a lawyer trusted it to write a legal brief? And can Hadrius actually comb through a pile of marketing and communications materials and reliably spot problematic promises from advisors to their clients any better than the keyword-watching that most large firms have already implemented (and if firms leverage the technology to review all of their communications rather than just a random sample, does that actually increase their compliance burden by implying to regulators that they now actually expect to catch every instance of wrongdoing)?
In other words, the promise of AI automation is one thing, but the reality of doing enough due diligence to figure out whether the technology is really effective at doing what it purports to be doing is a unique new issue that advisors face with the rise of AI in particular. Because at the end of the day, the firm and its chief compliance officer are responsible for ensuring that compliance tasks are actually done, and done correctly — meaning that if the technology isn’t up to snuff, it’s the firm and CCO who will have to deal with the consequences for choosing that particular AI tool in the first place.
From the industry perspective, while compliance, with its high volumes of materials to review on a regular basis, is especially favorable for automation-driven use cases, the question remains how close the technology is to the point where advisors can hand off those responsibilities to AI in particular, and count on the technology to do it accurately — and perhaps, how much of a margin of error they believe they will have with regulators around mistakes made by the AI. Because ultimately, if firms feel they have to review everything the AI actually does, it’s not certain that they’ll realize any time savings by using it — making it less likely that they’ll be willing to pay for it (beyond what they’re currently paying for their existing non-AI technology tools to automate more basic compliance steps).
MORGAN STANLEY LAUNCHES AI CHATBOT TO HELP ITS ADVISORS (NOT GIVE ADVICE TO CLIENTS … YET?)
It’s been nearly a year since ChatGPT took the world by storm, virally growing to tens of millions of users in just a few weeks as the world experienced what it was like to chat with an AI tool that chatted back in a remarkably intelligent-sounding manner. Almost as soon as people began to “talk” to ChatGPT and watched it reply back with answers that sounded more convincingly human than any other technology to date, the ideas began to flow about what applications ChatGPT could be used for. due to the technology’s nature, that included not only the typical kinds of repetitive tasks that tech automates, but also increasingly complex, intelligent functions that had been done by paid professionals — from preparing legal briefs to potentially delivering financial advice.
In the months since, though, it’s become clear that relying on the current generation of AI tools to do intelligent work may be overstating the tools’ capabilities. Because ultimately, the great breakthrough of ChatGPT wasn’t that it had studied bodies of knowledge or learned how to apply them intelligently — it was in using large language models, or LLMs, to string together words in a coherent way and weave information from a large number of sources together into a single consolidated response — a response that, while it’s not written by a human, sounds as though it was created by one.
But the combination of being trained to use language well but not to fully absorb information in specific subjects often gave ChatGPT and other LLM-based tools the air of, at best, a smooth-talking amateur opining confidently on subjects where it is far out of its depth, and at worst, a “moody teenager” that tries to break up marriages. Since early in the ChatGPT era, there has been awareness of the technology’s “hallucinations,” where what the AI says may sound intelligent but lacks any basis in reality — the most famous case being when an attorney asked ChatGPT to create a legal brief, only to later find (or rather be told by the judge to whom the brief had been submitted) that it had invented fake legal citations. ChatGPT had added them simply because it had decided that that part of the document would be a good place to include a citation, and made one up to fit the need.
Still, while tools like ChatGPT may not have fully internalized deep knowledge domains like the law, taxes or financial regulations well enough to be trusted to apply them, its language training can make it useful for summarizing bodies of text with technical language so a human isn’t forced to read through original source documents to gain enough understanding on a topic to, for example, answer a client’s question. That can make it a useful tool for someone giving advice, even if it isn’t the source of the advice itself.
So it’s notable that in September, wirehouse broker-dealer Morgan Stanley launched an AI tool in its wealth management division, which notably does not include advice delivery to consumers on its list of features. Instead, the tool — built by ChatGPT developer OpenAI — focuses on three core use cases designed to lift the productivity of Morgan Stanley’s advisors themselves:
First, the tool’s current main feature is its ability to tap into Morgan Stanley’s database of investment research (encompassing around 100,000 research reports and other documents), allowing advisors to type in a question about something they want to research and get not just a list of documents to read, but a response that weaves together information from a range of research materials, consolidated into one expedited response that advisors can then use in their own response to clients.
The second case, which is still in pilot mode, is using the AI tool to listen in on client meetings with the client’s permission, allowing it to capture meeting notes (which it presumably can then log into the CRM system) and generate a post-meeting summary that can then go out to the client — all of which could represent a significant streamlining of meeting-related support tasks that can be time-consuming for advisors with 10 or more meetings in a week.
The third use case, which Morgan Stanley hasn’t launched yet but has been hinted at, is taking information on a client situation and generating ideas around planning strategies that an advisor could then take to their clients. Notably, though closer to the advice realm than the other two use cases, this function doesn’t sound as though it truly would give advice itself — rather, it would be more of an idea generator, or perhaps even more accurately an automated checklist, that proposes options for planning strategies (including some that may not be obvious or common, but could be recognized by the AI to take advantage of a client’s specific circumstances) that advisors and clients can then narrow down to whatever is most relevant to recommend and implement.
As with all AI in new applications, the question going forward is how effective Morgan Stanley’s new AI tool will actually be at doing what it purports to do. The new tool may be able to review thousands of pages of investment research, but does it know how to evaluate the merits of different research methods and not overweight research that might be out-of-date? Can it accurately summarize meeting notes, and pull out the most important takeaways, for one-to-two-hour planning meetings day after day? Will it actually surface the right planning strategies for a client’s circumstances, or will it be liable to miss strategies that could be important (or worse, send advisors chasing after strategies that aren’t right for a client situation)?
These questions notwithstanding, it’s interesting to see a multitrillion-dollar wirehouse invest in AI, and worth noting in particular that the core use cases are not to use it to generate advice but rather to support advisors on otherwise time-consuming tasks like research, meeting support and brainstorming planning ideas. All of which are very human tasks, but if Morgan Stanley’s AI can shave off just a little bit of the time it takes to complete each step, the aggregate time savings across its 16,000-odd advisors could very well be worth the significant investment in building it out.
In the meantime, we’ve rolled out a beta version of our new AdvisorTech Directory, along with making updates to the latest version of our Financial AdvisorTech Solutions Map (produced in collaboration with Craig Iskowitz of Ezra Group)!
So what do you think? Would quantifying the depth of your client relationships move your bottom line enough to justify investing in a solution for doing so? Is account aggregation an important enough feature that you would continue to pay for it if the shift to direct API feeds raises the cost? What aspects of your compliance processes would you trust AI to handle?
Michael Kitces is the head of planning strategy at Buckingham Strategic Partners, co-founder of the XY Planning Network, AdvicePay and fpPathfinder, and publisher of the continuing education blog for financial planners, Nerd’sEye View. You can follow him on Twitter @MichaelKitces.
Ben Henry-Moreland is senior financial planning nerd at Kitces.com, where he researches and writes for the Nerd’s Eye View blog. In addition to his work at Kitces.com, Ben serves clients at his RIA firm, Freelance Financial Planning.