Tag Archives: Angie Herbers

FPPad Bits and Bytes for August 28

On today’s broadcast, BlackRock plans to acquire FutureAdvisor, Salesforce previews it’s Financial Services Cloud platform, and a new white paper from Kaleido will tell you how you’re going to overhaul your business model.

So get ready, FPPad Bits and Bytes begins now.

(Watch FPPad Bits and Bytes on YouTube)

Today’s episode is brought to you by Laser App Software, host of the brand-new Laser App Advisor Con event coming this October in Las Vegas.

Laser App

This event will be led by top advisors, offering their own case studies and best practices on adopting industry-leading technology. Space is limited, so secure your registration today by visiting fppad.com/laserapp2015.

Here are the links to this week’s top stories:

BlackRock Press Releases from BlackRock, and

Blackrock Acquires FutureAdvisor For $150M As Yet Another Robo-Advisor Pivots To Become An Advisor #FinTech Solution from Kitces.com

[Well, if you haven’t heard by now, the big news this week comes from BlackRock, as the world’s largest asset manager with around $4.7 trillion under management, agreed to acquire FutureAdvisor, the online automated investment service based in San Francisco. Let’s run the numbers: FutureAdvisor reportedly manages $600 million dollars, at 50 basis points, they earn, at best, $3 million in gross revenue, BlackRock reportedly paid something like $150 million for FutureAdvisor, so they paid 50, that’s right, 50 times gross revenue for the company. Wow. If it’s true, that’s like, way beyond Facebook and Twitter valuation territory! For an automated investment service!

So let me cut to the chase for your business. In a Wall Street Journal interview, BlackRock COO Robert Goldstein said that as BlackRock looks to “grow the company, our focus is going to be on working with our partners.”

In other words, financial institutions. Does that include you, the RIA? I don’t know. But it could be just institutions that compete with you day after day for client assets. Great.

So if this doesn’t light a fire under you to enhance your technology, improve your client experience, and clearly identify that your services go WAY beyond automated investing, I don’t know what will.

Look. I believe in you, I believe in the value you add for your clients, and I trust that what you is so much better than a five-question risk survey followed by an asset allocation recommendation.

But if you just sit there on your hands and do nothing, I just don’t see how your business stands a chance over the next five years.] BlackRock, Inc. has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire FutureAdvisor, a leader in digital wealth management.

Salesforce Introduces Salesforce Financial Services Cloud: Transforming the Client-Advisor Relationship from Salesforce

[Next up is news from Salesforce, another industry behemoth, that this week announced it will release the Salesforce Financial Services Cloud in February 2016.

Claiming it’s the company’s “first industry-specific product,” (I guess they want to forget about Salesforce for Wealth Management?), the platform will offer a much more modern interface, secure private messaging with clients, and even integrations like Advisor Software for portfolio rebalancing and Yodlee for account aggregation.

But after closer inspection, Salesforce Financial Services Cloud seems positioned mainly for broker-dealers and large enterprise RIAs like United Capital, one of the firms who offered design feedback. Just look at some of the terminology they use: Book of business? Tear sheet? That should give you a clue.

So as an independent advisor, I don’t quite yet see you using something like this directly from Salesforce, but rather it will likely be an option offered by an institutional custodian or one of the many Salesforce overlay providers like Concenter Services, Navatar, Salentica, and more.] Salesforce, the Customer Success Platform and world’s #1 CRM company, today introduced Salesforce Financial Services Cloud, transforming the client-advisor relationship for the digital age.

Kaleido Identifies Rapidly Declining Profitability, Failure to Prepare for Downturn as #1 Independent Financial Advisory Firm Threat in New Whitepaper from MarketWatch, and

Download the X-Cell white paper

[And finally, if you’re not already depressed by today’s broadcast, the researchers over at Kaleido, led by co-founders Angie Herbers and Kristen Luke, have noticed a disturbing trend among advisory firms. That trend is the rapid decline of profit margins.

Great. Just what you wanted to hear. But, I produce this broadcast to give you solutions to grow your business, so along with Kaleido’s research, the company issued a white paper describing what it calls the X-Cell Process™.

In a nutshell, the four-step X-Cell Process outlined should help you overhaul your service models so you can successfully incorporate automated investment technology into your business.]

This is not a paid endorsement, I just think it’s a useful resource for you to have, and all it will cost you is your email address.] Kaleido Inc., a practice growth agency serving independent financial advisory firms, has released a white paper entitled “X-Cell: The New Frontier of Advisory Client Service,” identifying growth inhibitors and other trends affecting the independent advisory community, as well as focused, tangible solutions.

Watch FPPad Bits and Bytes for August 28, 2015

Watch FPPad Bits and Bytes for August 28, 2015

From the 2015 Shareholders Service Group Conference: Key Takeaway from Angie Herbers

Find out what Angie Herbers, co-founder of Kaleido, Inc. says is the key to unlocking transformational growth inside a financial advisory firm.

FPPad Bits and Bytes for May 17

coast

I’m starting a long west coast swing tomorrow, so the next two weeks of Bits and Bytes are in jeopardy as I won’t be back in my home office until June 3.

Included in this trip is a stop at FPA NorCal 2013, so if you’re attending, be sure to catch my Mobile Adviser session on Wednesday the 29th at 1:15pm PT.

Here are this week’s stories of interest:

Trust Company of America And RIA in a Box Announce Strategic Alliance from PRNewswire

[I missed this story last week, but still feel it’s a good one for you. RIA in a Box carved out a great niche several years ago as the fast, turnkey way to get an RIA formed. Now the rapidly growing business continues to broaden its client base through strategic partnerships like this one with Trust Company of America. Even if you’re already an established RIA, RIA in a Box offers a range of ongoing compliance services from $99 to $399 per month. If that saves you at least two hours a month, you’re making money on the outsource relationship!] Trust Company of America, an independent technology and custody provider for RIAs, announced today that it has entered into a strategic alliance with RIA in a Box, the industry-leading RIA registration and compliance firm. RIA in a Box serves RIAs looking to start a career in the industry or break away from the wirehouse model.

 Want a More Profitable Firm? Let Employees Work From Home from AdvisorOne.com

[The place where I work (most of the time) has four walls, two windows, a desk, computer, and some office furniture. I bet the room where you work is not all that different. So does it make any difference that my room happens to be in my home? According to adviser performance consultant Angie Herbers, it doesn’t. She describes how the desire for more time with family or following a spouse in a move for a better job should not mean the end of employment with a successful advisory firm. In fact, Herbers’ example actually resulted in even stronger client connections without anyone ever stepping foot in a “traditional” advisory office.] One of the common lifestyle perks we get asked about is working from home. The technology explosion spilling over into financial advice has made working from home quite productive and profitable for many firms.