Going to an industry conference, the best you hope for is bringing back one or two really good ideas and a few new valuable contacts for your professional network. Rarely does it become a revelation. Rarely does the content and speakers all combine to paint a stunningly unified, precisely crafted and clear vision of the potential of the future financial professional business model. Of particular note is how a recent high-net-worth (HNW) focused conference also, concurrently, delivered a stern cautionary warning about both the power and the inherent legal risks of putting two words together—wealth and management. Such was my experience at the Financial Engineering Institute’s Fall Family Wealth Conference in Orlando a few weeks ago and, hence, the need for this write-up on the conference.

The Financial Engineering Institute (FEI) and its constellation of sister companies and strategic partners, called “expert sourcing firms,” are all carefully chosen and inextricably linked to support financial professionals who want to attract and retain truly HNW families and business owners. Nick Gregory, CEO and chief wealth engineer, of the FEI explained that over his 40 years of working with and building from the full range of needs of his high net worth clients, he mapped out their ten specific areas of need that he refers to as the “financial life support system that surrounds a high-net-worth family and their businesses”.  He then started carefully designing and engineering a comprehensive set of solutions for financial professionals that he states “positions them with an unfair competitive advantage in the HNW marketplace.

Nick Gregory on the problem with the current state of wealth management:

“Most wealth management firms and many family offices are just primarily managing investable assets with some concierge services thrown in. When I ask where their revenue stream is coming from, they say 90-95 percent of their revenue is from assets under management (AUM). There was a survey conducted recently reporting that 87 percentof wealth management firms are not managing wealth, they are managing the family’s liquid assets. So much focus is put on asset management that the real concern of the survey was the use, abuse and misrepresented and misperceived nature of the termwealth management.

In other surveys conducted with HNW families, you will see that asset management is deemed fifth in importance to them, not first. Comprehensive financial planning is the single most important need they requested, followed by estate planning, tax planning, and legacy planning. So that means most wealth management firms are built in reverse of HNW client needs. Other surveys tell us that 77-85 percent of the time when the patriarch of a family passes away, the current advisor loses the assets. Those percentages baffled the heck out of me. However, I then realized that most wealth managers are mainly managing liquid assets, which are very easy to transfer to other firms, versus offering a comprehensive wealth management approach. True comprehensive wealth management makes a strong, vital connection across the whole family, especially the subsequent generations, creating a strong epoxy for the wealth management firm and its relationships.

What most concerns me, though, is the other side of the coin of using the “wealth management” label in your advisory business. What is the potential liability of calling yourself a wealth manager but only delivering 1-2 areas of HNW financial support? It is a potentially dangerous positioning to place yourself in, with wide spread consequences, not the least of which is legally. Risk to HNW family wealth is not one dimensionalit is ten dimensional to be exact, as I have mapped out. What is to prevent the next generation of the family to claim that their family wealth and inheritance was squandered by mismanagement from the patriarch’s wealth manager who did not provide or coordinate true wealth management services in accordance to the terminology used in their website and materials?”

Nick Gregory on the solution for wealth management firms:

"Wealth management malpractice can generate a lot of negative results. The success of true wealth managers is predicated or dictated by taking a broader swath of control in the family’s financial life support systemwhat we call 'wealth engineering.' I fear a substantial increase in lawsuits unless wealth management firms are properly structured and can implement a truly holistic service. That is the goal of the Financial Engineering Instituteto enhance the DNA of financial advisors, law firms and accounting firms, to create an unfair advantage in the marketplace and build an unassailable multi-generational positioning with the HNW family and their businesses. The goal for advisors, as this chart depicts, is to be in the optimal positioning in the center of their client’s Family Wealth Hub:

“Every successful American Family has a “financial life-support system” and what permeates around that “system” is a great deal of complexity. We have identified 10 key areas of need for HNW families and their businesses:  unified governance, tax engineering, estate asset migration, risk management, charitable capital planning, asset protection, strategic business dynamics, capital sourcing, investment implementation, and lifestyle services. These areas are intertwined and filled with opportunities and pitfalls that most clients are unaware of.  Our “Approach Talk”, that we developed, provides an initial presentation for advisors to set the stage and educate HNW clients as true wealth managers in dealing with the financial blind spots of highly successful families. The process couples with a team of “expert sourcing” firms that are specialists in these key areas and are able to deliver high end tools, solutions and products that truly address complex family and business wealth. Advisors can now equip themselves accordingly to brand, position and differentiate around the true needs and goals of HNW Families. We are also the governing body and grantor of several professional designations – The Chartered Financial Engineer (CHFE), The Charitable Capital Advisor (ChCCA), The Chartered Family Wealth Advisor (ChFWA) and The Chartered Family Business Advisor (ChFBA). All of which are supported with client compliant powerpoints, brochures, flyers and ongoing complex case design support to deal effectively with HNW client opportunities and pitfalls that are strewn through their financial life support systems.”

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