When Clients Take the Lead

By Anna Zakrzewski Joe Carrubba Dean FrankleAndrew Hardie Michael Kahlich Daniel KesslerHans Montgomery Edoardo PalmisaniOlivia Shipton Akin Soysal Tjun Tang, and  André Xavier
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Flipping the lens to look at global wealth from the perspective of client needs instead of net worth reveals huge untapped revenue pools lying in plain sight.
Sometimes, it takes having the world turned upside down to understand what it should look like right-side up.

After a year and a half of norm-busting events, individuals and businesses know what is essential and what is not. Having adapted to extraordinary challenges, we’ve all learned that it’s possible to pivot in ways we couldn’t have imagined before. And having lived through dizzying changes, we’ve seen firsthand the importance of client proximity, speed, and efficiency.

Wealth managers now have a chance to put that perspective into practice in their own work. For a long time, the typical industry model has operated in an inside-out fashion. It’s time to correct that. Instead of following a corporate agenda, wealth managers must pursue a client agenda. Instead of sorting clients by their wallets, they must differentiate them by their needs and use behavioral insights to unlock new sources of value. And instead of letting complexity and cost dictate the pace of innovation, they must let clients set the tempo, employing digital platforms and cross-functional teams to speed go-to-market and to scale impact.

The next five years have the potential to usher in a wave of prosperity for individuals and wealth managers alike. But the process of sizing and capturing that opportunity requires adopting a client’s eye view and reorienting the entire business model accordingly.

For Boston Consulting Group’s 21st annual Global Wealth Report, my colleagues and I sought to do just that. We started with a radically simple proposition—understanding what clients needs are at each step of the wealth management life cycle. By shifting focus from wallets to needs, our analysis revealed whole segments that wealth managers are either underserving or not serving at all. These include individuals with simple needs, the new ultras, and the “affluent retiree” market—a $90 trillion investable wealth pool today.

Through interviews, analysis, and detailed examples, we lay out what it takes to attract and retain these clients and serve them in a competitively sustainable way. Although these examples represent some of the largest opportunities for wealth managers, they are just a subset of the total number available for those willing to change or rethink their approach.

The pandemic may have turned the world upside down, but it has also created the opportunity to refocus on first principles and see what’s truly important. Wealth managers have talked about being client-led for years. Now they have the chance—and the imperative—to deliver on it.

We hope that the ideas expressed here prompt stimulating conversation, and we look forward to continuing that dialogue with you.

Anna Zakrzewski
Managing Director & Partner
Global Leader, Wealth Management Segment

Authors

Alumna

Anna Zakrzewski

Alumna

Managing Director & Partner

Joe Carrubba

Managing Director & Partner
New York

Managing Director & Partner

Dean Frankle

Managing Director & Partner
London

Alumnus

Andrew Hardie

Alumnus

Managing Director & Partner

Michael Kahlich

Managing Director & Partner
Zurich

Managing Director & Senior Partner

Daniel Kessler

Managing Director & Senior Partner
Zurich

Alumnus

Hans Montgomery

Alumnus

Managing Director & Partner

Edoardo Palmisani

Managing Director & Partner
Rome

Principal

Olivia Shipton

Principal
London

Managing Director & Partner, BCG X

Akin Soysal

Managing Director & Partner, BCG X
Zurich

Managing Director & Senior Partner

Tjun Tang

Managing Director & Senior Partner
Hong Kong

Managing Director & Senior Partner

André Xavier

Managing Director & Senior Partner
São Paulo

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