As discussed in our "Cost-Effectively Growing Assets" whitepaper, as asset management firms evolve their distribution models—integrating business intelligence, sales and marketing to customize their value proposition to the advisor community—they must align their distribution resources to support their best relationships and opportunities. This includes aligning both sales and marketing coverage to the value, behaviors and preferences of each segment.
To do this effectively, firms should follow three steps:
Align customer engagement with a whole journey approach
Today, advisors have far more opportunities to engage with marketing-based digital touchpoints—such as the website, email and sponsored content on third-party websites—than they do with salespeople. And they do not care who is responsible for each touchpoint. They care that every interaction with a firm feels like a natural continuation of a single, consistent conversation.
Align talent to customer needs
To grow assets in a cost-effective manner, asset managers need to deploy talent wisely. The most expensive resources should go to the advisors who represent the biggest opportunities for your firm and who want and value engagement with these resources.
In addition to identifying the opportunity each advisor represents to your firm, understanding how those advisors want to engage with you is a key factor in aligning talent to customer needs. This includes two key components:
Align the organization to match the opportunity
Firms need to know their numbers—to obtain a 360-degree view of their current sales footprint, using data related to sales, revenue, costs and competitive opportunity.
Source: SS&C Research, Analytics and Consulting, Rightsizing Sales Organizations and Managing Territories, 2020
Over the last few years, executives from virtually every asset management firm have mentioned a desire to modernize their distribution operations and compete more effectively in the ever-changing landscape of the asset management industry. Starting to leverage data and technology has helped. But firms also need to make significant changes in strategy and culture—which are often the hardest types of change to create.
The COVID-19 pandemic gave firms the rare opportunity to jumpstart their modernization by forcing them to rely more heavily, or even entirely, on virtual and digital engagement. Now, firms need to institutionalize the practices and processes that proved to be most efficient and effective across their database of advisors to create a new “status quo” of strategy, operations and culture—instead of going back to the old one.