Family Office
Education vital to advisor-client relations

Wealth consultants advocate "no strings" approach to educating
clients. Wealthy families want more than winning investment
strategies. They want to understand their investments -
and a recent poll of ultra high-net-worth investors suggests
they're growing impatient with their advisors' inability to help
them do that. That means advisors have to start educating their
clients about investing in ways that are entirely free of
product-push, say wealth industry players.
Last year the Institute for Private Investors (IPI), a New
York-based education and networking resource for ultra wealthy
families, asked 300 of its private members what general
improvements they'd like to see in the wealth management
industry. Four of 10 said "willingness and skill in investor
education." But well-to-do investors aren't alone in seeing
education as a priority. Responding to weak markets in the
aftermath of the dot-com meltdown and a series of high-profile
corporate fraud scandals, the Securities and Exchange Commission
set up a fund in 2004 aimed at improving investors' grasp of
investing concepts and principals.
The IPI has taken action as well. Last year it established the
Investor Education Collaborative (IEC). The brainchild of IPI CEO
Charlotte Beyer and Susan Remmer Ryzewic, the IEC seeks to help
advisors educate their clients in a format that attempts to
replicate the frankest and most beneficial interaction Beyer and
Ryzewic have seen in 14 years of observing investors and advisors
communicate with one another.
In practice that boils down to a series of case studies that
advisors can use as teaching aids with their clients. By taking a
family members through a case study and then examining it
together in a structured question-and-answer session, the IEC
says advisors can help family members get a better understanding
of their fundamental attitudes about investing, including
insights into the degree to which those attitudes may be shaped
by purely behavioral processes, as well as a firmer grasp of the
investing principals at work in their own portfolios. In turn,
says the IEC, advisors who use the case studies come away with a
deeper understanding of their clients' attitudes and expectations
about investing - enlivened, says one advisor, by a new
appreciation of their clients' family dynamics.
"IEC plans to set the standard in investor education by offering
a more engaging way to teach vital investing concepts," the IPI
says in a press release. "The goal is to offer an affordable,
successful method for investor education using proven techniques
and technologies."
Daniel Geary, director of Lydian Wealth Management's Philadelphia
office, says the IEC approach works. "It's exciting because it
gets people to interact," he says."People are more used to
straightforward PowerPoint presentations - you know, where you
explain investment concepts and the yield curve, and after five
minutes everyone's asleep."
The Metropolitan Group is a proponent of the case-study approach
to educating high-net-worth families. The Cresskill, N.J.-based
consultancy for wealthy families has developed nearly 30 case
studies around topics such as family governance, succession
planning and conflict resolution. "[The IEC] goes deeper on the
investing side; you could say we go deeper on the family side,"
says Mark Rubin, a managing partner with the Metropolitan
Group.
But Rubin has nothing against more traditional approaches to
investor education. "Some families learn more from a didactic
methodology; others respond better to an interactive approach."
For instance, he says, "next-generation" family members - those
in their late teens and early 20s - are more likely to benefit
from conversational, group-based interaction than some of their
older relatives. The power of the IEC's case-study method, says
Rubin, is in its ability to give advisors more flexibility in
their approach to educating clients.
Lydian's Geary agrees. "It's definitely the way to teach if you
really want to get a discussion going in a small family group as
opposed to the family leadership," he says.
Geary presented an IEC case study called "Roller Coaster Markets"
to a family of six - a mother and father, their three adult
offspring and a spouse of one of the children - in a two-hour
session of broader-context family meeting. He says the case
study, essentially a study of investment risk, was an easy
three-page presentation that took little time to run through with
the family. The rest of the session was devoted to Geary's
questions, mostly gleaned from the case study facilitator's
guide, and the family members' responses. "It's role-playing with
the family members putting themselves in the place of those in
the case study and analyzing what happened to them," says Geary.
"People got very active - including some who'd been more
reluctant to take part [in previous discussions]."
The reaction from his clients was positive enough to make him
want to lead other families through IEC case studies, says Geary.
And, he adds, the exercise gave him a deeper understanding of his
clients. "This goes beyond investing to show the family dynamics
around investing at work," he says.
All that said, the Metropolitan Group's Rubin says advisors
interested in educating their clients should resist the
temptation to wing it. "What we're really talking about here is
how families function," he says. "So if you don't understand
that, and don't know what you're doing, you could potentially
give out the wrong message." That is, without the right tools and
training, an advisor could come off someone looking merely to
capture more of a family's wallet share. "It's very important to
be clear about your intentions," Rubin emphasizes.
And, though Rubin recognizes that high-net-worth families are becoming more sophisticated in the dealings with advisors, they still "have to be careful about who they're talking to, and try to understand when someone's offering education or just trying to get at a source of [assets under management]." -FWR