Family Office
Schwab and Edward Jones top HNW "experience" poll

Affluent customers rate brokerages in terms of client service,
value added. High-net-worth investors rate Schwab as the top
discount brokerage in the U.S. in terms of customer service and
overall responsiveness and Edward Jones as the top full-service
brokerage, according to a recent survey by the Luxury Institute,
a New York-based market-research firm.
Ameriprise Financial took second spot in the discount category
and Smith Barney was the number-two pick among full-service
shops, according to the Luxury Institute.
"The top retail brokers understand the importance of retaining
wealthy consumers as the ease, availability and reliability of
low cost online trading increases," says the Luxury Institute's
CEO Milton Pedraza. "Highly skilled, knowledgeable, and dedicated
personnel greatly enhance the customer experience and are
reflected in these scores."
A question of trust
The Luxury Institute conducts two kinds of surveys. One has to do
with the prestige of brand names. In those cases -- such as the
survey on regional-bank affiliated wealth-management groups
reported in FWR last month -- the Luxury Institute
presents its online survey respondents with a list of brand
names. The respondents are asked to rank the ones they recognize
in terms of their impression of its prestige. The individual
respondent's personal experience with the brands in question may
not be a factor, nor is there an opportunity for a respondent to
nominate a firm that's not on the list.
But in a consumer experience survey, the respondents -- in
this case 1,650 Americans who report an average net income of
$302,000 and an average net worth of $3.2 million -- are asked
only about firms they've done business with in the previous 12
months. And only firms with a statistically significant number of
recently past or present users among the respondent pool makes
the list.
And in any case Luxury Institute survey results are weighted to
match demographic and net-worth profiles for the same audience
according to the Federal Reserve's latest Survey of Consumer
Finances.
In addition to the four firms that placed first and second in the
discount and full-service categories, respondents weighed in on
discount broker-dealers Wells Fargo Securities, TD Ameritrade,
Fidelity Brokerage Services, E-Trade, Banc of America and
full-service brokerages Wachovia Securities, UBS Financial
Services, Merrill Lynch and A.G. Edwards (which is slated to
become part of Wachovia Securities).
For those brokerages they would not recommend, survey respondents
most frequently cited broker unresponsiveness, biased
recommendation, and a lack of overall trustworthiness. -FWR
.