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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.
WSicom
October 22, 2014, 5:30 AM ET
THE PRACTICE:
Software helps firms monitor advice on planning. Firms have
long been able to monitor how advisers invest client money. But
technology now enables the higher-ups to much better track adviser
performance in other areas, such as financial planning, Bob Veres
says. Writing in Advisor Perspectives, he looks at how one firm,
Mercer Global Advisors, uses a software called InStream to see how
diligent its advisers are in drawing up plans for clients, and to track
those clients' savings and spending rates, among other things.
And here is the entire article referenced above. This article is from
"Advisor Perspectives" an industry publication...
The Tool that Will Transform
Firmwide Financial Planning
October 21, 2014
by Bob Veres
Alex Murguia, founder and CEO of InStream Solutions, may be the
most creative visionary in today's advisor software ecosystem. And
like all people who think outside the box, sometimes he discovers that
his best ideas have far better uses than he intended.
InStream is best described as a financial planning tool. It performs
the usual retirement-sufficiency calculations and Monte Carlo
projections. It offers such creative add-ons as Social Security
planning, automatic creation of mindmaps that organize a client's
entire financial situation in graphical format, and, more recently,
incorporation of Dr. Wade Pfau's "safe-savings rate" calculations,
which make planning advice more relevant to Gen X/Y clients in their
early accumulation years. There are customizable alerts that
proactively warn an advisor if a client's situation is breaching any of a
variety of thresholds, such as retirement sufficiency outside the safe
zone, moving below the safe-savings rate or having a mortgage
which, at current rates (automatically pulled down from the Internet
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every day), could profitably be refinanced.
But another feature, which Murguia was initially excited about, was
ignored by the smaller advisory firms who were among the first
InStream users. "We collected all the recommendations made by all
the advisors to all the clients in the system, anonymously, of course,
and aggregated them for all of our users," he explains. "We thought it
would be incredibly valuable to be able to compare your
recommendations in a particular client situation with all the other
recommendations. The idea was to evolve a best-practices engine
across the profession. But people just weren't using it."
Rescued from the dustbin
Murguia was thinking about dropping the feature and focusing on
some of his other ideas. And then he demonstrated InStream to a
large potential buyer: Ralph Ujano, Senior VP of Wealth Management
at Mercer Global Advisors.
At the time, Mercer was beginning to face a challenge that is entirely
new to the mainstream planning profession, but which is a well-
known headache in boardrooms of wirehouse
organizations. "Consistency of advice is very important to us," says
Ujano, "especially at the rate we've been growing."
But how do you impose and monitor any financial planning
consistency when you have, as Mercer does, advisors working in
offices in Philadelphia, Washington, DC, Columbus, OH, Detroit,
Chicago, Sarasota, FL, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Omaha, Boulder,
Scottsdale, San Diego, Newport Beach, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara
and San Francisco? The firm now works with 4,500 clients, collects
in excess of $50 million in annual revenue, and its 45 planning
professionals are conveying literally thousands of independent
advice-related judgments in conference rooms in all corners of the
country.
"On the investment side, we can monitor and maintain consistency
quite easily," says Ujano. "We have a core set of strategies that are
monitored daily, and the profession has a lot of portfolio management
tools that make it possible for us to know that we're giving pretty
darned consistent investment advice. But," he says, "there isn't
anything comparable to help us be consistent in how we're framing
and providing that advice. When I first saw InStream, I told them that
didn't have a way to track whether every client was receiving a
personalized, customized plan. They showed me what they were
doing, and said: We haven't really articulated it this way, but that's
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exactly what we're building."
"It's very easy, because the technology has been there over time,"
adds Murguia, "to create model portfolios and have bands within the
asset allocation, and standardize the portfolio management
experience for clients and monitor outliers and notify you if something
is off track that needs to be rebalanced."
"But what we realized when we were talking with Mercer, on the
planning side, is it completely wild west," he says. "You have to trust,
blindly, in the competence of your advisors. When these larger firms
bring in a lot of new planners, how do they know what they're actually
doing in their plans? Are they all competent? Are they moving off the
reservation in their recommendations?"
The broader insight, which emerged from a software feature that was
almost discarded for lack of use, is that a growing number of
ambitiously growing advisory firms are moving past a threshold where
their advisory team has a chance to informally look over everybody
else's shoulder. They are starting to encounter the same challenges
the brokerage firms have faced for years.
And now, for the first time, they have a tool which will address the
problem.
Monitoring adoption and results across a large firm
Ujano is now a power user of InStream, but not for its planning
features. "Firmwide, we're currently onboarding 25-40 new clients in
any given month," he says. "At the first level, I'm getting reports that
tell me which advisors are using the software platform and, for each
of them, how many of their clients are receiving financial plans, and
how quickly and comprehensively that tends to happen. I can also
check how often they're updating the plans."
That allows him, from his office in Scottsdale, to pick up the phone
and call an advisor in Georgia and note that, on average, a certain
number of clients are being input into the planning system. "I can
say: You're at half that number," says Ujano. "Tell me what's going
on.
He is in the early stages of looking at trends. How consistently are
advisors using the Social Security portion of the platform? This can
be broken down by client age or net worth. How often are they using
the safe-savings rate feature, and is it being done with clients of
appropriate age? InStream lets the home office, or an on-site
manager, sort on one type of goal-based planning that advisors are
offering, like the education planning, broken down by age. The
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output, currently, looks like this:
% Include Co-Clients
Goal Type Distribution
Retirement
IN Education
MI Legacy
bleary*
O
Unde,
21-30
41-50
61-70
Ovm 70
In this example that the heaviest use of college planning takes place
when clients are in their 30s and 40s, when they have children
approaching adulthood, and the planning picks up again when clients
are in their 60s, presumably because they're now providing financial
help to college-age grandchildren.
If you want to take a broader look at a variety of different planning
activities, again associated with client ages, again for an office, a
single advisor or across the entire firm, the report would look like this:
31-40
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9) Include Co-Clients
Goal Type Distribution
Ret,emen!
•
Education
•
Legacy
MI L'es!ylo
MI Ail
%of Clients
Unciof 20
21-30
31-40
4150
51-60
Over 70
InStream can customize these reports by sorting the underlying data
however an advisory firm needs to look at it. Meanwhile, Ujano is
thinking about how to use the alerts functionality to achieve more
firmwide planning consistency.
"We can set safe zones in the Monte Carlo analysis across all of our
offices," he says, citing a simple example, "and our advisors will get
an alert if that threshold is breached, which helps them stay on top of
client situations. We're talking about setting up firmwide alerts on
things like: are they hitting their savings targets each year? And," he
adds, "from an administrative standpoint, we can see which advisors
are on top of these things and addressing them immediately. Getting
the right advice out there the first time is really important--and we
have to make sure our folks have a clear pathway to do that."
Of course, the system will also provide broader metrics, like AUM
numbers for each advisor and an average level for the firm and each
region, number of clients served per advisor and region, number of
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new clients and trends in any of these areas. And it can lead to
marketing campaigns, actually giving substance to the often-empty
concept of "big data."
"We had a firm that looked at the education planning they were
doing," says Murguia, "and they discovered what you see in the chart:
that folks were focused on it in their 40s and 50s, and then it went
dormant. Then it popped up again among cohorts that are in their
70s and 80s. They realized that this was really an important issue to
their older clients, funding the education of their grandkids. It led
them do an educational campaign around that with their older clients,
talking about 529 plans. From an enterprise perspective," Murguia
adds, "that kind of business intelligence on trends and best practices
is giving them valuable management information."
The next generation management tool
The lesson? "I really thought aggregating plan data would attract the
smaller firms who wanted to know best practices, and then it would
trickle up," says Murguia. "But it turns out it was a big part of our
value proposition for enterprises. And when you look at it, there are a
lot of rebalancing mechanisms for investments, and tools to create
model portfolios and stay on top of the consistency of investment
advice down to the penny. But until now, there has been nothing
comparable on the planning side, nothing to help them establish,
monitor and drive best practices down and throughout their firms."
Ujano, meanwhile, has taken on an unofficial, but important, role as
feature consultant for InStream, looking for better ways for the
software to facilitate better planning at his firm—and others. "We're
really committed to the quality of our advice, as well as the
transparency and consistency of that advice throughout our
organization," he says. "We want to be able to add value beyond the
structure of the portfolio we're creating," he adds, citing the
integration of Social Security and Medicare, potentially using a
standby letter of credit and reverse mortgages for portfolio longevity
purposes and distribution strategies with cash reserves — "and have it
all built into our platform, where we can identify best practices from
the top down, and monitor how well and consistently they're being
applied at the advisor level."
As advisory firms grow and face the challenges that Mercer is
addressing, this feature that was almost thrown away will become an
increasingly important management tool for the profession, and solve
a problem that none of the larger emergent planning enterprises
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realized they would face.
Bob Veres's Inside Information service is the best practice
management, marketing and client resource for investment advisors
and financial planners. To get a free sample issue of Inside
Information, send your request to
, or order
online at http://www.bobveres.corn.
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| Filename | EFTA00592846.pdf |
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| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
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| Indexed | 2026-02-11T22:52:47.269324 |