Inter-Generational Wealth – an example of ‘Where to Play’ & ‘How to Win’?

Inter-Generational Wealth – an example of ‘Where to Play’ & ‘How to Win’?

“The brown? Or the pink?” According to a recent FT article[1] it’s one of the first questions that digital interface designer InvestCloud asks wealth managers when discussing the two extremes of the website ‘look’ it provides.

The article goes on to explain that ‘brown’ features very traditional imagery while ‘pink’ is more contemporary, or at least …less serious with cartoon rockets etc. Brown is for those wealth managers whose client base is more baby boomer, while pink is designed to appeal to millennials.

While the language of baby boomers and millennials is easy short-hand, brown vs pink reflects choices … there’s a lot more to it than just a colour palette – the answer to the ‘brown vs pink’ question should be the culmination of a ‘strategy conversation’ … covering the key questions: ‘where to play’, ‘how to win’ and ‘how to configure (to win)’. These are the three pillars of an effective growth strategy.

Companies that are serious about growth are serious about marketing – putting the customer at the centre of everything they do BUT in a world of multiplying customer touch points and rapidly changing customer behaviours … becoming, and staying, customer focused is increasingly difficult to do.

In financial services different individuals will attach different weights to varying core human emotional drives, and these drives influence how people think about their wealth, financial freedom and financial literacy – and hence can form the basis of a financial services segmentation (and contribute to the ‘where to play’, ‘how to win’ and ‘how to configure’ answers). The three constructs that drive financial decision-making, attitudes and behaviour are:

Perspective: how people view and connect with the world – whether they have a more optimistic/worry-free, as opposed to a more pessimistic/more anxious, view of the world, including their view on responding to constant change.

Intent: where an individual is in terms of the challenges and goals they set. It embraces the congruence they are trying to achieve and the creative expression they want in their lives, including the need to support, care for and contribute to others.

Command: confidence, control and competence, whether people see themselves as being driven by events or able to manage their lives and contribute to others.

We then identify segments based on perspective, intend and command which inform our understanding of how client expectations differ, what different client experiences are various segments looking for, how their investment objectives differ, how they wish to receive and process information etc. etc.

Why is this important? Well the world that wealth managers have known is changing. Research from financial services journal ‘Investment News’ (July 13, 2015) indicated that $30tn is expected to pass from baby boomers to Generation X and on to millennials – “customer segments that many investment advisors do not understand because they don’t know how to connect with their clients’ children . . . who may be technology-savvy and expect a very different service experience than their parents did”[2]

Customer segmentation helps companies use finite assets to “over-invest” in high value customers whose needs align with their capabilities … each customer segment represents a different opportunity, has a unique set of needs and requires a different value proposition that resonates

‘Where to play’ throws up questions for wealth managers to address, such as

  • What market opportunities exist or can be created that are both attractive and achievable?
  • Which segments of customers should we focus resources on – today and tomorrow?
  • What type and amount of market activity resides in each segment?
  • What is our portfolio of business and the relative weight if investment?

‘Where to play’ sets a clear and structured strategic framework – to identify, evaluate and focus on the right market opportunities.

Once we have a view of the landscape and can identify the value generating opportunities within it, we can ask the ‘how to win’ questions.

  • What should the company do for each set of customers?
  • What do individual segments do (need, want or believe) and why?
  • What is the product offer to target the attractive opportunities?
  • How should we present that product offer in terms of a client experience?
  • Through what means or channels, and with what message (brown or pink)?

And finally how do we configure our internal systems and processes to deliver the value generating offer and experience? ‘How to configure’ may suggest transformation of our channel or go-to-market strategy, product or process innovation, business model innovation or a change in our marketing communications systems.

Advisors unable to prove they are effective at establishing relationships with clients’ children and serving the next generation will find their client base inevitably erodes and as a result their business value falls. This is why – where to play, how to win and how to configure are such important strategic questions.

“InvestCloud says brown may still be the right choice for traditional wealth managers, but it argues that it is towards the pink end of the spectrum that more need to move — in order to present a different persona to a different generation of investors”

But importantly you can’t run 2 personas in parallel without causing dissonance – i.e. confusion in the mind of the client as to exactly what you stand for. Strategy is about making these choices – neatly summed up as ‘pink’ or ‘brown’

[1] http://www.investmentnews.com/article/20150713/FEATURE/150719999/the-great-wealth-transfer-is-coming-putting-advisers-at-risk

[2] https://www.ft.com/content/48eeceb4-538f-11e8-84f4-43d65af59d43

‘Segments of One’ – myth or reality?

‘Segments of One’ – myth or reality?

How many segments is too many? At some point we always have this conversation. Clients usually find 4 too few and 12 too many (leave aside that it’s not about how many but rather how you prioritise). So the spectre of ‘segments of one’ leaves us scratching our heads – an existential crisis for those of us who get paid to package the market up into somewhere between 4 and 12 homogenous groups; and paralysing for clients who now have (pick a big number) a million segments of one. But is it? And what does ‘segments of one’ actually mean?

In trying to get our collective heads around ‘segments of one’ we keep coming back to the difference between segmentation and profiling – traditionally profiling leverages a mass of data to add flesh to the bones of a segmentation – the segmentation has distilled the complexity inherent in all markets down to something manageable. But, so the argument goes, the processing power of IT, and the ability for brands to now get much closer to their customers etc. etc. makes the segmentation step ‘redundant’ as we no longer need to distil complexity, but rather embrace it. This is the hyperpersonalization argument.

In a piece for ‘Think with Google’ Unilever’s Chief Marketing and Communications Officer, Keith Weed, cited the mobile phone as the driving force behind an empowered consumer – who could disagree –  and that its now “driving a hyper segmentation revolution”, and Unilever to “a future where we will build brands in segments of one”.

So let’s think about this in terms of a company that makes things. If my business is making ‘things’ at scale – physical mass customisation or hyperpersonalization is very difficult to do. Scale is important – if I make high spec bicycles, I could customise these to individual taste, but I might make 10, 100, 1000, 5000 a year. What if I make 20million units of something? Whether we are trying to develop strategy or drive something like NPD – we still need to distil complexity into something manageable and useful. Of course Keith Weed isn’t suggesting (I think) that using hyper segmentation Unilever is going down a mass customisation route.

The reality is that we will still have between 4 and 12 segments to allow us to pragmatically manage the complexity and develop our product portfolio and core brand foundations BUT within those segments – data and the ability to now have a one-to-one dialogue with consumers will develop a unique brand experience. Not necessarily one that the brand owner controls but still we can see this one to one relationship as ‘segments of one’. So for a standardised mass market product we may develop individualised brand conversations but we are limited by the nature of the product and the way we go to market. Organisations like Unilever are (it would seem – I have no direct knowledge) looking to developed one-to-one relationships with their consumers – off the back of a mass market product offer. Is this based on profiling within an existing segmentation frame – sort of tactical hyper segmentation within a segmentation? So what is the ‘segment of one’? It is a question of both capability and practicality.

But what about those organisations whose products are intangible …. say Netflix or many financial services companies … companies that can be characterised as having a lot of data on each individual customer and the ability to reconfigure their product offer in an (effectively) infinite number of ways. So they can ‘just’ profile their customer and offer suitable, customised packages (enabled by technology) – they don’t need the intervening step of a consolidating segmentation. Right? Probably not. We are getting much better at trawling data for attitudinal and behavioural cues, and using this knowledge to inform marcoms and other interactions but, to inform strategy, I will bet these organisations are still using some kind of consolidating framework (anyone from NetFlix, please feel free to set me right). Managing complexity is expensive. To embrace complexity to the extent that segments of one would dictate, means redefining what we mean by ‘strategy’. If traditionally strategy has equated to ‘making choices’ – in this new world, the choices are no longer made by the organisation, but rather by the customer. This also assumes that the organisation is less resource constrained – presumably this is a function of technology.

Even as we get better at mining the increasing amounts of data available to us, there is still a long way to go in terms of maximising the value and utility to the customer of this kind of profiling. NetFlix’s ‘Top Picks For …’ seems to me to be little better than random choice – based on watching an episode of 70’s British sitcom Porridge, the recommendation that I might like to watch Top Gear would seem a tenuous link (to me … and that’s the whole point).

Visionary change is a very disciplined business

Visionary change is a very disciplined business

At ESOMAR’s, 70th anniversary, World Congress from 10-13 September in Amsterdam www.esomar.org/congress we will be presenting a paper on transformational change in the financial services industry, entitled …
Are you insured, Scarlett? ‘I can’t think about that right now… I’ll think about that tomorrow’. How MetLife imagined a new future for the insurance industry… and is delivering it today.
In the run up to this presentation we will be exploring some of the themes touched on in the paper with a weekly(ish) blog post. We will also provide a link to the paper and presentation at the end of the Congress.

Read the fifth of our weekly blogs by clicking on this link: Visionary Change is a Very Disciplined Business

While ‘one of the many pleasures of old age includes giving things up’ … this won’t include work’

While ‘one of the many pleasures of old age includes giving things up’ … this won’t include work’

At ESOMAR’s, 70th anniversary, World Congress from 10-13 September in Amsterdam www.esomar.org/congress we will be presenting a paper on transformational change in the financial services industry, entitled …
Are you insured, Scarlett? ‘I can’t think about that right now… I’ll think about that tomorrow’. How MetLife imagined a new future for the insurance industry… and is delivering it todayIn the run up to this presentation we will be exploring some of the themes touched on in the paper with a weekly blog post. We will also provide a link to the paper and presentation at the end of the Congress.

This fourth blog entitled … While ‘one of the many pleasures of old age includes giving things up’ … this won’t include work’ continues to explore the changing nature of retirement.

Read the fourth of our weekly blogs by clicking on this link: While one of the many pleasures of old age includes giving things up this wont include work

Getting Along With Less Cheese

Getting Along With Less Cheese

At ESOMAR’s, 70th anniversary, World Congress from 10-13 September in Amsterdam www.esomar.org/congress we will be presenting a paper on transformational change in the financial services industry, entitled…

Are you insured, Scarlett? ‘I can’t think about that right now… I’ll think about that tomorrow’. How MetLife imagined a new future for the insurance industry… and is delivering it today
In the run up to this presentation we will be exploring some of the themes touched on in the paper with a weekly blog post. We will also provide a link to the paper and presentation at the end of the Congress.

Our third blog… ‘Getting along with less cheese’ is the first of two that explore the changing nature of retirement

Read the third of our weekly blogs by clicking on this link: Getting Along With Less Cheese

That Robot Stole My Job

That Robot Stole My Job

Should we fear the rise of the machines? Or ‘That robot stole my job’!

At ESOMAR’s, 70th anniversary, World Congress from 10-13 September in Amsterdam www.esomar.org/congress we will be presenting a paper on transformational change in the financial services industry, entitled…
Are you insured, Scarlett? ‘I can’t think about that right now… I’ll think about that tomorrow’. How MetLife imagined a new future for the insurance industry… and is delivering it today
In the run up to this presentation we will be exploring some of the themes touched on in the paper with a weekly blog post. We will also provide a link to the paper and presentation at the end of the Congress.

This second blog entitled … Should we fear the rise of the machines? Or ‘That robot stole my job’! explores the future of work and artificial intelligence and the implications for employment and society

Read the second of our weekly blogs by clicking on this link: That Robot Stole My Job