Wealth management: RM enablement when “marketing” was a dirty word
Problem
Advisors grew books through dinners, seminars, and introductions. Corporate marketing blasted brand emails that felt off-tone. When compliance tightened, advisors still sent “their own” PDFs because approved materials were stiff and slow. The firm needed scale without turning advisors into corporate spokesbots.
Constraints
Regulatory review queues were a bottleneck. Advisor segments ranged from ultra-HNW teams to small-market generalists. Any system that felt like “more homework” would die quietly.
Approach
We built a library of modular snippets—headlines, disclosures, charts with locked axes, client scenarios—composed into pre-approved layouts. Advisors picked a lane (retirement income, business sale, etc.) and generated a personalized draft in minutes, routed through compliance with predictable SLAs. Marketing shifted from campaigns to “packaging expertise” advisors already had.
Rollout
We started with one complex topic where errors were costly: sequence-of-returns risk. We trained a pilot team, measured time-to-send and revision counts, then expanded topics only when compliance throughput held. Parallel track refreshed seminar kits so in-person motion and digital motion told the same story.
Risks mitigated
- Non-compliant edits: locked fields vs free text with sampling QA
- Advisor shame: private coaching and “best examples” sourced from peers, not corporate
- Queue spikes: triage rules and pre-reviewed seasonal packs before tax deadlines
Outcomes (illustrative)
Approved client communications increased while review rework dropped. Advisors reported faster follow-ups after meetings because the “write the email” step stopped being a Sunday-night chore.
Lessons
In wealth, enablement is marketing. If compliance and marketing share a single definition of “good enough fast,” clients win—and so do advisors.
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