Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals
August 2013
Effective marketing strategies used in targeting retail investors often are dismissed by institutional marketers as being too obvious or unsophisticated. This issue of Excess Returns considers how institutional marketers would do well to emulate certain retail marketing best practices.
With best wishes,
Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research
Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.
This often happens when I am working with an institutional marketing team. I suggest adding more visual information. I suggest that institutional marketing can capture audience interest in the same way that a great magazine article sparks the imagination. I suggest that whatever marketing initiative we are working on needs less data and more stories, less uniform predictability and more differentiating substance. I get excited about the possibilities. Then I hear the pause … It’s a long pause fraught with disapproval. Finally, someone says, “But that’s so retail.” Or, “We can’t do that. It’s too retail.”
This mindset is virtually ubiquitous. The reality is, most institutional marketing, almost by definition, is boring — all philosophy-process-people-performance with no stories to make the investments come alive. By contrast, retail marketing has become more and more interesting — something to emulate, not something to avoid.
Here are a few suggestions regarding how institutional marketers can capture some of the excitement created by the best retail marketing initiatives:
Best Practices in Retail Investment Marketing
Use relevant visual content. And no, I’m not thinking about photos of elderly people enjoying retirement. I am thinking of maps, illustrations, photos and videos — any visual information that brings to life what your firm is investing in and why. Visual content relevant to the investments is rare in institutional investment marketing. For those who have the imagination and are willing to do the work, therein lies the opportunity.
Educate. This does not mean yet another white paper entitled “The Case for XYZ Asset Class.” Institutional investors want and need more information about how asset managers view the world of investment possibilities and how they hunt for the best investments. A story about information that your investment team recently uncovered during a research trip. Or a story about the transformation of an old industry or the birth of a new one. (Often when I suggest adding such information to institutional investment marketing, people will say, “You mean more anecdotes.” But I mean something far more robust than anecdotes; I am talking about information that opens whole new worlds, the kind of information that got people excited about being investors in the first place and that ignites interest in your firm’s strategy.)
Eliminate jargon and acronyms. Even the most sophisticated institutional investor may have decision-makers who are laypeople with little investment knowledge. It doesn’t take a lot of extra ink or breath to spell out or say “leveraged buyout” instead of “LBO” and no one will feel that you are condescending to them if you do so.
It cuts both ways. Retail marketers also would do well to emulate institutional marketing best practices. The four-P formula (philosophy-process-people-performance) is required by consultants and (when not presented with the predictability of a death march) adds intellectual substance to retail marketing programs. Similarly, retail marketing would benefit from more proof in the form of performance attribution and research validating the investment approach.
Over a decade ago, during an interview about Alpha Partners, someone asked me, “What is the biggest trend that will reshape the way investments are sold?” I said “Retail investors are becoming more institutional.” What this response did not encompass is the fact that institutional investors are at heart retail investors with a bigger, more complex job. But that doesn’t mean they’re not human beings and human beings, the last time I checked, gravitate toward visual information, well-told stories and the excitement of learning something new.
No More Dumbing Down
In the early 1990s, I mainly worked on retail campaigns for mutual fund companies. Way back then it was virtually impossible to work on a retail marketing campaign without someone saying, at some point, “We need to dumb this down.” The suggestion always made me deeply uncomfortable because it is condescending toward the audience and also because the dumbing down process invariably weakened the end product. Investors across markets want to learn and understand; they don’t want pablum and, even if they’re relatively unsophisticated, they know pablum when they see it.
At that time, alternative investment funds for the retail market were just a gleam in someone’s eye, if that. Now, one of the biggest ways that retail investors will continue to become more institutional is via increased use of alternative investments (variously defined depending on the source but typically including hedge funds, private equity, real estate, infrastructure and commodities). The Mainstreaming of Alternative Investments, a 2012 McKinsey & Company study, documents the huge potential of the retail alternatives market and a 2013 SEI research paper, The Retail Alternatives Phenomenon, reports that firms such as Morgan Stanley’s Alternative Investment Partners, Blackstone Group and Carlyle Group, among others, have already launched or filed for retail alternative products.
According to research by McKinsey & Company, in 2015 retail alternatives
will likely account for 13% of US retail fund assets and 24% of revenues.
How will the spread of retail alternatives affect investment marketing? Retail alternatives will mean expanded and improved investor education, which in turn will mean smarter, more sophisticated investors. This is another giant step in a decades-long process of blurring the lines between retail and institutional.
A Simple Comparison
To witness firsthand the current difference between retail and institutional marketing, here’s an online research initiative you can pursue right now. Go to the websites for several large, well-regarded, global asset managers. Most have different sites for retail investors, financial advisors and institutional investors. Visit the retail investor site and take a tour. Then visit the institutional investor site and compare what you find there. Consider how your own company’s institutional site could be improved by adding some of the same elements you found to be effective on the retail sites and vice versa. Ten years ago, the retail site would have been all photos of happy retired people and the institutional site would have been all white papers, and this dichotomy still exists to some extent today. But increasingly you will find great ideas for strengthening intellectual content on the retail site and for adding greater human interest to the institutional site.
Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals
August 2011
During times of market turmoil, investment managers have an obligation to communicate swiftly and decisively with their clients. Yet decisive communications can be tough when the market oscillates daily between fear and greed. This issue of Excess Returns considers how some investment firms excel at communicating effectively when times are tough. We also provide a few topical favorites from our reading list — including a novel reminiscent of Edith Wharton with real-life stock charts.
With best wishes,
Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research
Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.
On the eve of the US long-term debt downgrade, my husband and I are preparing for our regular quarterly meeting with our investment advisor. We manage our portfolios separately. He is conservative and I am moderately aggressive, so we tend to balance one another. This time, though, he is asking me questions that I cannot readily answer — about the implications of the downgrade and how he should position his portfolio given the recent Sisyphean activity of the markets (one step forward, three steps back).
So I head to the Internet to gain some perspective, visiting the websites of some of the largest investment managers — all companies with billions of dollars under management and impressive communications teams. What I find there ranges from feast to famine. Some firms offer so much rich, diverse, timely commentary on current market activity that it’s almost overwhelming (in a good way). I invest with some of these companies and I am happy to see that they are cognizant of what is going on in the world. Other sites for multibillion dollar asset managers, however, prominently feature commentary on news that is now many months old, just as if this mess of a market had not happened yet, and still others bizarrely ignore current events altogether.
I visit the site of a firm renowned for the accuracy and timeliness of its macroeconomic insights and all I find is a lot of brand messaging and public relations blather about what a cool place it is to work. I find this insulting and I bet other people, including prospective clients, feel the same way. Presumably the macro insights are reserved for paying clients, but this firm, which is not closed to new assets, would be better served by at least affording prospective clients a glimpse of its legendary acumen.
Communications Strategies for Volatile Markets
When times are tough, asset managers — all asset managers, but especially large, multiproduct firms — have an obligation to communicate. In my review of dozens of websites for multibillion dollar global firms from August 8, the Monday after the downgrade, to the end of this month, I encounter several commonsense strategies that strike me as being particularly effective:
Move Fast. The best websites always have new information and insights, with postings time-stamped for freshness.
Educate. Moving this fast might mean that these firms don’t necessarily have fully formed views yet. But they can still help investors by explaining what is going on and what it might or might not mean. On certain asset manager websites, for example, I was relieved to find answers to questions about the downgrade that I had not even thought to ask.
Be systematic. The investment business at the higher levels has become a publish-or-perish enterprise. By having a series of regular publications, the best firms are automatically geared up to address big-picture events in a timely fashion.
Communicate with a human face. Fireside chat-style video clips with Chief Investment Officers and lead Portfolio Managers present a human face when investors are most in need of reassurance and accountability from the people managing their money.
Consider the big picture. Communications are never more important than during times of stress. Your firm has a simple choice regarding what message you want to send on your public website: “We have no interest in the larger top-down world around us” or “We are here for you and we want to help.”
Fortunately, most global investment firm websites want to help. I read everything I can and I start feeling a bit more hopeful, a bit less like Sisyphus. I have a well-informed conversation with my husband prior to our portfolio review meeting and we are both well prepared. This process gives me a huge measure of sympathy for those who are responsible for investing billions of dollars of other people’s money. I am grateful to the asset managers who have helped me to understand what is going on; in the future, I am more likely to visit their websites, and to continue investing with them.
A Tale of Reach and Grasp
“‘Only fools and charlatans try to time the market,’ he announced, looking at Joe. ‘Which are you?’ Listening to him, Joe thought how satisfying it would be to punch him in the face.”
— From A Hedge Fund Tale of Reach and Grasp … or what’s a Heaven for?
In addition to scouring asset manager websites for perspective on the current markets, I head to Amazon where I am happy to find the latest book by Barton Biggs. I am delighted to find that it’s a novel — and a novel with stock charts no less! The dust jacket compares A Hedge Fund Tale to An American Tragedy and Bonfire of the Vanities, but to me it also reads like the best of Edith Wharton.
Eyefuls of Bark
“Here I was, obsessing over all these individual companies, and never once giving thought to the bigger picture, geopolitical or otherwise. I not only was missing the forest for the trees, I had my face pressed up against the trunks so closely I had eyefuls of bark … I vowed that I was going to try to do more macro research and risk management, a high concept that had permeated the hedge fund world after LTCM [Long-Term Capital Management], but that I and a lot of others viewed with ambivalence.”
— From Diary of a Hedge Fund Manager, From the Top, to the Bottom, and Back Again
Diary of a Hedge Fund Manager, by Keith McCullough and Rich Blake, provides one investor’s firsthand account of the manic, lemming-like orientation of the stock market during a boom. As with A Hedge Fund Tale, the perspective of history provides balm to the soul. As I always say, when the going gets tough, the tough … read.