Monday, October 7, 2013

Advisers inundated by fund company outreach

If you feel as though asset management companies are reaching out more aggressively than ever before, that's because they are.

On average, advisers are contacted 126 times a month from companies trying to sell investment products, up from 110 times a month last year and about 100 times a month five years ago, according to the 2013 Cogent Research Advisor Touchpoints survey.

Social media saw the biggest increase in use by asset managers as the number of communications doubled over last year to more than four a month.

E-mail, old fashioned mail, webinars, internal sales calls, wholesaler visits and road shows all saw increases as well, according to Cogent.

The 7 Ways Fund Companies Pester Advisers

Not all of the channels are getting rave reviews from advisers. Two out of five advisers said they preferred to be contacted by e-mail and 31% said they prefer external wholesaler visits, according to the Cogent survey of more than 1,700 financial advisers.

For some advisers, though, the crush of communications is more of a nuisance than helpful.

“It's way too much,” said Matt Reiner, chief investment officer at Capital Investment Advisors.

Mr. Reiner routinely deletes e-mails with headlines like “Morningstar Top Percentile!” or weekly investment commentaries.

“You do remember them if they keep on going all the time, but it tends to be too much,” he said. “If they really want your business, they'll figure out how to get in touch with you.”

Once a company does get in touch, what matters most to Mr. Reiner is whether the company is willing to establish a working relationship that goes beyond just pitching products.

“We don't try to talk to companies too much, but we want them to be available when we need them,” Mr. Reiner said. “It's really more about developing a personal relationship than just being all sales, all the time.”

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