X
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the ifa bulletin
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Risk
  • Events
  • Video
  • Promoted Content
  • Webcasts
No Results
View All Results
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Risk
  • Events
  • Video
  • Promoted Content
  • Webcasts
No Results
View All Results
No Results
View All Results
Home Risk

Modern human advisers can’t get enough technology

In January 2015, I published a report examining automated investment advisers or robo-advisers as they are more frequently known. At the time, this was a relatively new concept sweeping across the world from the US to Australia. 

by Ian Dunbar
September 21, 2016
in Risk
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

After a panel discussion on robo-advice and fintech innovation at the My Platform Rules Conference in February the same year, the buzz in the room was all about robo-advice and how it would disrupt the financial advice industry. Many suggested that this might be the end of the human financial adviser as we knew it.

Headlines such as ‘Robo-advisers are here. What’s a human financial planner to do?’ (Washington Post, November 5 2015) and ‘Why worry? Human advisers are on the way out’ (The Sydney Morning Herald, March 4 2015) stoked the anxiety of many. 

X

Have the robots won? Are we flocking to robots and ditching humans?

Fast forward 18 months and, rather unsurprisingly, human advisers are still with us, and quite possibly in a stronger position than they have been for decades. Turns out that robo-advice is a real opportunity for human advisers. Who would have thought?

Recent research from MyPrivateBanking, a Swiss financial research company, tells us that the most rapid gains are being made by wealth managers who are embracing robo-technology to drive efficiency and scale in their businesses and engagement with their clients.

These human, robo-loving advisers are at the forefront of the digital wave sweeping the industry.  According to the research, hybrid advisers will manage 10 per cent of global investible wealth by 2025, some US$16.7 trillion, while it is estimated that pure robo-advisers will manage just 1.6 per cent.

The embracing of robo-technology will profoundly change the industry

Look under the hood of robo-advice and what we see is a bigger wave of technological innovation in the financial services industry, which has sadly lacked substantive innovation for the last couple of decades.  This technology change delivers exciting opportunities for the advice industry to transform through:

1. Driving scale, efficiency – manual and semi-automated processes such as fact finds, risk profiling and optimising investment strategies will reduce costs and speed up the advice discovery and delivery process. 

2. Time and geographical boundaries are being torn down – forget the need to the drive to meetings, fight traffic or wait for clients to be in town. Rapid advances and the acceptance of video-based technology, digital signing, secure transfer of documentation and customer identify verification are re-defining the office.

3. Enhanced transparency – improvements in customer portals and apps (mobile of course) create the opportunity for transparency and engagement. This does not mean just allowing a client to view their portfolio, but delivering relevant, contextual information about achieving their goals and the risk they are taking.

4. Rapid (and efficient) communication – developing a community, the use of private chat, social media, video sharing, video blogs (‘vlogs’) or one-on-one video meetings on the move, all dramatically speed up communication and lower the cost of delivery.

5. Enhanced controls and regulatory compliance – the automation of processes that don’t require judgement, but require sound algorithmic logic, eliminates the potential for errors. Video records and digital histories of meetings will prove to be a more robust protection for both parties than meeting notes translated to a SOA over many weeks, while the context of the discussion is lost over time.

Taking advantage of technology and embracing these opportunities enables the adviser to build relationships, develop trust and act as the client’s financial guide – which is exactly what we want them to be doing.


Ian Dunbar is the CEO of SuiteBox, a mobile office technology solution for advisers and financial services professionals. Ian is a director and co-founder of Afiniation, a network of fintech companies across Australia and New Zealand. In January 2015 Ian published the research report Automated Investment Advisers – Global Market Survey.

Tags: AdvisersTechnology

Related Posts

TAL announces adviser co-created dashboard for policy management

by Alex Driscoll
December 3, 2025
1

Developed with advisers and their teams, according to TAL the new feature brings together all inforce policy information into a...

Gene study in a DNA chain. Mutations and genetic diseases. Gene therapy modification of cells to produce a therapeutic effect. Family tree and pedigree. Disease propensity. Paternity confirmation. SSUCv3H4sIAAAAAAAACpyRy24DIQxF95X6DyPWGYl5Ztpfibowj2ZQCETApKqi/HsNDBHr7vCxfe1rHu9vTUMYeMXJZ/OIEcZK680HB0FZg5gedu6kEdLV5O6GmdZAChWsU6BryCDw1cBVIjSb1hE/U5L4AGHz0sfpO+IQ5Bk1MnxJ5BVPOW5KIiWxA1OEHCrmN5ZYQVn8X5358VXcwFka/psWrow4qSVkI6dcSi4/QbprbQ02oWzl6m456FgwVEo3p7gy56rNhjWdvbRxu5ng4gqvzYm29gZMxxN/o6YsfAXvsVwUXg3i+Mn2Ws0xNiQDuyoR+BMx7IZ+OdJlpOM0zceJjse9IP/eqlAnrVOEMOYXJWrrKm5AqBB9z4apnei8tOOy8Pajm0UrOgaCdf0wdhQP//wDAAD//wMAz96J5pgCAAA=

Labor introduces legislation to ban genetic testing

by Alex Driscoll
November 26, 2025
1

This comes almost a year after the government announced it would introduce the legislation.  Though current industry standards stipulate that...

handshake strategy

PPS aims to continues growth phase with new appointment

by Alex Driscoll
November 25, 2025
0

Daniel Waller’s appointment comes as former head of distribution, Brian Pillemer, is set to retire.   PPS stated Waller played...

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VIEW ALL
Promoted Content

Mortgage-backed securities offering the home advantage

Domestic credit spreads have tightened markedly since US Liberation Day on 2 April, buoyed by US trade deal announcements between...

by VanEck
December 3, 2025
Promoted Content

Private Credit in Transition: Governance, Growth, and the Road Ahead

Private credit is reshaping commercial real estate finance. Success now depends on collaboration, discipline, and strong governance across the market.

by Zagga
October 29, 2025
Promoted Content

Boring can be brilliant: why steady investing builds lasting wealth

Excitement sells stories, not stability. For long-term wealth, consistency and compounding matter most — proving that sometimes boring is the...

by Zagga
September 30, 2025
Promoted Content

Helping clients build wealth? Boring often works best.

Excitement drives headlines, but steady returns build wealth. Real estate private credit delivers predictable performance, even through volatility.

by Zagga
September 26, 2025

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

Poll

This poll has closed

Do you have clients that would be impacted by the proposed Division 296 $3 million super tax?
Vote
www.ifa.com.au is a digital platform that offers daily online news, analysis, reports, and business strategy content that is specifically designed to address the issues and industry developments that are most relevant to the evolving financial planning industry in Australia. The platform is dedicated to serving advisers and is created with their needs and interests as the primary focus.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About IFA

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • News
  • Risk
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Promoted Content
  • Video
  • Profiles
  • Events

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Risk
  • Events
  • Video
  • Promoted Content
  • Webcasts
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited