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The Difference Between Hyper-Personalization and Digitization with Nalika Nanayakkara

WealthTech on Deck

English - January 23, 2024 08:00 - 30 minutes - ★★★★★ - 16 ratings
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The financial industry, anchored in data and figures, can sometimes overlook the fundamental truth that clients are emotional beings. Regardless of how carefully crafted wealth portfolios, diverse investments, and comprehensive plans for estates or retirement are, their effectiveness hinges on what the client values most.
In this episode, Jack talks with Nalika Nanayakkara, Managing Partner for the Americas Financial Services Operations at EY. In her role, Nalika leads the wealth and asset management (WAM) consulting business for EY in the U.S. She is also responsible for the EY financial services consulting organization and the execution of their NextWave strategy. 
Nalika talks to Jack about the difference between hyper-personalization and digitization in wealth management. She goes deeper into the importance of listening and understanding clients' personal needs and values. She also discusses the concept of money scripts and how they shape financial decisions. Nalika highlights the significance of trust, marrying financial planning with purpose, and incorporating emotional needs into segmentation models.

Key Takeaways

[01:51] - The difference between hyper-personalization and digitization.

[04:41] - Money scripts and the unconscious biases towards money.

[09:15] - Integrating emotional understanding in client interactions.

[14:16] - The importance of understanding what matters to clients.

[18:25] - Why advisors need to connect with clients personally.

[21:55] - Key recommendations for creating personal client experience.

[24:09] - The power of listening and understanding in financial services.

[27:23] - Nalika's interests outside of work.

Quotes
[02:53] - "Our industry is very numbers focused. We talk about portfolio returns and the probability of meeting a financial plan. Money, particularly wealth, is highly personal. But financial services are highly impersonal." ~ Nalika Nanayakkara
[09:47] - "Don't expect your clients to always be rational. You can have the most comprehensive wealth offer that's priced fairly, investments, estate, or retirement. But it's only as good as your client's willingness to consume it." ~ Nalika Nanayakkara 
[19:21] - "If you want to be successful as an advisor, you have to make that human connection. To do that, you have to really care about what matters to the person." ~ Nalika Nanayakkara

Links 

Nalika Nanayakkara on LinkedIn

NextChapter

Steve Gresham

EY

Dr. Brad Klontz

Riley Etheridge

Capital Group 

Merrill Lynch

John Thiel

Authentic and Ethical Persuasion

Connect with our hosts

LifeYield

Jack Sharry on LinkedIn

Jack Sharry on Twitter

Subscribe and stay in touch

Apple Podcasts

Spotify

LinkedIn

Twitter

Facebook

The financial industry, anchored in data and figures, can sometimes overlook the fundamental truth that clients are emotional beings. Regardless of how carefully crafted wealth portfolios, diverse investments, and comprehensive plans for estates or retirement are, their effectiveness hinges on what the client values most.

In this episode, Jack talks with Nalika Nanayakkara, Managing Partner for the Americas Financial Services Operations at EY. In her role, Nalika leads the wealth and asset management (WAM) consulting business for EY in the U.S. She is also responsible for the EY financial services consulting organization and the execution of their NextWave strategy. 

Nalika talks to Jack about the difference between hyper-personalization and digitization in wealth management. She goes deeper into the importance of listening and understanding clients' personal needs and values. She also discusses the concept of money scripts and how they shape financial decisions. Nalika highlights the significance of trust, marrying financial planning with purpose, and incorporating emotional needs into segmentation models.


Key Takeaways


[01:51] - The difference between hyper-personalization and digitization.
[04:41] - Money scripts and the unconscious biases towards money.
[09:15] - Integrating emotional understanding in client interactions.
[14:16] - The importance of understanding what matters to clients.
[18:25] - Why advisors need to connect with clients personally.
[21:55] - Key recommendations for creating personal client experience.
[24:09] - The power of listening and understanding in financial services.
[27:23] - Nalika's interests outside of work.


Quotes

[02:53] - "Our industry is very numbers focused. We talk about portfolio returns and the probability of meeting a financial plan. Money, particularly wealth, is highly personal. But financial services are highly impersonal." ~ Nalika Nanayakkara

[09:47] - "Don't expect your clients to always be rational. You can have the most comprehensive wealth offer that's priced fairly, investments, estate, or retirement. But it's only as good as your client's willingness to consume it." ~ Nalika Nanayakkara 

[19:21] - "If you want to be successful as an advisor, you have to make that human connection. To do that, you have to really care about what matters to the person." ~ Nalika Nanayakkara


Links 


Nalika Nanayakkara on LinkedIn
NextChapter
Steve Gresham
EY
Dr. Brad Klontz
Riley Etheridge

Capital Group 
Merrill Lynch
John Thiel
Authentic and Ethical Persuasion


Connect with our hosts


LifeYield
Jack Sharry on LinkedIn
Jack Sharry on Twitter


Subscribe and stay in touch


Apple Podcasts
Spotify
LinkedIn
Twitter
Facebook

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