Tim White of Kaye/Bassman Quoted in Investment News Article, It’s Good to Be Boss

Tim White of Kaye/Bassman Quoted in Investment News Article, It’s Good to Be Boss

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Tim White of Kaye/Bassman Quoted in Investment News Article, It’s Good to Be Boss: Owners, Top Advisers See Double-Digit Pay Hikes

Dallas, Texas, 12/5/2013:

In early summer, before layoffs began sweeping across Wall Street, billboard-sized photos of employees were plastered on the walls, pillars and elevator banks of Credit Suisse Group AG’s offices in the United States and abroad.
The museum-quality prints, depicting workers from administrative assistants to senior executives, were emblazoned with motivational words like “Proactive” and “Partner.” By mid-July, however, the photos disappeared and the Swiss banking giant began laying off 2,000 employees.
Security guards prevented employees from taking cell-phone pictures as the posters were stripped away, according to one employee who was present.
“It sent an entirely wrong message,” said an employee, who was not authorized to speak publicly. “Management literally threw away that kind of money on something so trivial, while planning to cut thousands of jobs.”
A bank spokeswoman declined to comment on the internal campaign or the employee’s comments.
Credit Suisse’s timing illustrates the unanticipated dangers of rampant job-cutting, which tend to run in cycles on Wall Street. Employee morale often plummets at a time when survivors are asked to pick up more responsibility and customer relations can suffer as service and relationships deteriorate.
What’s more, layoffs inartfully constructed can come across to shareholders as Band-Aid solutions that at best temporarily cut expenses and at worst pare away reserves of talented people.
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“They finished cutting the fat and now they’re into the muscle and bone,” said Tim White, a managing partner who specializes in wealth management at the recruiting firm Kaye/Bassman International in Dallas.

By Liz Skinner

Experienced financial advisers have seen their paychecks fatten over the past two years, thanks to increases in firm profitability, strong market performance and a talent shortage in the industry. The latest compensation figures also confirm that it pays to be an owner.

Compensation for lead financial advisers increased 12% over the last two years to a median of $134,000, according to the InvestmentNews/Moss Adams 2013 Compensation and Staffing Study. That’s an increase from a median of $120,000 reported in the 2011 study.

Owner advisers, those who are partners as well as practicing advisers, saw an even greater income boost. They earned a median of $240,000 in the 2013 study, an increase of 17% from two years ago. All the compensation figures include salary, bonuses and incentive pay.

Service advisers, for example, who work with clients under the direction of a lead adviser, earned a median of $81,332 in the 2013 IN/Moss Adams study, compared to $81,686 in the 2011 report.

The increases in top adviser compensation are similar to stats reported by the Financial Planning Association’s compensation study released in February 2013. It showed a 12% increase in financial planners’ average salary from 2010 to 2012.

For the sake of comparison with other professions, the lead advisers’ $134,000 median pay is about 9% greater than the $123,055 that engineers with the same years of experience earn, according to an InvestmentNewsanalysis of the 2013 IN/Moss Adams study and Salary.com. General physicians earn about 37% more than lead advisers, at a median of $184,386.

“There is a huge talent shortage in the lead adviser market,” Ms. Herbers said.

Despite the shortage, the amount of time it takes advisory firms to fill open positions is way down from a historical industry average of 12 weeks between the time a company posts a job until it is accepted, Ms. Herbers said. Today, it’s a five- to six-week cycle. She explains the phenomenon in terms of firms jumping to hire advisers more quickly and making higher salaries part of the initial offer.

The 17% boost in owner adviser pay from 2011 to 2013 is a result of firms reaping increased profits from investments in talent and technology made several years ago when growth had slowed, Ms. Herbers said. Owner compensation is going to flatten out in coming years because the industry is entering a period where it must invest again in talent in order to grow, she said.

Chris Holman, a senior coach with ClientWise, pointed out that owner compensation in good times may advance more than other professionals because they face the added downside risk when fixed costs and compliance costs go up.

Owners also may have sustained damage from the financial crisis, Mr. Holman said. This makes more recent numbers look particularly good.

Mark Tibergien, chief executive of Pershing Advisor Solutions, said earlier this year that he expects to see continued pressure on advisory firms to raise compensation.

Tim White, partner at Kaye Bassman International, agrees the pay landscape for personal financial advisors looks strong — unless you work for JPMorgan Chase & Co., which this week agreed to a $13 billion settlement with U.S. regulators over its role in the mortgage crisis.

“That’s about half the company’s profits for the year, so I expect bonuses to be impacted there,” he said.

Read the full story. (May require login.)

 

About Kaye/Bassman

Founded in 1981, Kaye/Bassman has grown to become the largest single-site executive search and recruitment firm in the United States with the simple mission of impacting companies and enhancing careers by providing the finest in professional, executive, technical and scientific search. Kaye/Bassman provides strategic recruiting and executive search solutions in over 20 industry practice areas including construction recruiting, healthcare recruiting, banking executive search, energy recruitment and many more. Next Level Recruiting Training, a recruiting training organization, Next Level Exchange, a recruiting training best practices information exchange, and Next Level Marketing Communications are also Kaye/Bassman companies.

For additional information or a sample copy, contact:
Darren McDougal
Kaye/Bassman International
(972) 931.5242
(972) 931.9683
communications@kbic.com

Source: http://www.investmentnews.com/article/20131121/FREE/131129973#

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