Three recruiters talk about hiring at investment management and mutual fund firms

Hiring is down, but not out, at investment management and mutual fund firms.

That’s according to three Boston-area recruiters I queried recently.

“Overall, hiring in the mutual fund industry is down sharply from where it was 3 years ago,” said Charles O’Neill, principal, Diversified Management Resources. His firm’s Mutual Fund Careers website scans openings from online sources and offers an online job search tool.

Michael Kulesza, managing director of Horton International‘s Boston office, emailed me that “Despite the turmoil in the stock market, hiring does continue, but at a slower rate.  What is interesting is the hiring is most vibrant at smaller asset management firms vs. the largest firms.  We are working with several Asset Managers whose focus is Endowments, Foundations and Family Offices.”

O’Neill said the roughly 7,000 online job openings in the mutual fund industry include nearly 4,000 in sales and relationship management and 1,500 in compliance and operations. “About 500 postings require or prefer candidates who are Chartered Financial Analysts,” he added.

Marketing professionals face a tough environment. “The count for marketing-related positions is down very sharply—perhaps because many companies continue to view marketing as an expense rather than as a revenue-generator,” said O’Neill.

Jerry Grady of the Ward Group, an executive search firm specializing in marketing and communications professionals, agrees that demand for mutual fund marketers is soft. However, firms are showing interest in marketers who can think strategicallyfor example, segmenting a channel and creating different value propositionsas they target intermediaries.

Grady also sees a shrinking of the divide between mutual fund product management and marketing. Some firms seek product managers who can think like marketersand vice versa. At these firms, it is not enough for product managers simply to be able to communicate with portfolio managers. If this trend continues, mutual funds will become more like consumer packaged goods, where product management and marketing are combined.

Looking forward, here’s what O’Neill predicts. 

Most employers seem to be in a wait and see mode for now. But further, sharp declines in the equity markets will require a total recasting of money managers’ budgetsand at that point, all bets are off. It is not inconceivable that industry employment levels—through attrition as well as potential layoffs on a large scalecould result in a much smaller, more compact business than we’ve seen in many years. 

What’s YOUR take on investment management hiring trends? Please leave a comment.

Related posts:

Hedge funds are better off than you think

There’s no mass exodus out of hedge funds, according to this clip from CNBC.com.

Indeed, hedge funds with global macro, managed futures, and equity market neutral strategies are delivering good returns, according to Ferenc Sanderson of Lipper.
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Susan B. Weiner, CFA
Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.
Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

"How to Live in a World of Black Swans: Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Take on the Financial Crisis"

What do a turkey being fattened up for Thanksgiving and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke have in common?

According to Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of the best-selling The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable, both mistakenly act as if the past predicts the future. 

The turkey, getting fed for 1,000 days, expected only food from the farmer until the ax fell just prior to the holiday. Bernanke, author of “The Great Moderation,” mistook a lack of volatility for a lack of risk. 

They both failed to consider the potential for a “black swan,” the focus of Taleb’s speech on “How to Live in a World of Black Swans,” delivered to the Financial Planning Association’s annual conference in Boston on October 4. Taleb reviewed some of the concepts discussed in his book, and then concluded with a call for investing in robust “barbell” portfolios.

Continue reading my article, “How to Live in a World of Black Swans.”
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Susan B. Weiner, CFA

Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.

Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

Links for investment industry job hunters

Next week I’ll publish some insights from recruiters on the hiring environment for folks in the investment management industry.

Meanwhile, here are some links for job hunters from Charlie O’Neill of MutualFundCareers.com:

Related post: Who’s hiring CFA charterholders?

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Susan B. Weiner, CFA

Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.

Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

"The Surprising Winners in the Financial Crisis"

Young people are “The Surprising Winners in the Financial Crisis.”

They’ll be better able to afford housing than their parents, says blogger Andrew O’Connell.

Moreover, “With more affordable housing, young people might actually be able to win back some of the earning power that the American middle class has been steadily losing to globalization and offshoring.”

There’s something positive you can discuss with your clients.
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Susan B. Weiner, CFA

Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.

Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

"Is It Different This Time?" by DFA’s Weston Wellington

For a reassuring take on financial markets’ resilience and the future of diversified portfolios, watch “Is It Different This Time?” by Weston Wellington of Dimensional Fund Advisors.

As an editor, I was impressed by how Wellington used images of magazine and newspaper headlines to convey how wrong alarmists have been on many occasions.

Thank you, Russell Wild, for pointing out this presentation.
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Susan B. Weiner, CFA

Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.

Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

"Is Outsourcing Portfolio Construction the Wave of the Future?"

Glenda Kemple knows precisely why she outsources portfolio construction. “You add value because you understand your client’s total financial picture,” says Kemple, CPA, CFP®, of Kemple Capital in Dallas, Texas. That picture includes cash management, tax planning, retirement planning, estate planning, education planning, and risk management, in addition to investment management. “We want clients focused on all of those dynamics, not just the portfolio.”

Those who outsource portfolio construction as Kemple does passionately agree. They believe it saves them time and empowers them to better serve their clients’ overall financial planning needs, while tapping high-quality investment resources at a reasonable cost. They also believe that outsourcing makes them more competitive, helping them snare bigger, more sophisticated clients—and to win a bigger percentage of their assets.

Non-outsourcers are equally passionate about keeping portfolio construction in-house, arguing that they save their clients fees and provide better performance, and have a better handle on their clients’ portfolios, as well as getting great personal satisfaction out of the portfolio construction process.

Continue reading my article in the Journal of Financial Planning (FPA membership required).

_________________
Susan B. Weiner, CFA

Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.

Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

Fidelity writes good headlines for volatility

Dealing with market volatility is a full-time job.
For us. Not you.

—————————————————————————-

The headline copied above works. It got me to pick up a brochure about the Fidelity Portfolio Advisory Service.

Why does it work?

First, it raises the reader’s anxiety with “dealing with market volatility is a full-time job.” But that isn’t enough. The brochure quickly offers a solution: Fidelity will handle volatility for you.

Consider trying to apply this model to your written communications.

_________________
Susan B. Weiner, CFA

Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.

Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

Should stock analysts use Twitter?

If you’re an analyst, should you consider using Twitter for research?

Check out “Should Analysts Use Twitter?” by Jeremiah Owyang, a senior analyst at Forrester Research, for three key questions that’ll help you decide. Basically, it depends on what industry you cover and whether the people in your industry are Twittering. To see if people are Twittering on your topic, search key words at http://search.twitter.com/.

You may also enjoy Owyang’s post on “How crowdsourcing helps some–but not all research activities.”


_________________
Susan B. Weiner, CFA

Check out my website at www.InvestmentWriting.com or sign up for my free monthly e-newsletter.

Copyright 2008 by Susan B. Weiner All rights reserved

Writing sample: Three key lessons from “Schwab and TD Ameritrade Financial Stability”

Sometimes a little tweaking can make your email message more compelling to your readers. That’s especially true when you make your message reader-centric.

Below you’ll find a “before” example of a message I received recently and the “after” version with my edits to make it more client-focused.

BEFORE:

Schwab and TD Ameritrade Financial Stability

We received a number of phone calls the past few days about the financial stability of Charles Schwab and TD Ameritrade who we use to custody client accounts.  I am pleased to report that they are both in fine shape, as they are not investment banks.   Investment banks create products and sell them to institutions such as insurance companies, pension plans and banks.  In addition, your accounts are separately held and each account has both SIPC and supplemental insurance far in excess of your accounts’ value. For more information about SIPC and supplemental insurance please click on the following link:

 

 

AFTER MY EDITING:

Schwab and TD Ameritrade are Financially Stable

Has the recent financial turmoil made you worry about the  financial stability of the firms that provide custody for your accounts with us?

Charles Schwab and TD Ameritrade are both in fine shape. They are not investment banks and they have strong balance sheets.

In addition, your accounts are separately held and each account has both Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) and supplemental insurance far in excess of the account’s value. For more information on SIPC and supplemental insurance click on the following link:

COMPARING THE BEFORE AND AFTER

What are the key lessons from the two versions?

  1. Use headings to convey your message. My heading, “Schwab and TD Ameritrade are Financially Stable” conveys a lot more information than “Schwab and TD Ameritrade Financial Stability.” It puts readers’ minds at ease quickly and may spare them having to read the entire message
  2. Talk about you, not us. The first version starts with “we received…” and talks about “we use to custody….” The second begins with a focus on you.
  3. Don’t assume that your reader understands acronyms. Spell out that SIPC is short for Securities Investor Protection Corporation.

Still, I give the authors credit for e-mailing their clients promptly. It’s not easy to craft a perfect communication when time is short.

 

Image courtesy of Rinjith Krishnan at FreeDigitalPhotos.net