AI is no longer a future disruption for financial services firms. It is becoming part of the operating baseline, changing how firms produce content, manage relationships, explain value, and compete for attention.
That shift is already showing up in the market. When publicly listed wealth managers’ market value dropped by $20 billion following news of a single automated tax planning platform, most viewed it not as a sudden earthquake, but the start of an inevitable shift.
Most AI commentary focuses on survival: how advisory roles will change, what tasks will be automated, and how firms can preserve the human side of the relationship. That misses an equally important question: what does AI change about how firms actually grow?
AI’s potential to automate repetitive tasks and improve efficiency has been exhaustively documented. Consultants and industry thought leaders have shown great imagination in extrapolating from relatively simple tools to end-to-end automated systems that push advisors away from technical execution and closer to relationship management.
They’ve shown far less imagination or rigor in their response to those scenarios. In fact, commentators who normally pride themselves on original thinking have converged almost uncannily on a simple narrative about the future of financial services. And it goes something like this:
Financial services firms will compete based on client experience, not technical outputs. AI will complete most of the “grunt work”, while advisors, relationship managers, and other client-facing roles focus on the “human side of things.”
Trust building. Expectation management. Emotional intelligence. These are the skills that’ll define advisory firms in the future.
That take has clear merit and matches current data. Nearly 80% of affluent households still prefer a human relationship, even if AI can effectively handle all of their practical planning and execution needs.
But that story leaves out a crucial piece of the puzzle. Firms aren’t just concerned about adapting to AI; they’re also aware that organic growth is essential to take pressure off their margins and combat the dual challenge of aging advisor populations and changing client demographics.
Simply embracing AI and “focusing on clients” won’t drive that growth. It requires a whole new approach to marketing, one that takes into account how clients think and feel in the “post-AI” era.
By “post-AI,” we do not mean a world after AI. We mean the point when AI is no longer treated as a differentiator by itself. It becomes part of the operating baseline, and firms have to compete on the quality of their thinking, data, positioning, and client experience around it.
The industry is still going through a transitional period. Financial Planning magazine has called it the “AI Apology” era; we’re more inclined to term it the “AI Paranoia” era. Advisors are paranoid about being left behind. Clients are paranoid about being misled. And both parties are unsure exactly how the technology will change the advisory relationship.
A recent study captures this dynamic perfectly: 79% of high-net-worth investors have a problem with their financial advisors not disclosing their AI use, yet only 33% said their advisors had ever had that conversation with them. But while these growing pains are real, there is little reason to believe they’ll last.
The concept of “holistic advice” went from a relatively niche offering to something more than half of all clients expect over just five years. We believe the role of AI will be similarly clarified and normalized very soon; advisors who stay ambiguous about AI will lose ground quickly.
This will lead to a new “post-AI” consensus that meaningfully changes everything from lead generation to client retention strategies.
Once AI is an established part of most firms’ operating model, there will be three new realities to face:
The buyer’s first question may not be “which firm is best?” It may be “which firms do I even notice?” Before a prospect can trust your firm, they have to recognize that you exist and understand why you matter.
Client acquisition has traditionally been heavily constrained. First, by location and time, which meant advisors could only attend so many networking events. Then, by limited time and resources to invest in digital marketing.
AI will change that by allowing more competitors to invest in finding and engaging prospects and centers of influence (COIs). A small digital footprint will no longer be a sign of being busy; it will be a symptom of being shut out of new relationships.
Building systems to scale content production. As we’ve written elsewhere, the bottleneck for quality content production is no longer execution; it’s insight. Financial services firms must establish workflows to share insights internally and turn them into content at scale. That will help you keep up with competitors’ output without compromising the quality of your content.
This should not stop at publishing. Those same insights should shape website messaging, nurture emails, webinar topics, advisor follow-up, and sales conversations. The firms that win will not be the firms that create the most content. They will be the firms that turn internal expertise into a connected growth system.
Stop asking "who are our competitors?" and start asking "what category will a prospect file us under before we get to explain ourselves?" When every firm delivers competent holistic planning, "another full-service RIA" is a category that ends the conversation.
AI effectively shrinks the “moat” around specific skills and outputs. Even smaller firms will be able to offer more holistic services to more clients, making it harder to differentiate based on your core service offering or performance.
McKinsey puts it clearly: as AI raises the floor for technical planning across the industry, feature gaps between firms will narrow at an unprecedented rate. What distinguishes firms will no longer be what they offer, but how they frame and deliver it.
The buyer's new default is "why pay you when a chatbot answers in 30 seconds?"
Your most common competitor is no longer only the firm down the street. It is also the free tool, the self-directed search, and the do-nothing option.
Clients already have access to low-cost or free tools that can help them understand tax questions, build budgets, compare options, and pressure-test financial decisions. As AI models improve and guardrails get stronger, the baseline quality of that information will likely keep rising.
That does not make advisor expertise irrelevant. It makes undifferentiated expertise harder to sell.
Your leverage will come from the perspective, judgment, and story around that expertise: how you frame trade-offs, how you guide decisions, how you build trust, and why prospects and COIs should believe your firm is the right one to help.
A sharper point of view that never reaches the right prospects still leaves growth on the table. So do campaigns that attract leads your sales process cannot convert.
ProperExpression helps financial services firms align the full growth system: positioning, content, campaigns, website strategy, and sales enablement. That way, these shifts become reasons prospects choose you instead of reasons they overlook you.