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Q&A: Kent Smetters To Investors: Don't Go BotQ&A: Kent Smetters To Investors: Don't Go Bot

Lauren Barack

September 11, 2012

1 Min Read
Q&A: Kent Smetters To Investors: Don't Go Bot

Kent Smetters, the founder and former president of the online-based financial planning firm Veritat, recently shepherded his firm through a buyout with LPL-based NestWise in July. We asked the current Boettner Chair Professor at the Wharton School why he believes his hybrid model of personal interaction with advisors, coupled with occasional online connections is a better option for the future than the current rise of pure-play Internet based bots crunching through a financial plan.

"The number one question isn’t how cool is your technology, but what motivates you as an advisor. Where do they add value, and where they add value is not having two clients with identical financial plans. It's having great science but then bringing in the advisor. The fact is people are going to the platform with some wishes that they want to talk about. Those things are where advisors add tremendous value.

Everyone in 2008 was choosing Path A, get rid of the advisor, have a portal, put something in and bam something comes out. But the second real issue was survey after survey shows that people really don't want to get investment advice from such an anonymous and impersonal way.

To do comprehensive financial planning you need science and technology, but it's a person issue. The idea that after all the years you've worked, you should now trust that to a computer program? Don't get me wrong, there's no question there’s a decent sized self-directed market of about 17%. But most people want to talk to someone. The average American doesn't know the difference between a stock and a bond. The average American comes to a financial advisor because they don't know where to get started.

About the Author

Lauren Barack

Lauren Barack is a journalist, editor and photographer who has written about flea markets in Kiev, protests in New York, fishermen in St. Petersburg, and new media launches in London.  Also trained as a filmmaker, Lauren has produced, edited, appeared on camera, and written for networks including VH1, Comedy Central, TNT and MTV. 

A graduate of New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, and the University of California at Berkeley, Lauren won the Loeb Award in 2009 for her MSN Money series, "Middle Class Crunch," earned a Pace Foundation Fellowship in robotics, and an Associated Press Television and Radio Association scholarship while in graduate school. Meeting Milton Berle remains a career highlight. She failed to light his cigar before an interview. He forgave her and taught her his secrets for on-camera makeup. She'll never appear pale again.