I recently had the pleasure of presenting to some of AssetMark’s best advisors at the Platinum Summit event. During this session, I shared about creating a truly multi-generational firm—one that goes beyond multigenerational families and expands to multigenerational advisors and team members and even into multigenerational services. Here’s the simple truth: if your client roster and your org chart are aging in sync, you don’t have a pipeline—you have a retirement party. What follows distills that session into a practical blueprint for building durability, enterprise value, and growth across generations.
When I say multi-generational, I mean multiple dimensions at once: the families you serve and the team that serves them, and what and how services are delivered. If any of these facets are missing—client households across generations, advisor bench strength, appropriate and valuable services—longevity, valuation, and growth all suffer.
The largest wealth transfer on record is underway. Independent studies estimate roughly $124 trillion moving through 2048, with the vast majority landing in the hands of heirs. Yet intent to stay with a parent’s advisor hovers around the one‑in‑three range—and it drops when there’s no pre‑existing relationship. Meanwhile, our own talent pipeline is aging: the average advisor is in the mid‑50s, and more than a third expect to retire in the next decade. Despite this, fewer than half of advisors report a written succession plan. Put together, that’s a retention problem colliding with a capacity problem.
Engage whole families early. Don’t wait for a transition event to meet spouses and adult children. Make family reviews part of your service calendar, and document at least one meaningful next‑gen touch each year for top households.
Design services for life stages. Round out retirement income work with equity‑comp education, debt and cash‑flow coaching, first‑home strategies, 529 and student‑loan guidance, and values‑based investing conversations that resonate with Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z.
A multi-generational firm earns the next generation by designing a service model that feels native to how they live, decide, and build wealth. That means mobile-first access and flexible modalities (video, chat, text), self-serve scheduling, and a “one-page plan” that updates dynamically as life changes.
Pair ongoing advice subscriptions or tiered service levels with life-stage offers—equity-comp coaching, student-loan and cash-flow strategies, first-home planning, and values-aligned investing—delivered through collaborative portals and real-time data aggregation. Communicate in short, visual bursts; automate routine check-ins and milestone nudges; and make it effortless to share documents, sign digitally, and pay online. Give emerging clients meaningful face time with your associate and next-gen advisors so trust transfers naturally over time. When you package modern access, transparent pricing, and life-stage expertise this way, you’re not “adding a youth program”—you’re institutionalizing loyalty across generations and future-proofing the firm.
Modernize how you communicate. Offer meeting‑modality choice, concise updates, collaborative portals, and one‑page visual plans. Meet younger decision‑makers where they are—without abandoning the personal touch boomers appreciate.
Build a true bench. Recruit and grow associate planners early, give them visible roles with key relationships, and systematize your advice process with playbooks and checklists so experience isn’t trapped in any one person’s head.
Put succession in writing. Even a concise, staged plan—triggers, valuation approach, funding, roles, and a client‑communications outline—boosts confidence with clients, staff, lenders, and buyers.
Multi‑generational depth stabilizes revenue when assets are most portable, expands capacity through capable next‑gen talent, and increases enterprise value by reducing key‑person risk. Buyers and lenders reward continuity.
Two quick ways this shows up on your P&L:
Retention dividend: proactive spouse/heir engagement protects lifetime client value when it matters most.
Succession premium: documented continuity widens exit options and strengthens multiples.
Our consulting team at AssetMark is unapologetically committed to a simple truth: great ideas don’t create change—implementing them does. Ideas are like treadmills: easy to buy, but you only get results when you jump on and hit “start.” With that in mind, here’s a focused 12-month plan to begin building a truly multi-generational firm.
Over the next 12 months, move through four tight phases:
Quarter 1—Diagnose & Design by auditing family coverage for top-tier households, mapping your talent ladder, and drafting a one-page succession outline, then convert that work into three or four measurable targets to review each quarter.
Quarter 2—Activate Clients by hosting family wealth briefings for priority relationships, launching a “next-gen welcome” process, and packaging two or three life-stage services tailored to Gen X and Millennials.
Quarter 3—Build the Bench by elevating or hiring associates, assigning co-lead roles on 25–40 key relationships, and rolling out simple process scorecards to keep experience consistent.
Quarter 4—Institutionalize by turning the succession outline into a signed plan with funding and timelines, reviewing coverage and retention metrics, and sharing wins across the team.
Heir relationship penetration: top households with a documented next‑gen touch in the last 12 months.
Multi‑advisor coverage: percent of revenue covered by two or more client‑facing advisors.
Profitable, scalable, process-driven services: attractive to multiple generations.
Succession readiness: existence of a written plan and communication template.
A multi‑generational firm isn’t a slogan—it’s an operating model. The wealth transfer is here, heir loyalty isn’t guaranteed, and the advisor talent cliff is real. The firms that intentionally connect with families across generations—and develop teams to match—will protect today’s relationships, capture tomorrow’s growth, and command higher enterprise value when it’s time to transition.
Dana Burkhardt is VP, Head of Business Consulting at AssetMark. She and the team help advisory firms build system‑driven growth engines that scale across generations.
Sources: Cerulli’s $124T transfer projection and distribution to heirs/charities (Dec. 5, 2024); low heir-retention indicators around ~30% (various 2023–2025 analyses); advisor aging/retirement timelines (2024–2025 reports); and the industry’s lagging written succession plans (~42%) (Dec. 2024).
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8538297.1. | 10/2025 | EXP 12/31/2027