Helping asset managers stay ahead of change.
What it takes to modernize client experience while transaction volumes and expectations rise.
Harnessing momentum in wealth: A view from SEI’s Chief Product Officer.
Stepping into my new role, I’ve reflected on potential trends, the major challenges the industry may face this year, and my approach to helping SEI’s clients adapt.
AI models and agentic tooling will keep improving, but the firms that thrive this year won’t be those that “buy an AI tool.” They’ll be the ones that fix the plumbing: normalizing data, reducing duplication, and integrating systems.
Shifting investor priorities reinforce that point. Continued demand for proactive tax strategies, flexible investment products (including semi‑liquid alternatives), and greater account‑level customization all depend on clean, well-integrated data.
With alternatives entering wealth and retirement channels and more investors expecting real-time experiences, activity is rising. Firms are balancing higher transaction counts, more frequent updates, and smaller ticket sizes. The growing burden on operations and people will test the industry’s absorption limit this year.
Beyond volume, 2026 is expected to bring inherited tech sprawl and a lack of standardization to the forefront. Many organizations are running portfolios of aging systems that don’t talk to each other. The result is brittle workflows and inconsistent data—precisely what undermines AI ambitions and slows down modernization efforts.
Organizations can meet this moment with integrated technology, standardized data architecture, and scalable operational support that reduce complexity. Whether you’re combining aging systems into a single infrastructure, creating a trusted data foundation for analytics and AI, or simplifying the growing demands of alternative investments, an external expert can bring the focus and clarity needed to move forward with confidence.
Over the past few years, we’ve invested in our foundation—data standards, platform consolidation, and process modernization. That work set the stage for 2026, where speed, efficiency, and scale will separate platforms from tools. We’ll keep listening to the market. We’ll meet with clients to understand problems firsthand and continue to co‑create solutions that deliver value and growth.
This is a year to simplify, standardize, and scale. By taming tech sprawl, getting the data right, and focusing on client and user experience, we can turn constant change into a competitive advantage—for financial institutions, intermediaries, and the investors they serve.
Helping asset managers stay ahead of change.
Simplify the complex to elevate your advice.
Powering the future of your business.
Investment solutions that meet your goals.