The recent arrival of an iPad mini gave me a happy reason to take a fresh look at asset manager iPad apps and note a few advancements. I needed to re-install the apps that had been on my first gen iPad while a few were new to me. Henderson Global Investors launched its app just last week and I was catching up with the AllianceBernstein AB Connect app, launched in December with added content and capability for advisors with a log-in. And, it's been 10 months since my last post on the state of the art of version 1.0 apps.
The perspective I offer is as a user of lots of iPad apps and as a consumer of mutual fund and exchange-traded fund (ETF) content on the desktop, iPad and mobile. My bias is for apps that are both device- and audience-aware, with a particular interest in how a financial advisor might engage. Three years after the iPad’s introduction, not every money manager offers its own app and it’s not a foregone conclusion that all will. When asked about apps lately, I cite a few datapoints:
Advisors can read and use the content you publish on your Website content. But if you’re going to the trouble to produce and continually update an app, keep in mind that the most useful asset manager app would enable advisor productivity (including content sharing) after hours. And, if you expect advisors to try your app and regularly use it, the app needs to provide a better experience than a collection of self-navigated Web pages can. Here are some highlights of what I saw while adding the apps to my sweet new mini.
This is just a matter of being considerate. Greater reliance on the cloud means that consumers can save money by buying tablets with the minimum size hard drives. The last thing you want to do is come along and consume a disproportionate amount of their limited hard drive space with your big ole files—and God forbid that you use their dataplans in the process. Henderson Global Investors and John Hancock are two firms that are smart to give the user control over what gets downloaded and when. This screenshot combines two screens from the app.
An app is a closed platform, which enables app publishers to control the experience and make some assumptions about their “captive” users. A piece of content can be a beautiful thing in an app, uncluttered by a Web page’s navigation and sidebars, etc. But if you’re producing content for a business reason, you’ll want to enable users to use the content outside the cozy world of the app. Asset manager app support for sharing via users' social accounts continues to be spotty, with PIMCO's app offering the most choices (via Twitter, Facebook, email and Google Reader). The integration of the iPad content and what managers are saying on their own social accounts (e.g., Twitter, Facebook and YouTube) also is still kind of clumsy. Oppenheimer’s Global Tracker app includes presentations whose value is extended by the simple inclusion of an email form for the emailing of presentations and of the app itself. (Wonder why the note cautioning OppenheimerFunds employees to use their company email address couldn't be communicated internally, though.) Hopefully the day will soon come when the presentations' individual charts and graphs can be made available to be shared on social networks and embedded.
Content sharing in the physical world often involves hard copies, and a few apps are now supporting wireless printing.
I was loving life, printing an outlook from AllianceBernstein’s AB Connect app, thinking about how simple this would be for an advisor to prepare for a meeting. However, I was foiled by a gotcha that advisors have rightfully complained about since we first shifted the printing to their office equipment: the disclosures on the last page are reversed out of an all-black (ink-consuming) page!
More user-friendly is the John Hancock app, which provides welcome printing controls.
Included in the John Hancock app, by the way, is a robust library of forms. Somebody who’s all-digital (and plenty of advisors aspire to be) is going to miss being able to tab from field to field to complete and then print. But, maybe that’s a capability on the roadmap?
It’s a high bar for an asset manager to produce an app that advisors will use again and again. There’s nothing fancy about this, but see how U.S. Global Investors makes an effort to encourage followership (and acquire names) from even one-time users of its app.
Henderson's is one of the few apps that uses location to find a wholesaler. And when the wholesaler is located, adding the name to the device’s Contacts list is a snap.
Finally, this screenshot from the Schwab On Investing app shows how the My Briefcase feature, included in a few asset manager apps, could evolve. Schwab enables content saving to be organized by customizable tabs and the user can write and save his own notes about the content. Imagine how an advisor might value this feature and how it could foster app reliance.
How about you? What features are you noting—or missing—in asset manager apps?