But are they truly collaborating?
There is no shortage of associations and networks across the industry. Yet their contribution is far from uniform — and the distinction matters.
Some organisations fulfil a clearly defined role: They set standards, represent the industry, and maintain dialogue with regulators and supervisory bodies.
This is essential work. But it is governance — not collaboration.
Collaboration challenges in wealth management
Alongside them, a growing number of networks and private circles have emerged.
Here, the value proposition becomes less obvious: Is it about meaningful exchange — or primarily about affiliation?
The most effective associations tend to share a few characteristics:
– Minimal friction in communication
– Members operating within broadly comparable parameters
– A genuine openness to share perspectives and solutions
As explored in independent wealth management models, structure alone does not define effectiveness.
One observation is often overlooked: Independent wealth managers rarely compete directly — except when it comes to talent.
Which raises a question: What actually limits deeper collaboration?
In many cases, it is not the structure but the mindset. An in-house logic shaped by traditional banking environments persists.
Similar patterns can be seen in banking versus wealth management environments, where legacy thinking continues to influence behaviour.
This is often combined with an overestimation of what clients truly differentiate.
Where real collaboration in wealth management happens
Because in practice: Clients do not benchmark portfolio management or CRM systems, research providers, or internal models across managers.
The real opportunity lies elsewhere: In sharing knowledge, infrastructure, and selected solutions.
Insights from personalised service in wealth management reinforce that value is often created beyond pure technical comparison.
Quietly improving efficiency and quality.
And where this works best is rarely in large, formal settings.
It tends to emerge in smaller, trust-based circles.
As also reflected in strategic resilience discussions, adaptability often comes from closer, more flexible interaction.
Perhaps the more relevant question is not how many associations exist, but where they actually create measurable value.


