When I explain wealth management to a wine expert, I start with grapes. A grape is a grape, full stop, just as money is money. And yet every wine expert knows the truth: there is no such thing as just one grape. There are varieties, regions, houses, and above all very different ways of working with the same raw material. Wine and wealth management turn out to share the same lesson.
The same principle applies to traditional private banks. Geneva banks often focus on international clients, with a strong emphasis on structuring and long-standing traditions. Zurich banks tend to be market-driven, efficient and product-oriented, while Basel banks are frequently close to entrepreneurs, industrial families and long-term planning. None of this is better or worse. It is simply different.
What Wine and Wealth Management Have in Common
The difference is not taste, as it is in wine. The difference is service. It shows in the offering, the platform, access to specialists and how a portfolio is managed day to day. If you choose one private bank, you also choose one style, one philosophy, one house — which is exactly why the flexibility to adapt across providers matters so much.
That flexibility depends on more than good intentions. It rests on the quiet infrastructure behind the relationship, from the CRM core an independent firm relies on to a reliable wealth management data hub that keeps every bank’s data consistent in one place. Without that foundation, working across houses becomes noise rather than clarity.
Why an Independent Wealth Manager Changes the Picture
This is where the independent wealth manager comes in. An independent wealth manager is not another bank; instead, they work across banks. Rather than committing to one institution, the client chooses independent oversight, and the banks become partners rather than owners of the relationship. This lets clients combine strengths, depending on needs, complexity and life stage.
Think of a sommelier. Not tied to one winery, but offering a carefully curated list. The grape stays the same, yet access to multiple cellars creates choice, flexibility and independence. It is a theme I return to often across the wealth management blog archive, and it leads to one simple question: why limit yourself to one house?