Only 31% of bank wealth executives are satisfied with new-client acquisition, yet referrals drive 80% or more of new business at top performers.
The problem: Firms conflate referral activity with a referral program. Most COI relationships remain informal or unstructured, and internal referrals depend on individual advisor relationships rather than institutional design. A 40% advisor retirement wave over the next decade will take these informal networks with it. Firms that wait lose the book to better-prepared competitors.
Datos’ Referral Program Maturity Framework gives firms a staged path from Opportunistic to Structured to Systematic referral management. The framework works because it doesn’t ask firms to find new channels. Instead, it reallocates existing CRM, compensation, and analytics investment toward the referral channels already producing the majority of new business. Documented referral plans drive 68% more new clients and assets versus undocumented practices.
This report lays out six concrete, sequenced moves to convert existing referral activity into institutional infrastructure. Firms learn which relationships to formalize first, how to align compliance frameworks with growth objectives, and why reconfiguring systems they already own beats buying new technology. This is your essential blueprint to formalize referral infrastructure before informal relationships walk out the door.
About the Author
Gregory O'Gara
Greg O'Gara serves as a Strategic Advisor for Datos Insights' Wealth Management practice, focusing on research and analysis of the North American wealth management industry. He has strong expertise in financial advisor technology, platform architecture, and investment delivery models, with specialized knowledge in custody and clearing operations, retail trading ecosystems, investor engagement, and regulatory frameworks. His advisory work helps firms...