Is skills creation the answer to the transforming role of the Relationship Manager?
Lynne has been with AMS for over 20 years, many of which have been spent collaborating closely with blue-chip clients across a range of sectors. Lynne has partnered with many of the world's largest global investment and retail banks including Morgan Stanley, HSBC and Standard Chartered and supported the evolution of their regional and global RPO models. Lynne has a degree in Business Administration from Aston University. Before joining AMS Lynne spent 10 years in HR and consulting roles with BAA and Hay Management Consultants in a range of roles from business partner to reward and OD.
Over the next two decades, an estimated $85 trillion will change hands globally in a massive generational wealth transfer. For banks, this represents the opportunity of a generation—and the pressure point of a generation for the Relationship Manager (RM) role.
As high-net-worth individuals become more diverse, more digital, and more demanding, banks are under pressure to evolve the RM from a traditional relationship custodian into a tech-enabled, insight-led advisor. But here’s the challenge: you can’t hire your way to that future.
Skills creation—not just hiring—is now a strategic priority for CHROs and TA leaders looking to future-proof the RM workforce.
What’s changing: The new RM mandate
The RM of the past focused on in-person rapport and product access. The RM of the future must operate in a dramatically more complex environment—where trust is built digitally, expectations are real-time, and clients want advice, not pitches.
Banks are already reacting:
- A leading global bank uses generative AI to create over one million tailored prompts per month—enhancing relationship manager (RM) conversations and improving client personalization.
- Another major financial institution is doubling its wealth management assets by aggressively expanding its RM workforce across key markets.
- A top-tier investment firm’s AI-powered coaching tool has reduced RM research time by up to 95%, allowing advisers to focus more on deepening client relationships and strategic engagement.
But these tools only tell part of the story. The RM’s core skillset is expanding, not just digitizing. They must now:
- Interpret data and act on insights.
- Navigate ESG and sustainability investing.
- Communicate cross-generationally and cross-culturally.
- Serve as educators, not just service providers.
The demand for this profile is surging. The supply is not.
Hiring alone won’t close the gap
Too many banks are relying on external hiring to secure future-ready RMs—but this approach is proving unsustainable. The reasons are structural:
- The skills needed are changing faster than the external market can supply them.
- Traditional RM profiles are often ill-equipped for advisory or digital-first expectations.
- Top RMs with digital fluency are being aggressively poached—not only by banks, but by FinTechs and family offices.
For CHROs, the core question becomes: how do we build a differentiated RM workforce when every competitor is fishing in the same shallow talent pool?
What skills creation really means
It’s time to redefine “skills creation” in the RM context—not just as training, but as an integrated talent strategy. Here’s a simplified framework we see high-performing CHROs using:
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Digital & data fluency
RMs must become confident users of analytics tools, AI-powered CRMs, and digital collaboration platforms. They need to not just receive insights—but know how to act on them.
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Advisory depth
Tomorrow’s RM will be expected to understand ESG products, industry verticals, succession planning, and alternative investments. This requires a consultative mindset, not a product-led one.
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Human skills
In an AI-powered world, what remains uniquely human? Empathy, judgment, cultural fluency, and trust-building. These become differentiators when everyone has access to the same tech stack.
The CHRO playbook: Building a future-ready RM workforce
Here are five concrete moves CHROs should be driving now:
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Invest in RM Academies
Create new pipelines by partnering with Skills Creation to create talent with both digital and advisory capabilities before they land in your organization.
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Expand talent pipelines
Assess for potential, consider career changers, returners, and complementary adjacent skills. Look beyond traditional sources. Some of the best future RMs may be coming from consulting, ESG advisory, or tech sectors—not just private banking.
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Redesign career mobility
Create visible, skills-based progression paths so RMs see the value in evolving their roles. This also supports internal mobility from other functions.
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Deploy skills intelligence
Use AI to map current RM capabilities and predict future needs—regionally and globally.
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Calibrate by region
Tailor skills creation by market: ESG in Europe, digital in Asia, family office structuring in the U.S., cross-border compliance in Latin America.
The cost of inaction
Failing to act on RM skills creation carries multiple risks:
- Lost client trust as advisory quality lags behind.
- Rising attrition as skilled RMs are poached by disruptors.
- Margin erosion as productivity gains from AI tools are unevenly realized.
- Missed opportunity in a once-in-a-generation wealth shift.
Skills creation is no longer a learning and development issue—it’s a competitive advantage.
Conclusion: A strategic moment for CHROs
The banks that lead in the next era of wealth management won’t just have the best digital platforms. They’ll have a Relationship Manager workforce that blends digital fluency, advisory depth, and human connection.
As CHRO, the question isn’t whether to support this shift—but how fast you can help lead it.
Because in the race to win tomorrow’s clients, it’s not just about how many RMs you have. It’s about how future-ready they are.
Executive Summary
Between now and 2045, an estimated $85 trillion in generational wealth will shift globally. This is creating unprecedented demand for Relationship Managers (RMs)—but not the traditional, product-pushing RM of the past. Banks now require a new breed of RM: tech-enabled, insight-driven, and trusted advisors.
Many institutions are responding by ramping up hiring or deploying AI to boost RM productivity. But hiring alone cannot solve the growing skills gap. The RM role is evolving faster than the external talent market can keep up, and poaching from competitors is both costly and unsustainable.
To future-proof this critical workforce, banks must shift from a “buy” to a “build” mindset—placing skills creation at the heart of their talent strategy.
What does that entail?
We recommend a three-part skills framework:
- Digital and data fluency – confident use of analytics tools and AI to drive client conversations.
- Advisory depth – ESG insight, sector expertise, and financial planning capabilities.
- Human skills – trust-building, cultural fluency, and intergenerational communication.
For CHROs and TA leaders, this means taking bold steps:
- Launch RM academies and digital L&D platforms.
- Expand sourcing beyond traditional banking profiles.
- Use skills intelligence to forecast gaps and tailor development by region.
- Redesign RM career paths to reward learning and role evolution.
The risk of inaction?
Lost clients, higher attrition, and missed opportunity in the most significant wealth shift of our time.
Skills creation isn’t just a learning initiative. It’s a competitive differentiator—and a board-level priority.
Is your RM workforce future-ready?