X
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Expert Resources
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the Money Management bulletin
  • News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
    • Fixed Income
    • ETFs
  • Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
No Results
View All Results
  • News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
    • Fixed Income
    • ETFs
  • Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
No Results
View All Results
No Results
View All Results
Home News Financial Planning

Insignia looks to AI for advice efficiency to meet 2030 targets

Insignia chief executive, Scott Hartley, has said the licensee is “on track” with 2030 revenue and client targets for its advice division, and is looking to AI for future efficiencies.

by Laura Dew
August 21, 2025
in Financial Planning, News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Insignia chief executive, Scott Hartley, has said the licensee is “on track” with revenue and client number targets for its advice division, part of its 2030 strategy. 

The firm stated last November that it wanted its advisers to be reporting $1–1.1 million in revenue per adviser by FY28 and $1.1–1.3 million by FY30. This revenue increase would be driven by accelerated organic growth via referrals, marketing and new propositions rather than enacting inorganic growth and acquisitions that it might have done in the past. 

X

When it comes to client per adviser, it is targeting 115–125 by FY28 and 125–140 by FY30.

In its financial year results for FY25, it said these targets are “on track” as clients per adviser increased from 90 to 96 driven by strong client growth and improved adviser efficiency, despite adviser numbers declining from 200 to 188. 

Revenue per adviser increased from $750,000 to $854,000 driven by a focus on higher value clients and higher asset-based fee income. 

Hartley said: “We are driving revenue growth in advice through improved efficiency, client acquisition and both initiatives are progressing well.

“The internal tools are a lot about providing efficiency and administration efficiency for advisers and their teams through the use of technology. Some of those tools will be developed specifically for us using AIm but others will be adapted from existing industry technology. We see a significant uplift in advice efficiency as a result of changing the advice and review process, allowing advisers to be able to spend more time with their clients, so 140 [clients] isn’t a stretch.”

Insignia said it is re-engineering the advice review process to increase the capacity and also investing in artificial intelligence (AI) technology to capture file notes to assist with statement of advice (SOA) applications. An AI-enabled advice ecosystem will streamline and automate activities across the advice process, it said, and can be used for an AI-powered assistant, knowledge hub and client service agreements. 

Hartley said: “Using AI and robotics, we are further improving straight through processing from advisers’ back office to the platform. The client services agreement fees form that goes straight through now, that’s being rolled out to all advisers as we speak, and SOAs, where removing the need for re-keying from an SOA to a new business application by the back office, that will now go straight through to the Expand platform, extracting only the necessary data from the SOA.”

Overall, the advice division reported net revenue of $160.6 million, up from $150 million last year, thanks to strong new client growth and higher asset-based fee income in Shadforth, partially offset by lower insurance commission. Operating expenses declined from $120 million to $114 million due to the realisation of benefits from the Rhombus Advisory separation. However, it was offset by salary increases and adviser incentives.  

In the second half of the financial year, the firm also enacted a bidding process between CC Capital, Bain Capital and Brookfield which resulted in a scheme implementation deed signed with CC Capital for a cash consideration of $4.80 per share. 

This is expected to complete in the first half of the 2026 calendar year – possibly as early as February – subject to regulatory and shareholder approval which it expects to take around six months. 

Elsewhere in the results, the firm reported a statutory net profit after tax (NPAT) of $16.1 million. 

Commenting on the increase, it said this was attributable to a $213 million decrease in remediation costs, legal settlement and penalties, $47.4 million decrease in transformation and transition costs, and $60 million decrease in base and reinvestment operating expenses.

Average funds under management and administration (FUMA) were $323 billion, a 7 per cent increase from $301 billion. 
 

Tags: Artificial IntelligenceInsigniaInsignia FinancialScott Hartley

Related Posts

Centrepoint overtakes Count in licensee line up, eyeing further growth

by Shy-Ann Arkinstall
December 16, 2025

Centrepoint Alliance has overtaken Count as the second largest AFSL with more advisers in the pipeline and strong EBITDA growth...

ASIC updates conflict of interest guidance for advice businesses

by Shy-Ann Arkinstall
December 16, 2025

ASIC has released an update to its regulatory guidance on managing conflicts of interest for financial services businesses on the...

Sequoia warns of impairments linked to Shield and First Guardian fallout

by Keith Ford
December 16, 2025

Sequoia Financial Group has flagged a series of non-cash impairments for the first half of FY26, citing exposure to Shield...

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VIEW ALL
Promoted Content

Consistency is the most underrated investment strategy.

In financial markets, excitement drives headlines. Equity markets rise, fall, and recover — creating stories that capture attention. Yet sustainable...

by Industry Expert
November 5, 2025
Promoted Content

Jonathan Belz – Redefining APAC Access to US Private Assets

Winner of Executive of the Year – Funds Management 2025After years at Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse, Jonathan Belz founded...

by Staff Writer
September 11, 2025
Promoted Content

Real-Time Settlement Efficiency in Modern Crypto Wealth Management

Cryptocurrency liquidity has become a cornerstone of sophisticated wealth management strategies, with real-time settlement capabilities revolutionizing traditional investment approaches. The...

by PartnerArticle
September 4, 2025
Editorial

Relative Return: How fixed income got its defensiveness back

In this episode of Relative Return, host Laura Dew chats with Roy Keenan, co-head of fixed income at Yarra Capital...

by Laura Dew
September 4, 2025

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

Podcasts

Relative Return Insider: RBA holds, Fed cuts and Santa’s set to rally

December 11, 2025

Relative Return Insider: GDP rebounds and housing squeeze getting worse

December 5, 2025

Relative Return Insider: US shares rebound, CPI spikes and super investment

November 28, 2025

Relative Return Insider: Economic shifts, political crossroads, and the digital future

November 14, 2025

Relative Return: Helping Australians retire with confidence

November 11, 2025

Relative Return Insider: RBA holds rates steady amid inflation concerns

November 6, 2025

Top Performing Funds

FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND
Fund name
3 y p.a(%)
1
DomaCom DFS Mortgage
211.38
2
Loftus Peak Global Disruption Fund Hedged
110.90
3
SGH Income Trust Dis AUD
80.01
4
Global X 21Shares Bitcoin ETF
76.11
5
Smarter Money Long-Short Credit Investor USD
67.63
Money Management provides accurate, informative and insightful editorial coverage of the Australian financial services market, with topics including taxation, managed funds, property investments, shares, risk insurance, master trusts, superannuation, margin lending, financial planning, portfolio construction, and investment strategies.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • Financial Planning
  • Funds Management
  • Investment Insights
  • ETFs
  • People & Products
  • Policy & Regulation
  • Superannuation

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
  • News
    • All News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • All Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • ETFs
    • Fixed Income
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
  • Features
    • All Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
  • Expert Resources
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited