Predictive power found in manager culture assessments

Quantitative measurements of the culture of funds management firms can provide indications of the future success of those companies and also their ability to retain personnel, a study by researcher InvestmentQ finds.

The preliminary findings of a three-year study in which InvestmentQ, a research project managed by global consultant FS Associates and advised by Watson Wyatt Worldwide and the Brandes Institute, used a web-based tool called Q-Sort to quantitatively analyse the culture of 24 American funds management companies.

Funds managers, clients and consultants all performed Q-Sort analyses on the companies in 2004, and the results were compared with the growth in funds under management and staff turnover in the ensuing three years to mid-2007.

Barry Gilman, head of the Brandes Institute think-tank, said the aim of the study was to learn “to what extent can Q-Sort be a predictor of future investment success?”.

A critical part of interpreting the results of a Q-Sort is measuring the differences among the perceptions that managers, clients and consultants have of the culture of a firm.

Sponsored Content

Where surveyed managers held similar views of their business culture as consultants, they tended to be more successful in the three years after the Q-Sorts were performed.

But where a manager’s perception of its business culture diverged from those formed by consultants, its growth in funds under management tended to slow in the following years.This outcome applied to one-third of managers surveyed, Gilman said.

“When managers were more favourable on themselves, clients and consultants were less favourable.”

The Q-Sorts also indicated upcoming staff turnover in some firms.

“Some metrics were quite highly associated with a subsequent lack of growth of assets under management and high turnover.”

Although the sample size was small, and the results tested only in a three-year timeframe, Gilman says the findings warrant further use of the Q-Sort tool.

“All of this is indicative but still powerful enough in results to say this is worth following up. As we get more managers along and look at results over greater periods of time we can get away from indicative and move towards statistical proof.”

Jeff Nipp, director of investment manager research at Watson Wyatt Worldwide, said the service helped the consultancy to “identify areas of potential concern” and conduct “more meaningful” conversations with managers about their business culture.

The tool, which is free to use, assesses whether the culture of a firm is predominantly optimistic or pessimistic, whether there is a sense of control or chaos, and whether there is tolerance of dissent, among other measurements of organisational culture.

It was first developed by social scientist William Stephenson in the 1940s, but professors Randall Peterson (who also advises InvestmentQ) and Philip Tetlock of the London Business School developed the Group Dynamics Q-Sort, the type applied by InvestmentQ.

To date, the Q-Sort database contains analyses of more than 100 managers, mostly from North America and Europe.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

The Netherlands’ UWV battles to regain funding

The funding crisis that hit pension funds across the world may be easing – in common with the five-year long economic crisis – but restoring healthy funding levels remains a vital priority for many investors. The Netherlands’ €4.9-billion ($6.6-billion) UWV pension fund is one of that number. A funding ratio of 98.7 per cent at

The diminishing role of agents

I’ve always been frustrated by interviewing consultants and the lack of conviction they have about their decisions. “What would your ideal model portfolio look like?” I constantly ask. “It depends on the client” is the predictable and consistent answer. That may be valid, even true, but it speaks to a wider problem. Consultants are hired

Push the reset button at PRI in Person

At the United Nations-backed Principles for Responsible Investment conference Cape Town on October 1, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation Sharan Burrow delivered a speech entitled Push the Reset Button – a Line Between Speculation and Investment. She discussed the stability of the global economy, the necessity for investors to shift to long-term

OECD leads global infrastructure push

The OECD seeks to lengthen the time horizons of investors and get institutional money flowing from across the world into infrastructure gaps.

Sustainable investment goes to school

The Robert F Kennedy Centre for Justice and Human Rights and Columbia University’s Earth Institute will run a series of high-level courses on sustainable investment focused on environmental, social and governance approaches as well as human and labour rights this autumn. The Compass Sustainable Investing Certificate program, designed for long-term investors, will have a solutions-driven

Giving time to investment governance

Roger Urwin, global head of content at Towers Watson and governance specialist, says most organisations don’t spend enough time on it, but transformational change is all about giving time to investment governance. Culture and leadership, for example is so self-evidently important in people organisations and yet it is understated in asset owners, he says. “The soft

Previous