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Practice Management > Marketing and Communications

Advisor Group’s New Name Gets Mixed Reviews

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Osaic, the new brand name for Advisor Group, is being greeted with a mixed reaction from some members of the financial services industry.

The firm’s rebranding initiative goes hand in hand with its previously announced plans to unite its eight firms into one entity. It indicated in April that it was considering a new brand name.

“Some people commented to me that the name sounded like a drug like Ozempic, while one advisor said he wasn’t even sure how to pronounce it,” Jon Henschen, president of the recruiting firm Henschen & Associates, told ThinkAdvisor by email Thursday.

“A recruiter jokingly said, ‘Osaic stands for: Oh S— Another Identity Crisis,’” he explained.

“When they were owned by AIG, they had an identity crisis when [one of the broker-dealers] had the name AIG Financial Advisors,” he noted. “The 2008-2009 meltdown made that name toxic, which is when they came up with SagePoint.”

But, with the new name Osaic, “this isn’t an identity crisis now but rather, somehow trying to bring unity through a new name, [and] rebranding can bring unintended consequences,” Henschen said.

“I don’t think an alternative name was necessary,” he explained. “They could have just gone by Advisor Group which has history and explains what they are.”

‘Right for You?’

Also questioning the new name was Rob Farmer, managing director and head of communications at The Rudin Group, who told ThinkAdvisor: “Companies undergo name and branding changes for many good reasons. Advisor Group’s stated rationale — to unify their various firms under a single structure — makes sense.”

He, too, preferred the company’s old brand name, saying: “You could argue that ‘Advisor Group’ was effective, and clear, in service of that already. What is less clear is the meaning of the [new] name itself.”

Farmer conceded that it “may well be that over the long term it will create a little sunlight between them and a crowded, competitive marketplace.”

But Farmer added: “My initial reaction is an urge to add a tagline: Ask your doctor if Osaic is right for you!”

‘More Than Just the Name’

“We’ve seen some of these comments before,” Osaic’s executive vice president of marketing and communications, Jen Roche, told ThinkAdvisor in a phone interview Thursday afternoon. “Whenever you go through a rebrand — you announce a new name, a new logo, anything like that — you’re going to have a lot of people who love it, you’re going to have some people who don’t like it.”

Therefore, Roche said: “We knew we were going to get a mixed reaction as we launched our new brand and we certainly expected negative reaction from recruiters and competitors. That is their job. That is what they do.”

What was more important to the company, however, was that “our advisors, our clients, our employees had an overwhelmingly positive reaction to the new brand,” she said.

Roche also clarified specifically why the company selected Osaic as its new brand name, telling ThinkAdvisor that it was derived from the word mosaic, which means “a lot of different things are coming together to create something beautiful and new.”

That, she noted, also describes the firm itself, which is a combination of various firms. The letter m was dropped from the word to create the new brand name because the company wanted to reflect its uniqueness, she said.

Furthermore, “the Advisor Group brand was not particularly well-known,” and advisors for its various divisions were mostly not that attached to it, she said.

In a statement, Roche said: “The word Osaic is a coined word, and it is uniquely ours, but the brand is about more than just the name of the company. We developed the name, the visual identity and the brand platform to reflect our values, our heritage and our bold vision for the future.”

For its renaming campaign, Osaic worked with branding agency Sullivan & Co. The agency says its roster of clients in financial services includes AXA, Capital Group Private Client Services, BlackRock, Fidelity, Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, MassMutual and Charles Schwab.

Some Positive Views

“Changing their name at this stage of their evolution is a logical step as they are consolidating multiple brands into one and improving their value proposition,” according to Robert Sofia, CEO of advisor marketing company Snappy Kraken.

But Sofia said in a statement provided to ThinkAdvisor: “It’s important to note that the true power of a brand name is not fully appreciated in its initial stages. It takes time for a brand name to acquire meaning. The perceptions and experiences that individuals have with the Osaic brand over time will ultimately shape its true significance.”

Sofia pointed to Apple, noting it “may have seemed like an odd choice for a computer company when competing against giants like Microsoft and Dell.” But he pointed out: “With time, the name has become synonymous with something meaningful and recognizable.”

He added: “What truly matters is having a brand name that is (1) simple, (2) unique and (3) relevant to the business in some way. The most appealing and visually appealing brand name is meaningless without a sustained commitment to excellent work by exceptional individuals over time.”

Meanwhile, industry veteran Larry Roth, managing partner at RLR Strategic Partners, told ThinkAdvisor by email that he liked the new name “very much for several reasons.” For one thing, he said, “Osaic is easy to pronounce, spell and it presents differently than the rest of the brands in the industry.”

Roth, who led Advisor Group from 2006 to 2013, also explained: “More importantly it feels fresh. This name and brand will allow the company to fit into a modern wealth management industry without boxing itself into a corner regarding the kinds of services it can provide its affiliated advisors.”

He added: “If you consider the other major players in the space, they seem to have specific industry terms or names of people who have long passed away at the center of their brand. Osaic is different and, for that alone, I think it’s interesting.”

Among those congratulating Advisor Group was Aaron Klein, co-founder and CEO of Nitrogen, which recently changed its name from Riskalyze. “Congratulations to our good friends at Advisor Group on their new identity as Osaic!” Klein tweeted. “Having just done a rebrand, I know how hard it is and I’m so excited for you all.”

The fintech firm said in May it switched its brand name to Nitrogen to “reflect its evolution into an advisory firm growth platform.” Initial industry reaction to the new name was overwhelmingly positive among fintech industry experts ThinkAdvisor interviewed at the time.

(Credit: Adobe Stock)


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