This article provides a step-by-step guide as to how a Writer user can quickly and easily write a suitability report recommending the purchase of structured investment product. 


1) Select or add the client

 

From the Genovo main dashboard, go to Write report and select or create the private client(s) you wish to write the report to. If your Genovo account is integrated with your back office system, remember that you can import the client, rather than adding them manually, by clicking the add from CRM button.



2) Select the Report Creation Method

 

The preferred report creation method is to use the Genovo AI Assistant (‘Gena’). All you need to do is type, paste or speak a simple advice prompt stating the advice scenario. For this scenario, I’d suggest something like:



Gena will then:

 

  • Determine the most appropriate report type.
  • Apply a report name.
  • Create the framework of the report.
  • Add the required report sections.
  • Import the plans from your back office system (if you have a CRM integration), or
  • Create a ‘skeleton’ plan ready for you to flesh out as required.

 

However, in the interests of completeness, this article  walks you through the steps of building the report using Genovo’s 'from scratch' report creation method. There are four other report creation methods available, designed to fast-track you through one or more of the steps below and make the report building process even easier.


3) Create the report

 

In Report Details, give the report a name and select the Report Type - we'd suggest using the Review Report – Recommendations (2.0). 

 

4) Add the required sections

 

You’ll now need to add the necessary sections from the 'Available sections' drop down, which in this instance will be:

 

  • Review of Your Existing Pension Plans, and
  • Recommended Investment Strategy.

 

5) Complete all section wizards

 

Next, you'll need to step through the section wizards of all sections that require your input, as follows:


5.1) The Introduction section 

 

Progress through the steps of the Introduction section in the usual way. When you reach the Client Objectives step you should select or add the advice option(s) that accurately reflect the client's objective(s) and add comprehensive Know Your Client (KYC) information to ensure you fulfil the regulator’s expectations of you in terms of documenting a client's objectives.

 

You can use and adapt one of the Genovo advice options, such as:

 

Review your existing *investments / pensions* to ensure they continue to reflect your needs and objectives, and investment preferences.’

 

Alternatively, you can add your own advice option if you prefer, or you can manually enter the client’s objectives by typing, pasting in external content, or even just speaking the objectives, by clicking the Add objectives as freetext button.


5.2) The Client Risk Profile section

 

It's in this section that you will confirm the clients’ attitude to risk and capacity for loss, as well as their knowledge and experience and any investment preferences they may have. Given they’re investing in a structured product, this would be an ideal place to highlight their preference for capital protection.


5.3) The Review of Your Existing Pension Plans section

 

Simply follow the Wizard section steps in sequence:


5.3.1) Plan Summary

 

You now need to add the SIPP. If you’re working with an integrated client, click the Add plans from CRM button, otherwise add the plan manually by clicking Add plan.

 

Because you’re going to be recommending a new investment strategy for the plan, it’s really important that you include the plan’s Current Investment Strategy, so the client can easily see ‘before & after’ versions of their plan’s underlying investments, as well as the associated charges. If you’re working with an integrated plan and the plan in the CRM has underlying funds / holdings, these will be imported with the plan to form the Current Investment Strategy.

 

5.3.2) Benefits & Features

 

Some of the details of this step may have been populated from the CRM, but if not, you can easily add them yourself.

 

Given that the advice in this scenario is simply to switch the underling investments, you could choose not to populate this step, in which case nothing will come out in your report. For some other recommendations, (e.g.  if you were recommending the plan should be replaced), this step is very important.

 

5.3.3) Current Plan Charges

 

Enter the plan’s current charges. You’ll find everything you need to know about the Current Plan Charges step in this article from the Genovo Knowledge Base.

 

Note that Genovo’s AI assistant (‘Gena’) can be used to retrieve plan charges from previous Genovo reports where the plan has been reviewed. This Knowledge Base article explains how this feature works.

 

5.3.4) Recommended Action

 

Select the “switch the underlying investments of” Recommended Action and then select from one or more of the supporting Genovo advice reasons, (or add you can add your own). The example below is a custom advice reason I created for this scenario:



5.3.5) Revised Plan Charges

 

Add the revised recurring plan charges as appropriate. Seeing as the only recommended action for the SIPP is to switch the underlying investments, it’s probably only the investment management charges that will change.

Top Tip – where the charges haven’t changed very much, it’s easier to copy across the charges from the Current Plan Charges step. This is covered in detail in the last few paragraphs of this Knowledge Base article.


5.3.6) Key Disadvantages and Tax Implications

 

Remember, you’re only recording any disadvantages with the recommendation to switch the underlying investments of the SIPP. Any disadvantages associated with using a structured product within the revised investment strategy can be covered off in the ‘why investment strategy’ step of the Recommended Investment Strategy section (see below).

 

5.3.7) Plan Comparison: Performance

 

If you’re recommending a structured product within a plan’s revised investment strategy, it’s probably safe to say that you’re not doing it for performance reasons (and in any event, how would you represent the past performance of a structured product that doesn’t have a performance history?).

 

However, you may be making other changes to the underlying investment strategy too, so this optional step is where you can record data to support a recommendation to change the investment strategy, if the change is being driven by performance. If you don’t enter any figures into this step, the Plan Comparison: Performance subsection won’t be included in your report.


5.4) The Recommended Investment Strategy section

 

5.4.1) Recommended Investment Strategy

 

An investment strategy in Genovo can include cash, individual equities, funds, portfolios, bonds, ETFs, investment trusts. For SIPPs, it can extend to any permissible investment – commercial property, physical bullion, fine art, etc, plus of course, structured products.

 

So – rather than add the structured product as a recommendation in the New Investment Recommendation section, when recommending it as part of a wider investment strategy it can be covered as part of the investment strategy.

 

You have a choice here:

 

  • Add the revised investment strategy as an entirely new strategy – most likely when most or all of the Current Investment Strategy is being changed.
  • Clone the Current Investment Strategy – useful when only a small part of the Current Investment Strategy is being changed.
     

Just click the Clone current investment strategy button and select from the list of investment strategies in the new window.


Next, regardless of whether you’re editing a cloned investment strategy, or creating an entirely new investment strategy, you’ll need to give it a name, for example: 

 

 

Once you’ve named the strategy, you now need to edit the investments. To do this, click on the Edit investments hyperlink:

 

 

This is where you’ll add the structured investment product as part of the investment strategy.

 

The quickest and easiest way is to re-use the Genovo Example Structured Product from the Investment Library. This example structured product includes a table of the various features and benefits of a typical structured product, so all you have to do is edit the various fields (including the investment name, obviously). this is much easier than creating it from scratch.

 

 

If the investment strategy is not the only investment in the plan’s investment strategy, you should now add the other investments too. It might look something like this very simple example:

 

 

Finally, don’t forget the Why investment strategy step. It’s here that you should explain how the recommended investment strategy meets the client’s objectives.

 

 

5.4.2) Recommended Investment Strategy Supplementary Information

 

This optional step allows you to select one or more options to include additional content in your report about your firm’s advice proposition, ESG investing, discretionary fund management, etc.

 

6) The Important Information section

 

This is the last wizard section you'll need to complete and the steps are self-explanatory.

 

7) Tailor the structure of the report

 

Having completed all the section wizards you should then tailor the structure of your report by unchecking any sections you do not wish to include in your report; and then change the sort order of any sections to reflect your personal preferences.

 

You’ll find more information about how to remove sections from your report here.

 

You'll find more information about how to reorder the sections in your report here.

 

8) Create and edit the report


Having created the framework of the report of the report with 98%+ of the content already included as an initial draft in the Report Builder, both Writer and Reader users can then make any final tweaks to the content of the draft report in the Report Editor. To open and edit the report in the Report Editor click Create / Edit report.


Report template


Having created the report, you may then wish to convert it into a template and save it to your Report Template Libraryto use as a starting point for creating future reports.