Financial advisors and tax professionals wondering how artificial intelligence can help them may consider the concept of a quality chess player who uses technology to beat a grandmaster.
"If my tools allow me to go into detail and give me good guidance in particular areas, that kind of means that I have to be a generalist in using tools to be successful," said Dean Sonderegger, senior vice president and general manager of tax and accounting at global accounting, information and software firm
In other words, the wealth and tax professionals who leverage AI well may resemble an updated, undefeated version of
There is currently "a huge gap" because "tax is something that is truly ignored by financial advisors" who "think it's the CPAs' problem," said Sindhu Joseph, CEO of AI wealthtech firm
"For the financial advisors, they are not aware," she said in an interview. "They don't have enough context and data at their fingertips, and this is something that is ignored or goes sideways many of the times. Everything has to be taken into consideration throughout the year."
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Just as studies
Earlier this month, Wolters Kluwer launched an
For example, the tool can collaborate with advisors to figure out whether two real estate properties are eligible for a like-kind exchange, estimate the tax impact for couples considering whether to file jointly or separately or, in the event of a divorce, lay out the ramifications, he said. And after the tool performs the calculation, it can then create a message to clients explaining the strategic choices. The "fun of this idea" is that it "dramatically improves the ability of practitioners" without requiring them "to go through a boatload of research," Sonderegger said.
"If you look at the history of knowledge, it basically is, how do I search and find through a general-purpose document what's relevant to me. As a professional, I then have to do some labor to match with my clients' facts and circumstances," he said. "It's an efficiency boost, if you will, to get to that point where something is more actionable."
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Other tools take a similar approach in trying to help advisors and tax professionals do their work faster by removing manual processes and suggesting approaches for clients.
A module called Client IQ in CogniCor's
"We would take all of the clients' specific data and then provide a few strategies which have not been implemented," Joseph said. "We are saying that, for this client household, these are the things that you should look at."
For the future, CogniCor is working toward
"There's a general distrust of AI and probably a healthy distrust of AI," he said. "The way you address that is you ground the tool in a set of content that is not the internet but is a very highly curated set of content."