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by bfrink
3397 days ago
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I think perhaps the worst thing about Addepar is the way it sells itself to prospective (inevitably young) employees: that's it's on a mission to "fix finance." While there are some operational inefficiencies to be alleviated in the wealth management performance reporting space, the savings from which might at some point be passed along to asset owners, the actual result of Addepar's work, at least in the short term, is much less grandiose. I would characterize Addepar's effects as enabling wealth managers to continue to capture more of this value as you point out, while also assuring tax-efficient inter-generational wealth transfer. This is perhaps a cynical and short-sighted view of Addepar (and I've been told as much by Addepar's management), but based on my experience in the investment management industry, I feel it's more true than false. |
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However, I don't know if Addepar is more guilty of this than any other local tech venture. It's an industry wide issue.
Just curious, did you previously work there? Your only HN submission was over a year ago, and it was an obscure news article about Addepar cutting sales staff:
https://news.ycombinator.com/submitted?id=bfrink
> While there are some operational inefficiencies to be alleviated in the wealth management performance reporting space
Addepar already does more than just "wealth management performance reporting".
And all successful startups, as far as I can tell, start by shipping something simpler and smaller than their ultimate vision.
Facebook started as Thefacebook. It was a PHP+MySQL site that had the names of your classmates, profile pics, and a Poke button.