Insourcing versus outsourcing has been something that we've been talking about this for ten, 15 years. You know, there was, the first generation of outsourcing, which was fund administration, back office, that's now kind of run of the mill. Everyone pretty much outsources those aspects. Nav striking, reg reporting in a lot of cases.
Then middle office outsourcing came along, I’ll call that the second generation of outsourcing and firms took a hard look at that. It’s no longer a trend. It’s here to stay. At this point, there are very few functions in the investment management process, outside of secret sauce portfolio management research and so forth, that are not a candidate to outsource.
Outsourced trading is now something that, not just smaller firms are taking a look at. I'm not going to sit here and say that traders have been commoditized, but it's certainly something that the asset management industry has taken a hard look at.
At the end of the day, there's no right answer in to, forming a balance between insourcing and outsourcing. I mean, there's cultural aspects that come into play. There's the types of assets that you trade.
How big of a firm, how global are you? The only way to really solve. I don't know if solve is even the right word. The only way I think to find that true balance between insourcing and outsourcing is to look at your operating model, both top down and bottom up, and see what the right fit is for you.
Legacy technology is pretty much why I'm sitting here. I mean, as a consulting firm that spent my entire career, in the asset management space, it feels like that's been the lion's share of the work that we've done as an organization, that I've personally done, as a consultant. Legacy tech has been around for decades. It's part of the game, right?
So making sure that you're constantly taking a look at your tech stack, that you're constantly looking at your operating model to follow along with your investment strategy is absolutely paramount. Legacy tech is not- I don't want to sit here and say it's here to stay because there's an inherent risk. The problem I think that a lot of firms face is, we can talk about legacy tech. We can talk about the fact that we have asset managers that are literally using the same technology and systems that they put in 20 to 30 years ago.
There's a legacy mindset in the industry that does cause inherent risk, reputational risk, people risk, monetary risk. And the quicker that we can kind of get senior members of an organization to kind of try to flip out of that legacy mindset and take a regular recurring look at what is out there.
Does it make sense to outsourcing certain aspects of your operating model? Does it make sense to look at cloud native, cloud enabled software that might enable you to pivot and move into investment strategies like private assets, ETFs, make acquisitions to augment your, your asset management organization. I think that's just something that people need to take a hard look at.
When I think about, you know, barriers, challenges, for our clients. I could sit here and talk about legacy technology and how that's holding people back. You know, certain kind of antiquated thinking is holding people back. But I'm going to take this in a slightly different direction. There's very few asset managers of any size, of any ambition that aren't taking on large transformative projects right now.
And I think there's a problem in our industry, which is what I feel is a massive barrier. And we see it firsthand because that's what we do. We run transformation projects. There is a lack of leadership and a lack of efficiency, that they are essentially running into each other right now.
When I talk about a lack of leadership, I think we've kind of lost sight of what it means to provide true sponsorship for large programs, large implementations. And when I talk about sponsorship, I'm talking about that kind of one throat to choke the person. Forgive me for that term, but, the one person on behalf of a software vendor, a solution provider and asset manager that is willing to make the hard decisions, and we have to spell that out, and that's fine as long as they understand the role.
Decision by consensus seldom works, in my opinion, and we try to empower our consultants to really kind of pound the table and make sure that they don't walk out of meetings without a decision. Now, the I talked about leadership. There's also an efficiency problem right now. And I'm going to point the finger at Covid. I think there's been since Covid. I think there's been a lack of collaboration. I think there's been communication problems, and it leads to inefficiency and transformation programs that used to get delivered on time and on budget are now hopelessly getting overrun. They're years behind. They are millions of dollars in some cases over budget.
I'm not saying there's a simple fix to this, but getting people in-person, co-located, running workshops like I've run countless times, and not walking out of that room until there's a decision is something that absolutely needs a light shine. Shine upon it, and it needs to be fixed.
Asset managers moving into private assets is something that certainly, I don't want to call the flavor of the month because it's absolutely happening. There isn't a conference that I have been to, whether it's an industry conference, whether it's something that's put on, by a solution provider, what have you, where private asset assets is in front and center, private assets and I but I don't want to talk about AI right now, Private assets moving into alternative assets is something that everyone's looking at.
All right, you got the Blackstone's, the BlackRock's, the Apollos, State Street. Both from a provider standpoint and an investment standpoint. Everyone is moving in that direction and trying to figure out what they need to do from a technology and an operations standpoint.
Now, spending. I don't want to date myself, but I'll just say 20 plus years in the industry, an investment manager, a CIO that wants to get into whether it's real assets or, or ETFs, complex derivative books back in the day and now private assets, they're not going to stop and wait for, ops and tech to have a surefire solution.
They're going to expect them to catch up, even if they have to manage certain aspects of their book on, heaven forbid, Excel spreadsheets.
What does that lead us to? It leads us to white papers that are in my inbox every day, from providers saying they have a TPV, a total portfolio view, or they have a solution to the whole office or the whole fund view or the whole portfolio view, there's everyone's coming up with these names and acronyms.
It reminds me a little bit of IBOR. IBOR, believe it or not, has been around for 12 plus years now and I still think there's a disagreement as to exactly what IBOR is. And then all the other BORs came, right? The ABORs boards and the PBORs and the TBORs. Ultimately, let's take a step back and let's look at the requirements like, what are we really solving for? What is the front office needed in terms of properly managing with, understanding risk, understanding performance. What alpha are they looking to achieve with a private market book?
I'm not sitting here saying that TPV is a solution looking for a problem necessarily. There is a lot of hype around it right now, but we're all familiar with the Gartner hype curve. Let's see where this goes.
I ask the question sometimes who owns it? Who owns that? I'm going to call it TPV. Who owns TPV? Where does it reside? Is it imperative that you have a solution for this, right now? I'm not so sure you might be able to solve it with a data construct and make sure that you're able to nail down, you know, the timing and the accuracy and so forth. I think time's going to tell. I think it's a client-by-client type of situation. But it really kind of boils down to the requirements and it's going to start with the front office. What do they really require to properly manage these assets.
When I think of some of our clients in the past it was clear that they were looking to grow through acquisition, whether their target was to get to 500 billion, a trillion plus. It's hard to do that organically. I guess it depends on where you're starting, of course. I think of one of our longstanding clients and they had a stated goal. They had an operational mindset that they wanted to grow by acquisition. They wanted to fill out their investment book. They wanted to fill out their geographical reach, through acquisition and the CEO said, we need an acquisition ready platform. Okay. Well, what does that mean?
It did not mean that they wanted a single platform front to back, necessarily.
They decided to go about it with Best of Breed. They had multiple IBORs. Okay. They had an IBOR for their fixed income. They had an IBOR for their equity. They had an IBOR for their derivatives book. They eventually got into ETFs. They got into alternative assets, you name it, they did it, and they still do it. Okay.
How they stitched together, and I guess the key cog in their strategy, and like I said, mindset, operational mindset to having an acquisition ready platform was through data. They had and still have in my estimation, a cutting-edge data platform and a cutting-edge data approach to ensure that if they were to do, a 250 billion, our acquisition, several 100 portfolios to fill a gap in their book, they were able to do it seamlessly, moving on to the best of breed platforms and so forth, that I didn't name by name, but I described them at least a little bit from an accounting standpoint or a management standpoint. They had different systems, but they had a single data approach.
They had a forward thinking, forward looking, data ecosystem, data integration platform and so forth, which enabled them multiple times. I can think of three acquisitions off the top of my head right now. They got them all done. They got them all implemented, transformed and were able to close on those deals. All within one year.