High net worth is a term that is used a lot.
You’ll find it mentioned in the reports and statements of many financial firms.
HM Revenue and Customs has a high net worth unit.
Most of the banks have units who look after the interests of this group.
Quite a few businesses say that they would like to sell to high net worth individuals. Many of them struggle to do so. This series of articles is all about selling to that group.
If your business wants to sell to high net worth individuals the sensible place to start is to think about who these people are.
What is a high net worth individual?
There are different views, but you won’t go too far wrong if you think of a high net worth individual as someone who owns at least the equivalent of one million US dollars in financial assets.
Ultra high net worth individuals, on the other hand, need at least thirty million US dollars or equivalent to qualify. In this instance, a family can be counted as well as individuals.
Some banks and financial institutions sub-divide further into such categories as “very high net worth individuals” and so on.
Who has this sort of resource?
If you’re looking to sell your products and services into the top end of this market, you’re looking at a very exclusive group of people. Check out the high end of the market and you’ll come across the people with yachts, private jets, expensive cars for each day of the week and so on.
Thinking about high net worth individuals more generally, you can easily start to gather some useful information that will help you to understand a little more about them.
Almost half of them have directorships.
More than 60% of them fly regularly.
Typically they will be worth just over £1 million.
By the way, according to some statistics, 1.1 % of the UK population are millionaires. Other sources say there are over 280,000 of them living in the UK.
Okay, 80% of high net worth individuals are male, which helps you with your customer profiling, but that doesn’t mean you would recognise a high net worth individual if you met him – or her - in the street.
They’re not that different from a lot of other people.
What sort of people are high net worth individuals?
Quite a lot of people could fall into this category.
- Think about the person who has run a business for 30 years. At retirement he or she could well realise this amount of money when selling the business.
- Some people inherit wealth. When the parental home is sold, it can realise significant amounts of money these days. Inheriting such a home and liquidating the asset can turn someone into a high net worth individual overnight.
- Some people, especially those in finance, earn big salaries and become wealthy at quite a young age.
- Yes, some people win the lottery or the football pools and become rich overnight. . . . And there are celebrities etc.
What’s important to remember is that high net worth individuals are a diverse group.
They don’t all have the same experiences.
They don’t all have the same expectations.
They don’t all have the same interests, needs and wants.
They don’t all live their lives in the same way.
They don’t all want to buy the same sorts of products and services.
Selling to high net worth individuals
It’s not enough in your business to state that you want to sell to high net worth individuals. When you make this statement you haven’t gone far enough with your analysis. You’ve identified s a market segment, but it’s not a niche. (It’s still too big.)
You need to slice your market segment further.
The first step is to do some customer profiling.
- Are you potential customers likely to be male or female?
- Are they likely to be young or old?
- Did they become affluent quickly or did they become affluent slowly?
- Are they interested in ……………. type of investment?
- Are they interested in …………………. type of activity?
You can then start to think about finding real people who fit your criteria.
Have you got to that stage?
If you have, that means your search for the right high net worth individuals has begun.








