All Content from Business Insider 07月11日 17:17
The hottest job in private equity: Keeping investors happy
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

由于回报率下降,私募股权公司在融资方面面临挑战。为了吸引和维护投资者,对相关专业人士的需求急剧增加。文章探讨了私募股权行业对具备哪些技能和经验的专业人士有最高需求。随着融资环境的变化,对能够建立良好销售流程、维护投资者关系以及具备专业知识的人才的需求日益增长。这些专业人士需要具备有效的销售技巧,能够适应快速变化的融资环境,并专注于满足投资者日益增长的需求。

📈 **销售技能 vs. 关系网络:** 尽管在某些地区,已有关系仍然重要,但私募股权公司更看重具备良好销售流程、持续开发潜在投资者以及独立赢得会议能力的专业人士。

💰 **私人财富“大军”:** 随着机构融资的减少,越来越多的私募股权公司开始推出面向高净值个人的产品,这需要一支由经验丰富的专业人士组成的“大军”来推动销售。

🗣️ **像投资者一样沟通:** 投资者关系专业人士在融资中扮演关键角色,他们需要向有限合伙人(LP)提供更频繁的投资更新,并能够就关税政策或美联储降息等宏观环境变化对投资的影响进行沟通。

🔄 **可转移的技能:** 随着对这些职位需求的增加,一些雇主开始接受具备可转移技能和经验的候选人,例如来自咨询行业的专业人士,或者在传统资产管理公司担任销售职位的人。

🎯 **找到你的细分市场:** 专门从事特定投资策略(如私募信贷、基础设施或私募股权二级市场)的专业人士越来越受欢迎,甚至包括专注于特定领域(如资产支持融资或直接贷款)的信贷专家。

 

Fundraising in private equity used to be relatively easy. First, you'd schmooze with executives of foundations, endowments, and pension funds, and then they'd write you a check with 6, 7, or even 8 zeroes. You'd go back for an even bigger check five years later, after doubling their money. Rinse and repeat.

Now, with private equity returns slumping and allocations to buyout funds increasingly maxed out, firms are finding they need to work a lot harder to get those big checks — driving up demand for professionals whose job it is to woo investors and keep them happy once they've invested.

Hiring for fundraising and investor relations roles at private equity and alternative asset firms surged to a record 3,378 in 2024, nearly double 2020 levels, according to data from recruitment firm Jensen Partners. That momentum has carried into 2025, said Sasha Jensen, founder and CEO of Jensen Partners, noting that first-quarter hiring hit another record high.

Sasha Jensen, founder and CEO of Jensen Partners

A survey from recruiting firm Odyssey Search Partners suggests pay for this group is also rising. Total compensation grew an average of 20% from 2023 to 2024, the survey of alternative industry fundraisers and investor relations professionals showed.

"There's a short supply of what the general partners are looking for," Jensen said, referring to the industry term for the financial sponsors in charge of these funds.

Business Insider spoke to four recruiters who specialize in hiring professionals who interact with investors on behalf of private equity firms and other alternative asset managers. They broke down the jobs, skills, and experiences that are most in demand as a result of the fundraising squeeze.

Sales skills vs Rolodexes

There is an age-old debate on Wall Street about what makes a salesperson shine — their Rolodex or their sales savvy.

Demand for professionals with preexisting relationships continues to be high in some investment hotbeds, like the Middle East and Asia, said Jennifer Xu, head of investor relations recruitment at Selby Jennings. But overall, times have changed.

"We tend to view the Rolodex as being a little bit overvalued. In today's world, no allocator will invest in a fund just because a known quantity is representing it," said Lisa Steele, a partner at recruiting firm BraddockMatthewsBarrett.

Recruiters said clients are looking for fundraisers with a proven ability to run a good sales process, keep track of outbounds to new investors, and continuously develop a new pipeline of potential investors. In other words, people who can sell to investors and win meetings without a preexisting relationship.

"This is not rocket science, but it is a process," Steele said, adding, "The sales process in institutional fundraising is very long, and somebody has to be comfortable and thrive in that process."

Private wealth "army"

As institutional fundraising dries up, more private equity firms are launching products they can sell to high-net-worth individuals — a trend started by Blackstone in 2017.

Jensen Partners' data shows that demand for professionals who can sell alternative investments to private wealth channels jumped 40% last year over 2023.

Selling to wealthy people is different from institutional fundraising. These products often need to be greenlit at the firm level before fundraisers can even begin persuading individual wealth advisors to pitch them to their clients. Both Steele and Jensen said it can take an "army" of fundraisers to be successful.

As with institutional fundraisers, firms are looking for professionals with proven experience and comfort with the process, which tends to move more quickly than institutional fundraising.

"In private wealth, you're in a world where they're executing and closing much more quickly," Steele said.

Some firms are adopting a sales model popular among traditional asset managers: the external/internal approach, Steele said. In this setup, externals handle field sales, while internals support from the office, including by supplying key sales information to the externals.

Talk like an investor

Investor relations professionals are in high demand because they play a key role in fundraising. Once the investor is onboarded, they take over the relationship, keeping fund investors, known as LPs or limited partners, informed.

The right IR team can mean the difference between a bigger check at the next fundraising round — or no check at all, recruiters said.

The job is increasingly demanding, said Anthony Keizner, cofounder of Odyssey.

"LPs want more frequent updates about their investments as they answer to their own stakeholders," Keizner said, adding, "they might want to know, for example, the effects on their investment from macro environment changes like tariff policies or a Fed rate cut."

Jensen said she is also seeing demand for professionals who work with investors at the capital formation stage, making sure investments are structured to the LPs' liking and acting as a de-facto portfolio manager.

She referred to them as strategic account development or strategic partnership professionals and said they tend to be senior executives with deft communication skills, acting as translators between their investment team and the LP.

"From an LP's perspective, you need a point of contact that can sit and talk toe-to-toe with the CIO," Jensen said. "They need to know exactly what risks the CIO is prepared to take on the platform, and communicate how they should structure investments around their portfolio."

Transferable skills

Recruiters said their clients are looking for sure bets — or what Xu called "someone who's plug-and-play."

Given the rising demand for these roles, however, some employers have become increasingly open to candidates with transferable skills and experiences.

"You might have sat on the investment side, decided you have the DNA of a salesperson, and made the pivot," Jensen said. People with backgrounds in consulting have also been known to make the pivot, she said.

On the private wealth side, firms have considered candidates in sales roles at traditional asset managers, Steele said.

"One benefit is that they have highly rigorous training, which is hard to find in alternatives sales," Steele said.

Some firms are responding to the talent shortage by building their own in-house programs to train entry-level workers.

"In recent years, there's been more of an effort to train entry-level investor relations professionals," Xu said.

Entry-level fundraising jobs are few and far between. Xu said firms that hire at this level tend to task those staffers with preparing presentations, running data, and providing behind-the-scenes support.

Find your niche

Recruiters said specialization is increasingly in demand, especially at large firms looking to raise money for distinct investment strategies, such as private credit, infrastructure, or private equity secondaries.

Xu said even the specialists are becoming more niche, with private credit specialists narrowing their focus to areas such as asset-backed finance or direct lending.

It could also mean having expertise in a specific style of LP, like insurance. One in-demand role is a head of insurance to help usher more insurance capital, especially for credit funds that use that money to make loans.

"When a private equity firm decides that they're going to develop a credit business, they're most likely going to hire a person or team that's focused on credit fundraising," said Bill Matthews, partner at BraddockMatthewsBarrett. "The generalist model doesn't work so well when you're developing different business models."

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

私募股权 融资 投资者关系 销售技巧
相关文章