The Most Valuable Skill in a Family Office

Expert generalists: who they are, what they do and why family offices need them.

NEWSLETTER

Family office insights this week:
  • The most valuable skill for a family office leader

  • Ten locations to set up your family office

  • A podcast on why generalists triumph in a specialized world

  • The lost art of accomplishment without burnout

  • How to answer “What are your salary expectations?”

The Most Valuable Skill in a Family Office

The Family Office Generalist: Jack of All Trades, Master of Wealth

In a world obsessed with hyper-specialization, family offices operate differently.

They need someone who isn’t just a tax expert, an investment strategist, or an estate planner—but someone who can think across all of these areas.

Someone who understands how everything fits together.

Let’s call them the Family Office Generalist.

This isn’t a traditional role. It’s not about having the deepest knowledge in one field, it’s about having the breadth to see patterns, to connect the dots, and to anticipate issues before they become problems.

A good generalist understands investing. A great generalist understands how an investment today impacts cash flow, estate planning, tax efficiency, and the family’s long-term vision.

Why Do Family Offices Need Generalists?

Most wealth creators don’t build their fortune by being generalists. They’re highly focused individuals—experts in building a business, trading commodities, or making the right deals at the right time.

But once that wealth is created, managing it is an entirely different game. An entrepreneurial skillset is not always best suited to preserving wealth.

Family offices are dynamic, complex ecosystems where every decision is interconnected. When a family member wants to invest in a new venture, it doesn’t just impact their portfolio—it affects liquidity, estate planning, tax exposure, and family governance.

Enter the generalist.

They don’t necessarily have all the answers themselves, but they know the right questions to ask, they know the right people to talk to. They can translate legal jargon into real-world implications, see risks that others miss, and understand how seemingly unrelated issues influence one another.

David Epstein’s Range argues that generalists thrive in complex, unpredictable environments—exactly what a family office is.

Unlike the corporate world, where specialists operate in silos, a family office needs someone who can operate across disciplines.

The Six Traits of a Great Family Office Generalist

1. Adaptability Over Expertise
A generalist doesn’t cling to rigid frameworks. They can pivot from discussing structured credit to philanthropic planning without skipping a beat. In a world where uncertainty is the only constant, the ability to adapt is more valuable than deep knowledge in a single domain.

2. Pattern Recognition
They don’t need to be the best in any one discipline—but they need to see the overlaps. When they hear about a tax-efficient investment structure, they immediately think about estate implications. When a family member wants to buy a business, they consider succession planning.

3. The Art of Asking the Right Questions
Generalists don’t pretend to know everything. What they do know is how to ask the questions that uncover blind spots. Their job isn’t to replace specialists—it’s to integrate their expertise into a broader strategy.

4. Strong EQ (Emotional Intelligence)
Money is emotional. So are families. A generalist isn’t just managing wealth—they’re managing relationships, expectations, and potential conflicts. They need to communicate complex ideas clearly, build trust with different generations, and know when to push back.

5. A Translator Between Worlds
The family office world is full of specialists—lawyers, accountants, investment managers, estate planners. Each speaks their own language. The generalist is the bridge, translating across disciplines so that everyone is aligned on what actually matters.

6. Decisiveness in the Face of Uncertainty
In a specialist-driven world, there’s always a temptation to delay decisions until every expert has weighed in. But the best generalists know when 80% certainty is enough. They gather input, synthesize information, and move forward—because inaction is also a decision.

Where Do You Find These People?

They’re not easy to find. Traditional career paths don’t train for this. But the best generalists often come from diverse backgrounds—lawyers who pivoted to finance, operators who ran businesses before stepping into wealth management, or even those who started in entirely unrelated fields before moving into the family office space.

The best indicator of a great generalist? Someone who’s worked across industries, built a diverse skill set, and thrives in ambiguity. Someone who doesn’t just see the big picture but knows how to connect it.

In a world that increasingly rewards specialization, family offices remain one of the last places where true generalists not only survive but thrive.

And for families who understand their value, they’re the single best investment they can make.

𝕏 highlights

As family offices professionalize, an estimated 37% of family office CEOs have MBAs. Here’s the Financial Times ranking of MBA programs. Not everyone agreed with these rankings!

Family offices and junior talent.

A look at ten different locations for family offices. If you work in any of these and would be happy to answer a very brief questionnaire, hit reply. We are planning some profiles on great family office locations.

 💼 where to work

This week, the February Jobs newsletter hit your inboxes. Advice for those wanting a career in the family office space, five experienced family office candidates and some notable job opportunities, including the below…

📚 what to read

This week I’ve been reading Slow Productivity - The Lost Art of Accomplishment Without Burnout by Cal Newport this week. I feel constantly busy, so this was a refreshing call to slow down, take time, focus on value. There are some priceless lessons here on “freeing your time from the constraints of the small so that you can focus on the big”.

📻 what to listen to

In this episode of The Next Chapter, author David Epstein on “Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World” argues that to succeed in any field, one must develop an array of interests. In interviews with renowned athletes, inventors and scientists, he explores the power of diverse experiences in a world that requires hyperspecialization

📺 what to watch

How to answer “What are your salary expectations?”

And finally…

This week we published an interesting Thought Piece from Seth Chadwell on the rise of outsourced real estate services. Well worth a read.

Next week the ever popular Dealflow newsletter will hit your inboxes on Wednesday and on Friday it will be a look at Fake Family Offices.

Family Office Buzz will be back on Monday (here’s the last edition if you missed it) with more of the best content on family offices and beyond.

Until next week, see you on 𝕏 or LinkedIn.

X

Rate this week's newsletter

Login or Subscribe to participate in polls.