The methodology centers on a 16-question scorecard that evaluates six distinct pillars: goal setting, financial planning, risk protection, independence, intergenerational strategy, and values-aligned impact. By incorporating research from the Harvard Study of Adult Development and positive psychology, the firm aims to move financial advisory services away from purely quantitative performance metrics toward a model rooted in emotional intelligence.
Beyond the Balance Sheet: A New Framework for Financial Wellbeing
After years of chasing conventional financial markers, London-based firm First Wealth is shifting its focus toward a proprietary framework designed to measure life satisfaction rather than just portfolio returns. The firm’s new guide, Measure Wealth by Wellbeing, encourages clients to evaluate how their assets actually influence their personal quality of life.

Co-founder Anthony Villis developed the approach following a personal health crisis that forced a re-evaluation of his own priorities. He argues that once individuals achieve basic monetary security, the focus must transition to how wealth facilitates health, social connection, and personal freedom. This shift is echoed by medical professionals like Dr. Oliver Rabie, who notes that financial stability is a prerequisite for maintaining essential lifestyle pillars such as nutrition, sleep, and stress management. As the firm integrates this scorecard into its annual review process, it signals a broader industry trend where the advisor’s role evolves from managing investments to coaching clients on the intersection of money and human flourishing.

Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!