What adopted was the rebranding of 11 totally different ETFs, with a view to creating the language of their names and advertising and marketing extra investor pleasant. Sure bloated names had been stripped right down to their naked necessities. Grimont and D’Souza word the instance of 1 ETF, previously known as the Harvest Equal Weight World coated name Utilities Revenue ETF (HUTL). That was rebranded to the Harvest Utilities Leaders Revenue ETF, buying and selling below the identical ticker.
Grimont notes that the choice to unify this suite with two key phrases: “revenue” and “leaders” underlined the widespread funding thesis espoused at Harvest: large-cap equities with coated name overlays for revenue.
“We wish individuals to acknowledge that title,” Grimont says. “The Harvest tech leaders, or fairness leaders, or regardless of the sector is, it’s the revenue leaders that they’ll have a look at.”
Whereas among the logic behind this rebrand was to achieve a extra outcome-focused cohort of DIY buyers, Grimont and D’Souza add that they consider this rebrand additionally fits an advisor cohort going through KYP rules and a crowded product shelf. With the ever-expanding roster of Canadian ETFs, particularly ETFs within the coated name class, advisors must triage. Fairly than utilizing an ETF’s title to find out if one thing is equal weight, globally invested, or the sector it performs in, the title can function the primary level within the funnel. Harvest elected for that key info to be the sector and the truth that it has revenue. From there, D’Souza notes that wholesalers can step in to speak with advisors concerning the underlying mechanisms, like equal weight allocations, the character of the choices technique, and the geographic allocation within the fund.
The choice for this rebrand wasn’t made in a vacuum, Grimont and D’Souza solicited enter from a cohort of “friendlies” each within the advisory channel and within the DIY area. That suggestions, and a level of their very own reflection, helped the Harvest staff see the place previous branding inconsistencies had emerged. Now they will strategy future launches with a level of self-discipline, launching inside broad classes the place they’ve established experience and benefit. D’Souza argues that by leaning on the self-discipline now baked into their fund language, the staff can resist the temptation to ‘overlaunch’ ETFs and give attention to what works for DIY buyers, what works for advisors, and what works for them. Whereas the inner means of rebranding could appear to be a advertising and marketing train, Grimont and D’Souza argue it has a significant impression on how advisors can work with these merchandise everyday.
