The firm that bet on the future

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About Lifeworks

Lifeworks Advisors is a Michigan-based RIA managing nearly $1 billion across 2,000 households.

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Why they switched

Lifeworks was building their own tech to compete for the next generation of clients. Then they saw Altruist was doing it faster and at a scale they couldn’t match.

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The results

Switching to Altruist saved Lifeworks $1,800 per household every year, freed up the team’s time, and made it possible to do more for every client they serve.

Ron Bullis didn’t get into the custodian-switching business lightly. As founder and CEO of Lifeworks Advisors, a Grand Rapids, Michigan-based RIA managing nearly $1 billion across 2,000 households, he runs his firm like a CEO should: with a clear mathematical business case before making any major move.

In 2021, he made one of those moves. Lifeworks closed a seed funding round and hired software engineers. The mission: build a direct integration to Apex Clearing, develop digital account opening, fractional shares, and electronic ACAT processing, all in-house.

For a while, that was the plan. Until one platform started changing the calculus.

The moment the math changed

Altruist was building the same thing Lifeworks was after—tech-forward tools that could compete for the next generation of clients. Except, they were doing it faster, at a scale Ron’s team couldn’t match.

“We just looked at Altruist and said, ‘Man, they’re going to do this better than we are.’”

That was the moment. Lifeworks wound down the internal software operation, redirected the capital, and made Altruist their primary custodian. The goal: move 75–80% of assets and households to the platform by the end of 2026.

What the transition actually looked like

The number one question Ron gets from other advisors: how will clients react to leaving a household-name custodian for one they’ve never heard of?

His answer: not one client pushed back.

“Clients don’t hire the custodian. They hire the advisor. If the advisor has a clear, cogent, and compelling reason for why they believe Altruist is the best partner for their clients, most clients are going to take that advice without any significant objections.”

The operational side was equally smooth. Altruist imported all of Lifeworks’ client data directly, including historical performance records, so clients could see an unbroken view of their portfolio going back years. That last piece wasn’t standard. Lifeworks asked for it. Altruist built it.

“I don’t know any custodian anywhere that would agree to do something like that and then deliver it in anything less than multiple years,” Ron said. The training was the same story—proactive and thorough.

What they got on the other side

For Lifeworks, the benefits landed in two places: what clients experience, and what the team no longer has to do manually.

On the client side, Altruist delivered the kind of mobile experience Ron’s next-gen clients expect—fast account opening, clean reporting, and the ability to log in and see their returns and move money easily.

“We’re going to democratize those benefits for everybody because Altruist has built the technology to manage that complexity at scale,” Ron said.

Running the numbers

Since making the switch, Lifeworks is saving nearly $1,800 per household every year in labor—work that used to fall on their team, now handled automatically by the platform.

“Here’s the basic math,” Ron said. “$1,800 per year, times the number of households in your firm, times whatever multiple of revenue your firm is valued at. Every 100 households puts $180,000 of cost back into your P&L. At a 10x multiplier, that’s a $1.8 million enterprise gain.”

$1,800

saved per year, per household with Altruist

0

clients pushed back on transition to Altruist

75-80%

assets moved to Altruist by end of 2026

What’s at stake for advisors

From Ron’s perspective, too many advisors are running on strong market returns, high profit margins, and the illusion that the status quo will hold.

“70% of the growth in our industry has just come from market appreciation, not from winning the next generation of clients,” Ron said. “There are far too many people in our industry that, I believe, are sleepwalking into irrelevancy because they refuse to look out there and ask: what are the platforms, what are the partners that we need to have that are building for the future?”

The advisors who are asking hard questions now will be the ones positioned to win, not just the clients they have, but the generation of clients everyone is chasing.

“If you have high conviction that it’s your responsibility to build a platform that serves clients across multiple generations, then you just get into this work, and you do it as fast and as clean as possible.”