Not yet signed up to receive more insights from Fortis CEO Nathan Foy? Subscribe here.
Here’s What Service Professionals Need to Know.
Anecdotally, the K-shaped economy is either here or arriving faster than most people want to admit. The idea is simple and uncomfortable: the top of the wealth hierarchy is booming while the bottom is in recession—and the two lines on the graph are moving in opposite directions. Every conversation I have—with clients, prospects, fellow CEOs, vendors, and service providers across four continents—points in the same direction. The split is real, it’s accelerating, and pretending otherwise won’t change it.
I’ll be honest: I don’t want this. I’d genuinely prefer a rising tide that lifts every boat. A robust, thriving middle class makes for a healthier society, a stronger culture, and frankly a better country. But no one asked me, and I don’t control macroeconomics. What I can control is how I position my business, how I advise my team, and what I share with the service professionals watching these trends unfold in real time.
So here’s what I’m seeing from the inside—running a company with service workers around the world, serving ultra-high-net-worth clients at the highest levels.
1. The Craft Advantage Is About to Become Enormous
If your job can be automated, it will be. That’s not pessimism—that’s pattern recognition. We are watching white-collar job loss accelerate in ways that would have been unimaginable five years ago. Legal review, financial analysis, copywriting, basic research, scheduling, customer service—entire categories of work are being quietly hollowed out. The people who built careers around processing information are in serious trouble.
But here’s what AI cannot easily replicate: in-person, high-skill service delivered by a human being who has trained relentlessly and refined their craft over years. Not a job. A craft. There’s a difference, and it matters more right now than it ever has.
The service sector workers who will thrive in this environment aren’t the ones who simply show up. They’re the ones who own their careers, invest in their skill sets, and treat their professional development the way an elite athlete treats training. Ongoing. Deliberate. Never finished. The jaws of automation are closing, and complacency is what gets you caught in them.
If you’re in a sector that’s not yet disrupted by technology, serving clients whose spending is growing, delivering something that requires genuine human presence and judgment—you are sitting on an extraordinary opportunity. But you have to treat it that way. Invest in training. Build a model of continuous refinement. The gap between the professionals who get this and those who don’t is about to widen dramatically.
2. Trends That Aren’t Going Anywhere
Across every market we operate in—Washington, New York, Hong Kong, India—certain trends hold. These aren’t fads. They’re structural shifts in how affluent clients allocate time, attention, and money.
Bespoke, in-person experiences that meet an emotional need: The more digital the world becomes, the more premium clients will pay for something real. A handshake. A driver who knows your preferences without being asked. An experience designed entirely around you. The demand for genuinely personalized, high-touch service is not declining—it’s intensifying as everything else commoditizes.
Curation above all else: The wealthiest clients in the world aren’t short on options. They’re short on time and tolerance for mediocrity. What they are willing to pay for is someone who has already done the filtering—who knows the difference between good and exceptional and can consistently deliver the latter. Curation is a skill. It requires taste, judgment, and relationships. Build all three.
Niches generate wealth: Generalists get squeezed. Specialists who serve a specific, growing client segment with genuine expertise build moats. The more precisely you understand who your best client is, what they need, and where they’re going, the better positioned you are to serve them—and charge accordingly. Growing niches provide the most riches. That’s not a clever saying; it’s an operating strategy.
Security demand is going to surge: The world is not getting safer, and for ultra-high-net-worth individuals and families, the risk calculus is shifting meaningfully. Digital threats, physical threats, reputational threats—clients at the top of the wealth hierarchy are increasingly aware of their exposure. Security-adjacent services, when delivered with discretion and competence, are among the most defensible offerings in the luxury service sector. This is not a trend driven by fear. It’s driven by awareness, and it’s not going away.
3. A Glut of Talent Is Coming. Position Accordingly.
As AI displaces white-collar workers and the service economy reshuffles, more talented people are going to enter the service market. Some will be overqualified and temporarily disoriented. Some will be genuinely excellent. All of them represent an opportunity—but only if you’re positioned to attract and associate with the best of them.
For service business leaders, this is a recruitment window. The talent pool is about to expand. The question is whether your culture, your brand, and your standards are compelling enough to attract people who have options.
For individual service professionals, this means the market will get more crowded. Differentiation will matter more than ever. The providers who understand what premium clients actually want — and deliver it consistently — will be even more distinct from those who don’t. Standing out in a glutted market isn’t about working harder. It’s about being better in ways that your clients can feel.
The Bottom Line
We are in the middle of a digital revolution that is reshaping who has leverage and who doesn’t. Companies built on exclusive information are already feeling the squeeze—a few weeks ago, a wave of legal SaaS businesses watched their value proposition deflate in real time when it became clear that a general-purpose AI could handle basic legal review. That’s not an isolated incident. It’s a preview.
The service professionals who will win this era are those who ride the major trends, serve clients who are growing in wealth and expectation, and deliver something that can’t be replicated by a server rack. If you’re building toward bespoke, high-trust, high-skill, in-person service for the clients who are ascending—you’re in the right place.
It’s a disruptive age. But disruption creates distance between those who adapt and those who don’t. Make sure you’re on the right side of that gap.