Atlantaâs newest RIA firm, MartinWright Advisory, launched Monday with seven employees and a clear mission: Bringing institutional-caliber investment management to complex familiesâand building an advisor-led ownership model designed to last.
The firmâs founders, Margaret Wright and Bradley Martin, are both in their 40s and are well-known in the cityâs wealth management circles. Between them, they previously managed more than $4.5 billion in cumulative client assets at Truist and Balentine, respectively. Now, theyâre betting their combined experience can anchor a new independent firmâone focused on deep customization, next-generation technology and clearly mapped advisor succession planning.
MartinWright will custody with Goldman Sachs Custody Solutions and operate under the Sanctuary Wealth platform, which acquired True Private Wealth while the firm was being structured. The RIA is jointly owned 50/50 by Wright and Martin, with no outside equity. âOur model is for us to sell this company to the advisors we hire over time,â says Martin.
The firmâs initial team includes Director of Investments Hugh Merkel, formerly of Mercerâs institutional consulting group. His mandate: bring âinstitutional-caliber asset managementâ to ultra-wealthy households. That means open architecture across public and private markets: Private equity and credit will be part of the mix, along with real estate and, occasionally, direct deals for clients approached with private opportunities.
âWeâre balance-sheet focused, not AUM focused,â Wright says. âYou have to understand the clientâs full balance sheet to advise properly.â The firm is focusing on families with $30 million or more in net worth, though there will be no strict account minimums for new clients.
MartinWrightâs technology infrastructure reflects the foundersâ push toward efficiency. The firm used AI-driven modeling to forecast budgets, design compensation plans and streamline HR operations. âStarting a company today is completely different than fifteen years ago,â Martin says. âWe can do far more with fewer bodies because the systems talk to each other from day one.â
The platform, built through Sanctuaryâs integrated tech stack, automates data across CRM, planning, and reporting systems. âIf you claim to be a next-gen firm, you have to embrace next-generation technology,â Wright says. âIf youâre not evolving, youâll get left behind.â
While technology and scale are part of the strategy, MartinWrightâs founders talk more about people than tech. âTurnover is one of the major pain points for wealthy families,â Wright says. âWe want to create an environment where advisors can become equity partners and grow their careers here.â
The founders are equally focused on the next generation of clientsâthose now inheriting responsibility for family wealth. âThat group is in their 30s, 40s, and 50s,â Martin says. âWe want to be intentional about how we serve them and engage their next chapter.â
The firm expects to reach about $800 million in AUM by the end of its first year, which should place it well beyond breakeven.

