July 23, 2018
The future-ready financial advisor
“In the struggle for survival, the fittest win out at the expense of their rivals because they succeed in adapting themselves best to their environment". ~ Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin would love financial advisors today. In October 1838 Charles Darwin thought of a way in which one species could change into another. He noticed that individual members of a species vary. Furthermore, all animals are competing with each other to survive. If the environment changed in some way, say if a new, faster predator appeared then any herbivores that could run slightly faster than other members of its species would be more likely to survive and reproduce. Any herbivores that ran slightly slower than most would be more likely to be eaten. Slowly a new, faster herbivore would evolve. This was later called the survival of the fittest. (http://www.localhistories.org/darwin.html)
Industry disruption is constant In the current world of financial advisors there is a storm of change. The three major changes Charles Darwin would observe is regulatory, technology and business models. Not only technology changes but major regulatory change is forcing the biggest change we have ever seen in the financial advising business; how advisor business models are changing and evolving. Being on the road and seeing different advisors in different locations I see the changes first hand. Let me explain my observations.
What does a Future ready Financial Advisor look like? Financial advisors more than ever are adapting to change and adjusting their businesses. To be prepared let’s give an example of what a future-ready financial advisor looks like.
First off, picture what this advisor's practice will look like in five years. From a technology point of view, they will understand what robo advising can do for small clients and embrace robo advising by having their own account to see what their competition delivers. Most advisors I talk to don't see them as a threat but a possible opportunity. They will have a technology platform that engages clients and they will have a better understanding of social media to service clients, not to market to clients. This will be a by-product, not a focus. The future-ready advisor will not be ignorant to social media because it is here to stay.
A future-ready advisor will have a clearly documented value promise converting all aspects of comprehensive planning including: tax, estate, risk management, insurance and investment planning. They will have it in writing so clients can answer three simple yet critical questions. What do I get, what does it cost, and how will you keep me on track? They will be so confident in their script that they would not be afraid to present it on the ABC.com network show "Shark Tank". Future-ready advisors fees are totally transparent and their pricing model will align interest with their most profitable clients, creating what Steven Covey would clearly recognize as a win-win scenario. (The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change by Stephen R. Covey Simon & Schuster; Anniversary edition. November 19, 2013)
Lifestyle is critical to future success. They will also be future ready by taking at least 6 to 8 weeks off per year so they can create their ideal lifestyle for themselves. As more than financial advisors, also real-life financial coaches, they must lead by example and make sure they are living a balanced life and not be working past capacity, as so many advisors tend to do. They have clearly figured out the three keys to success are number of profitable clients, annual revenue from profitable clients and number of weeks off per year.
80% of time with ideal clients and ideal prospects. Future-ready advisors will spend 80 percent or more of their time finding or working with profitable clients. They realize that taking on non-ideal clients only eats into their lifestyle and is not profitable in the long run, even if it means referring them to another advisor. Finally, future-ready financial advisors have clarity around their future, their lifestyle and ultimately their business value. Future-ready advisors run a very valuable business and know what it is worth and continue to find ways to build equity in their business. They will have teams that they work with to service their clients. Comprehensive teams including tax estate risk insurance and wealth management strategic partners. Their pricing model will be innovative and not old school. The client experience with the advisor of the future will be consistent and comprehensive. Advisors of the future will spend their work time on their working passions, which is spending time with profitable clients and building processes to improve their ideal client experience and outcomes. They will be more passionate than average advisors.
Future-Ready Financial Advisors focus on the Five T’s Technology, transparency, time off, total revenue per client and transferable value.
Are you ready for the future? How can you be an advisor of the future and get ahead of regulatory changes, technology changes and have a business model of the future? Ask Charles Darwin about the strongest advisors in our business today. If they do not adapt to change, we know where they will end up.
Finally, if you have not heard about the singularity and the effect of change in the future, check it out here. https://su.org/ . It may be the single biggest breakthrough that will change lives.
Future Ready Financial Advisor Checklist
Technology and robo-advisors Regulatory, Transparency and value promise to articulate fees and what clients receive Business model of future. Less clients more value per client. Investment Management and processes Collaborative approach and less principal dependency Practice Management Benchmarking and client feedback New ideal client acquisition with annual client segmentation Key client attrition and an ideal client experience process with 10+ touches per year For a copy of our guide "Future Ready Financial Advisor" and our practice management checklist go to http://www.advisorpracticemanagement.com/resources or http://futurereadyfinancialadvisor.subscribemenow.com/
For more practice management strategies check out my latest book or get a FREE 50-page preview and practice management checklist http://freebookpreview.getresponsepages.com/
If you want to learn better scripts and would like to have a community of Ideal Clients, check out a complete online coaching program developed by Bill Bachrach by clicking here http://www.youradvisorroadmap.com/apm/
If you would like more information about financial advisor workshops or want to build a better practice, email us at grant@ghicks.com for a complimentary discussion on how to build a better practice, with no obligation at all, or you can click the link if you want to talk for 30 minutes in the next month https://my.timetrade.com/book/JMTNJ or email me for our “Coaching Elite advisors” guide.
Advisor Practice Management’s goal is
“ Helping Financial Advisors take action, to create 100 quality financial plans for their clients”. My mission if you choose to accept it is “ To help advisors to create 1 million quality financial plans for people”. Ask your clients and prospects this question " What does a quality financial plan mean to you? Let me know if I can help you grow your practice.
Let’s work on your business. Start by emailing us. Why not?
Enthusiastically yours,
Grant Hicks, CIM, National Director of Practice Management Advisor Practice Management www.advisorpracticemanagement.com
909-17th Ave SW, 4th Floor Calgary, Alberta T2T 0A4 Tel 587 390 3148 Cell 403 970 8895 Email grant@ghicks.com
PS Where do you want to be in 3 years?
STATEMENT OF CONFIDENTIALITY The information contained in this email message and any attachments may be confidential and is intended for the use of the addressee(s) only. If you are not an intended recipient, please: (1) notify me immediately by replying to this message; (2) do not use, disseminate, distribute or reproduce any part of the message or any attachment; and (3) destroy all copies of this message and any attachments.
|