Practice Management TrendsettersMay 3, 2016


A simple yet critical process in getting fee ready

 

For financial advisors who are planning to switch their clients to a fee based platform or process, here is one strategy that will help you build a process for getting there faster. Build two practices. One practice called the ideal business practice or new practice, and one called the old practice or non-ideal clients. The ideal practice which has clients that are fee based and already are fully aware of your process, understand your value and are an ideal win-win client (they are happy with your revenue and services and they are happy to pay the fees for your services which are fully transparent). If you have no clients under this new business, then create the new business process and create your value promise. Under the non-ideal or old practice, you must have a plan also for managing them. As a coach, I spend more time with financial advisors on building plans for non-ideal clients ( old practice) than I do ideal clients.

Segment

A simple yet critical part of the process is to segment clients by recurring revenue. What is the ideal recurring revenue you want to generate on an ongoing basis from ideal clients?Once you create your ideal client plan, you can test it on clients and build your process of moving clients from your old business model to the new ideal business. List the clients you want to move into the new business and make a plan of how long it will take to get them to “buy in” to your new ideal business. This may include a discussion, paperwork and additional planning and document gathering. Now make a list of all clients in your old business, and go through which ones may fit your new business practice and which ones will stay as part of your old business practice.

Deliverables on the new ideal business

Make a list of deliverables for the new business including well defined planning checklists in the five key areas including: financial planning or retirement planning, tax planning, risk management and insurance planning, estate planning and investment management. Now that you have a list of deliverables, find the tangible and intangible value of each deliverable. This forms the basis of the new business process. More value delivered to your client. After you have quantified the value of all of your services, quantify what someone would be willing to pay for all of these services compared to the benefits and costs. Focus your value proposition on your new practice.

Deliverables on the old business

Now add up how much your deliverables are worth on the old business or non-ideal clients. You will find that some advice and planning you gave away for free. The bottom line is that you must have confidence that the work you do is valuable in order to expect other people to value you and your work. It’s business. Value is measured by money. Stop leaving this money on the table and under-serving your clients. It is not a percentage of assets, it is a dollar amount. How much is your advice worth? List the clients under the old business that will stay under the old business model.

By the end of this year, how many clients do you want on the new ideal practice and how many clients will stay on the old practice? What are the metrics for the new practice versus old practice in 12 months? We know the research by Pricemetrix suggests a potential lift in revenue over time (Source: Pricemetrix Insights, Transitioning to fee, Volume 6, August 2012 www.pricemetrix.com)

Make two client lists, new ideal practice, and old practice.

Now you have two business models, old practice and new practice. You may choose to run on two models for a period of time but eventually you will hit capacity issues and will be faced with the challenge of how many clients can I manage old practice and new practice. Start by writing out the lists and segmenting your clients based on annual recurring revenue and services provided. It will become clearer just by doing this simple exercise on how many new practice versus old practice clients there will be for you in the next year.

How do you answer the question “How much does it cost?”

When I first started in the financial services industry in 1989, I was given a manual and a video of how different commissions work. Back then I remember having this VHS video to help me understand compensation. I wish I kept it to see how much the world has changed. Imagine you are sitting with a new prospective client and they ask” how much does this cost” and you hand them a video and a manual to explain how much it costs. Understand that compensation is all about proper disclosure, but having a simplified answer that is easy to understand and remember is critical in the trust building process. Do you have a scripted answer? Is it easy to understand and remember? Do your clients understand and remember, or do they ask you again at progress update meetings how your fees work? Is it in dollar terms easily divisible into a monthly dollar cost? Or is it percentage and dollar terms, or only percentage terms? I cannot remember the last time I purchased a major item such as a home or car or anything that is a percentage, which does not include dollar terms. A common mistake advisors make is not having a clear scripted answer to the question” how much does it cost? “ . To test this point even further, many advisor do not record conversations they have with clients. If you want to have better conversations, record them with the client’s permission. Then let a trusted colleague or coach help you by giving feedback. You cannot learn to play better golf by watching it. You must practice it.

The importance of body language when going fee based or fee ready

With regulatory change, comes industry change. With industry change comes consumer change. Will consumers change when they fully understand the total costs of financial advice? We know that not all consumers do not fully understand their total cost of advice. Once consumers change, will they want more? Will they want something different? What does their body language tell you when you discuss transparency and fees? Their body language may give you the answers. In other countries such as Australia, South Africa, The United Kingdom and the United States, something different may mean switching clients into a fee based account. A new type of account that means change. Simply offering the alternative and letting the consumer decide is the first mistake. It comes down to trust with your existing and future clients. Trust is composed of two key components: authenticity - do you say what you mean - and reliability - do you mean what you say? A common mistake I pick up in meetings with advisors about fee based accounts is their body language. It is also the body language of the client.

Body language is crucial in our discussions with clients because it tells us what they think about us and our idea of going fee based. According to Dr. Nick Morgan (www.publicwords.com) who is one of America’s top communication theorists and coaches “People decode emotions primarily through gesture and tone of voice. The emotional component represents a separate, nonverbal conversation that parallels the verbal one, and typically happens a split second before.” According to Dr. Morgan, “When people communicate topics of great importance to them, they gesture what they intend a split second before the word comes out. We use surprisingly few words, and convey the emotional colors and tones of the conversation mostly through gesture. So you want to look at the language of the gesture to see what’s really important. Body language tells us what we think about other people. People decode emotions primarily through gesture and tone of voice. The emotional component represents a separate, nonverbal conversation that goes on parallel to the verbal one, and typically a split second before the verbal one.”

Record your conversations

We are asking our clients to trust us with this new program. We all have smartphones with video recorders. I encourage you to record your next fee ready discussion with clients (with their permission of course) and watch the body language of yourself and your clients. Having a good script is important, but equally important is body language. Are you conveying the message in a nonverbal way with your body? Go to Dr. Morgan’s website if you want to gain clarity in your body language. As Dr. Morgan suggests “that conversation will make or break you as a communicator. Again, you may be entirely unaware of it, but it may confirm you as the top dog, sabotage your authority, connect you with your mate for life, get you in a fist fight (or out of one), win you a game, or lose one, blow your chances at getting a raise, get you the big sale, lose you the prize, or win it — and so on, through most of the big moments in life. That’s how important body language is. That understanding is what you want to apply to reading your clients and presenting yourself”. If your clients are uncomfortable with change, maybe it’s time to change your body language?

Practice your conversations 

By practice, I mean by recording your conversations, playing them back then improving your conversation by having a clear, simple and compelling statement to answer the question” how much does it cost?”. Listening to you answer the question” how much does it cost, will help you become a better advisor. It will also help your clients see the trust and conviction when you have a simple, yet compelling answer to a very common question. I am not going to give you an answer here, because that is unique to each practice. Each practice may have different company requirements, cost structures, products and services. However, each practice must have a clear and simple, yet compelling answer. There is lots of simple recording software on your smartphone that you can use to record conversations. You can audio record your discussions, but body language is also important. For audio recording, one app I found easy to use is Dragon Dictation by Nuance software www.nuance.com. With your smartphone, there are several options. To implement this idea, record three meetings with clients and prospects, then play it back and listen to your answers. Can you improve your answers and build more trust? What do you say when you talk about fees? If clients are 100% convinced and confident of your answer, then they should be handing over dozens of referrals to you. Remember my earlier question. What is the ideal recurring revenue you want to generate on an ongoing basis from ideal clients?

One final question. Do you have ideal clients who works with you, give a few of their key contacts in their smartphone for you to talk to? That is the ultimate proof that they are confident of the value you bring to the table when you talk to them.

 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 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 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.


Grant Hicks
Advisor Practice Management