3 Key Conversations to Have With Clients to Prove Your Financial Adviser Value


Samantha Lamas  |   29th Jan 2020 | 4 min read

Financial adviser value is evolving—are your clients up to speed on what it can entail?

  Advisers face many obstacles, but when we asked them what their biggest challenge was, we quickly found that many related to one overarching theme: financial adviser value. The graphic above shows that some of the top challenges for advisers include: showing their value compared with robo-advisers and peer advisers, improving their value by using the most efficient software, prioritizing their time well, and meeting their clients’ ever-shifting preferences. All these various challenges come back to the core principle of value and, specifically, demonstrating that value to clients. One reason advisers struggle to communicate this value could be the discrepancies between what investors actually value and what financial advisers think investors value. In our research, we found that these two groups’ perspectives don’t always align. Here, we discuss what contributes to this gap and how advisers can help bridge it.

What we can learn from the gaps 

For this research, we asked individual investors to rank a set of common adviser attributes—such as “Helps me reach my financial goals” and “Understands me and my unique needs”—in order of importance. We also gave the list to advisers and asked them to rank the attributes in the order they thought investors found most valuable. As we explained in a previous blog post, when we compared the average rankings of both groups, there were quite a few crucial disagreements. However, many of them can be mitigated through proper communication.

How to help clients understand the true value of your financial advice  

Because of these discrepancies, it’s important for investors and advisers to effectively communicate and ensure that they’re on the same page about the client’s goals. Here are three key topics advisers should broach with clients to help communicate their unique perspective and value.
  1. Demonstrate the importance of personalized goals-based planning. Implementing a goals-based strategy can increase a client’s wealth by more than 15%. This may come as no surprise to financial professionals, given the known benefits of personalized advice, but individual investors may have a different perspective. Our research found that although financial advisers think that personalisation is very important for their clients, individual investors ranked it much lower on their list. Given the effectiveness of personalized advice, advisers should not take for granted that investors are committed to a goals-based strategy. Rather, they can provide a high-level overview of a goals-based strategy’s effectiveness to help investors understand the impact it can have on their overall wealth.
  2. Introduce clients to the world of behavioral coaching. The modern adviser is now also a behavioral coach: Someone who helps their clients weather market volatility and stay on track with their financial plan. This service is both unique to in-person advisers and extremely effective at improving their clients’ performance. But unfortunately, it’s another attribute investors take for granted—in fact, they ranked it as the least valuable attribute. To help more investors understand the value of behavioral coaching, advisers can start introducing clients to the field of behavioral science. You can get started with the resources and exercises we created for advisers to use with clients and display the importance of behavioral finance in investing.
  3. De-emphasize maximizing returns. The role of an adviser has evolved substantially since the time when investors only went to advisers for stock tips or investment strategies. Some clients, though, may be stuck in the past. In our research, investors continued to rank “Helps me maximize returns” high on their list. To help clear up this misconception and demonstrate deeper value, advisers can provide examples where chasing returns can hurt an investor’s progress toward their goals. For example, a client that is three years from retirement should focus on maintaining their wealth, not taking on risk to increase return.

Showing the breadth of financial adviser services 

Our research points to one overall finding: Financial adviser value is currently misunderstood. The role of an adviser is no longer just to be an investment expert; it’s also to serve as a behavioral coach, financial counselor, budgeting master, and more. Advisers wear many hats, and the evidence suggests that investors are having trouble recognizing all the ways an adviser can help them with their finances. Having these conversations with clients may help.  
 

Download our full report to read more about our research and access our worksheet to help identify what your clients value in an adviser.

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