RIA firms need to make concerted efforts to
find next-gen talent, such as setting up internships and building awareness of
their firms
Apr 8, 2019 @ 9:06 am
By Kate Healy
The talent shortage is
one of the biggest challenges our industry is currently facing, so it's no
surprise that finding and recruiting the right talent were top of mind for
attendees at TD Ameritrade Institutional's annual
adviser conference, National LINC, this year.
One of the speakers this year, Kelly Bradley,
really struck a chord with advisers as her story is a great example of how
connecting early can benefit adviser firms and students.
Two years ago, Kelly attended
her first National LINC as one of the several dozen financial planning students
we sponsor to attend LINC each year. While using the opportunity to network,
she met an adviser from her area, Marjorie Wentz of Trinity Wealth Management,
and inquired about internships.
While the firm didn't currently have an
internship program, Marjorie knew it would be a good opportunity, yet wasn't
sure how they would pay for the internship.
During a session at this year's conference,
Marjorie said, "Every time we've wanted to hire someone, we figure out
what is the increase in assets we need to break even with this hire. We justify
it by needing to bring in $4 million. We have $120 million under management, so
if we can't bring that in, then shame on us."
Trinity got much more than its money's worth.
Kelly was not only an enthusiastic and driven worker, but she was able to fill
in for the firm's operations manager, who left unexpectedly shortly after Kelly
started. Kelly rearranged her class schedule so that she could work two full
days a week, showing the job was a priority for her and allowing her to be a
predictable presence within the office.
Hearing Kelly speak and learning how she has
progressed in her career since that conference two years ago was inspiring and
gratifying. She represents the future, not just of our industry, but of how we
need to think about recruiting and hiring.
For the last 10 years, TD Ameritrade
Institutional has hosted financial planning students and their program
directors at National LINC to give them the opportunity to be immersed in the
RIA industry for several days. This year, 63 students and 30 university program
directors attended the conference. It's one of the largest groups of students
we've had, and they made a significant impression on the attending advisers.
What was happening between scheduled events
was what was most exciting at this year's conference.
Several of the students were interviewed for
internships or jobs, and two got offers. One adviser bought lunch for a group
of students and held an informal roundtable so everyone could ask questions and
learn more about each other.
"Our students had an amazing time and
were enriched by the conference," said Craig Lemoine, director of
financial planning at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. "They
made professional connections, learned from speakers, and built a strong cohort
with the other universities present. It was an awesome week."
This conference gives students the opportunity
to learn more about the advantages of a career as a RIA. But the opportunity
for advisers to connect with the workforce of tomorrow is even more valuable.
Advisers need to start early. College
financial planning programs provide a great pipeline, but they don't yet have
enough students graduating to fill the talent gap. Creating internship programs
allows firms to begin building a talent pipeline, as well as to build awareness
of their firms, so that when students are choosing between offers — because
they get multiple offers — their RIA firm stand out.
Figuring out an internship schedule that works
for both sides and keeping in touch as students finish their education can be
competitive advantages in today's battle for top talent. Firms need a strategic
plan that anticipates growth and fills the gap before capacity. This allows
time for recruitment, onboarding and development.
The talent shortage is real. But making a
concerted effort to find and develop next-gen talent will help RIA firms win.
Kate Healy is
managing director of Generation Next at TD Ameritrade Institutional and an
advocate for the rising generation of financial planners.
https://www.investmentnews.com/article/20190408/BLOG09/190409946/hiring-young-advisers-you-cant-start-too-early?NLID=daily&NL_issueDate=20190409&utm_source=Daily-20190409&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=investmentnews&utm_visit=696981&itx[email]=e06b4e645e2af5a8cdf41fd61c641308af802c6a87fcccd9edb043e1408493a3%40investmentnews
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