Women are less
likely to take action until they feel nearly 100% confident
According to the Merrill Lynch
Women & Financial Wellness report released earlier this year, the No. 1
financial regret that women have is not investing more of their money.
A lack of
investment knowledge and lack of confidence were reported as the primary
barriers. The key word here is confidence. Women are less likely to take action
until they feel nearly 100% confident.
So, what can we as
advisers do to help instill confidence in our female clients? The answer is
quite simple: Invite them to the table.
Ask them what is
important to them in their financial lives.
Continually align
the conversation with their goals and objectives.
Even though there
are more and more advisers having these real conversations, there is still an
army of advisers holding "old school" meetings. Meetings where the
adviser proves expertise through the use of industry jargon with little regard
for who is sitting across the table.
In this instance, if
the adviser can check all the boxes for discussing ratios, derivatives, yields
and liquidity (as the client's eyes slowly glaze over), the adviser wins!
Lack of relevance
The husband may
walk away thinking he is brilliant, but the wife has silently sworn off
investing or even being part of the conversation because it is confusing and
most of all not relevant to their situation.
If this has
happened, we need to invite the wife back to the table and ask her what is
important to her? What does she care most about? What is she most concerned
about?
We need to change
the conversation to learn her perspective on the family's finances. Where does
her comfort start? Where does it end? And why?
The more we can
learn from our female clients and the more we tie investments back to them as
individuals and as families the more confidence we help to instill.
This is so
crucially important for women because 80% to 90% of women will be solely
responsible for running their own finances at some point in their life due to
divorce or widowhood, according to the National Center for Women and Retirement
Research.
The sooner we can
bring clarity to investing and help women engage in their own financial lives,
the better prepared they will be when a crisis arrives.
The irony is that
even though women have less confidence around investing, when they get it, they
are often better investors than men. Women set goals, they stick to a plan and
they don't tinker.
That in itself is
the foundational recipe for success and is often intuitive for women. So, my
advice for anyone feeling intimidated by the conversation is to say:
"Stop. Please explain how that fits into our goals and our plan."
Linking investments
back to the plan establishes purpose and relevance. This all leads to
confidence, which at the end of the day should be both ours and the client's
primary measure for success.
Kathryn Brown is
founder and principal of Morton Brown Family Wealth.
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