Grant Hicks, CIM
How do financial
advisors talk about performance?
I get it I was an advisor for over 20 years. You have clients coming in and
they want to know how their performance was in the last couple of years. You
start by giving them numbers, comparing what the markets did and because the
last 12 months look good after a big drop in 2021 then a recovery, you are
thinking this is going to be an easy conversation and they will leave happy,
right?
Are we on track?
Except when they turn to you and ask the second question, this is where the
conversation turns, the trust goes down and it all changes. They ask you "
are we on track?" Without any written plans, goals, or empirical evidence,
you say yes it's been a great year with a big smile. Then you go back to the
numbers and bombard them with logic. You keep talking performance and numbers
and talking and talking and they turn silent. Sound familiar?
What were they really asking you?
Are we going to reach
all of our goals with the money we have saved? What is the probability of
reaching all of our goals with our current planning? Except there is a big
problem. They don’t have clarity around all of their goals. They have an idea
of one goal retirement and are tracking one goal with one big total at the end
so it is easy to calculate. Yet how about their other goals? How about
traveling before and after retirement, which can be a big expense? How about
their children’s education. Are they on track to achieve that goal? How about
helping family members financially? How about their vacation homes or cottages,
and second homes or cottage plans and goals? The list goes on, yet you say
everything is going to be ok.
Accept that you have to change your conversation
I made this mistake. That is why I am writing to you as a #financialadvisor
advisor to get a deeper sense of clarity around all of their goals. All 3 or 4
or 5 or more of their goals, ALL of them. I remember having a performance
conversation with a client feeling confident before the meeting. Then they said
they want to do more travel in retirement. No problem I said you have some
surplus funds and you should be good. They said they are going on a cruise. I
said fantastic where are you going and for how long. They said 6 months around
the world. I turned white as my blood rushed from my face. My first thought
was, I am not sure they can afford this. How will this impact their retirement?
They could see the worry on my face as I knew I had to update their goals,
their plan for their future, and their estate. This was no simple goal. Yet
they were thinking about doing this for a long time. They discussed they wanted
to travel, but I never went deep enough. I assumed a trip here and there and
they would be fine. But this trip was going to cost a substantial amount of
time and money. I never went deep enough to ask them about ALL of their life
goals and dreams.
I started getting 6 goals from every client
This changes everything. Performance is important but must be in relation to
their goals. I struggled as an advisor to get goals from my ideal clients. Then
it hit me clear as day the conversation has to change. Now I coach financial
advisor's goals-based planning through practice management processes. Don’t get
me wrong, performance is critically important, but it is only one dimension of
the conversation. When a client goes to your competitor and has a deeper goals
conversation that also taps into the client's values, usually no amount of
performance is going to stop them from moving their accounts.
Ask this in your next meeting with a client
If I help you get solid performance and reach all of your 6 goals mapped out
with clarity and put it on paper and a plan, are you happy with me as an
advisor? The client usually answers yes. Now if I help you hit all of the
performance benchmarks, but we don’t quite reach all of your goals are you
happy with me as your advisor? The client usually answers no. So what is more
important, performance or performance in relation to your goals? They are both
critically important, that is why your conversations will dramatically improve
in your ideal clients' and prospects' eyes and not be one-dimensional and just
talking about performance.
Great questions to ask
Have your goals changed in the last three, or four or five years? Or during the
pandemic? Most clients would answer yes. Then open the conversation about their
future. Use the attached list to spark the conversation. What else would you
like to accomplish in your future from this list? Check off your own personal
goals as you are reading this article. How many goals do you have? Do you have
a plan to help you accomplish all of your goals? Emotionally engage your
clients and prospects with pictures of their goals. Then watch their body
language and see their confidence in you soar making it a great meeting beyond
just performance. Feel free to use and edit this list.
Goals-Based Planning Exercise
____ Lifestyle - Retire / slow down / part-time
____ Debts- Debt reduction-debt free
____ Education – Children / Self
____ Vehicles – Cars / Boat / RV / collector
____ Major purchase – Vacation property / Lifetime Trip
____ Travel -Vacation property / Trips / bucket list
____ Health care – Family members / personal health
____ Home – Reno’s / Upgrades / downsizing
____ Celebrations- Weddings / birthdays
____ Estate- legacy- family-wishes
____ Gifts- donations / charitable involvement
____ Volunteer – Philanthropic goals / legacy
____ Care for someone – elderly / family
____ Business – Investment / opportunity / sell business
____ Career – education / changes / courses
____ Memberships / Hobbies – golf or sports clubs / groups / collections
____ Wealth protection and wealth transfer -succession planning to family
____ Wealth enrichment – asset protection strategies
____ Other goals
________________________
“Everyone needs and deserves a comprehensive financial and investment plan.”
How about your goals for your practice in 2021?
Our Practice
management checklist or fee audit checklist
While each financial
advisor's practice may have a different approach, advisors need to understand
where their practice needs help, and will they get the right help for the right
part of their practice. What areas does your practice need help with? Get a
copy of our updated 21-page “Comprehensive Practice Management Strategies
checklist” by going to our website https://www.advisorpracticemanagement.com/about-us
or clicking here https://practicemanagement.getresponsepages.com/
Fee audit checklist for ideal prospects, click here https://feeaudit.getresponsepages.com/
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