Grant Hicks, CIM
Who is not your ideal
client?
Every financial advisor is looking for ideal clients. yet only 25% of advisors
have a clear definition of who an ideal client is. ( The Future of Practice
Management, an inaugural study by the FPA Research and Practice Institute a
program of the Financial Planning Association® (FPA®) -December 2013.) That
means that 75% of financial advisors don't know who their ideal client is and
100% of them don't know who their ideal client is not.
Criteria for non-ideal clients
Elite advisors know what their time is worth and who they clearly want to spend
time with. Depending on the level of your practice understanding the ideal
revenue you want to get from a client becomes challenging, especially when you
do not have a clear definition of an ideal client. This can become a long list.
I remember when we celebrated as a team when one of our non-ideal clients left.
Dealing with people that are frustrating time consuming and not enjoyable is
obvious. You and your team need to know who your non-ideal clients are. But
what is not obvious is what clients don't want. People that don't want a
comprehensive financial plan people that don't share all of their information
with you, people that always talk about people that would never refer you or
introduce you? People that don't deal with other professionals and pay their
fees such as accountants lawyers mortgage brokers etc. or people that treat you
like a transaction when you're treating them like an ideal client. You provide
more and they want less.
Do you want to sit in first-class or coach?
Let's face it everybody wants to sit in first class but not everybody wants to
pay for it. A lot of your clients don’t know the difference between sitting in
first class in your business or coach. That’s because most advisors treat all
clients the same, yet some are paying first class and getting coach service.
You only need two service levels, ideal and non-ideal.
Non-ideal client criteria include:
Taking on too much risk and not following your advice
Unrealistic performance or planning expectations and is only performance driven
Not sharing all of their financial information in all seven areas including
tax, investment, estate, risk, insurance, debts, and cash flow
Has more than one financial advisor or insurance agent and deals with several
banks
Has a lot of wealth and has never consolidated any of it, and does not trust
one person with it
Has a comprehensive plan that covers all seven areas and has not implemented it
Meets their financial advisor without their spouse
Is not goal-oriented and not coachable
Sees money management as a commodity and thinks it should always cost less,
focuses on fees
Disrespectful to team members and disrupts your team
Is not a delegator, but fools you to think they are a delegator and
consolidator
Does not want coordinated meeting with other professionals
Share this list in your next team meeting to see if your team can help identify
non-ideal clients. Stop spending time with wealthy people who are not ideal,
will never be ideal, and treat you like a transactional advisor, not an ideal
advisor! Time is your most valuable asset, treat it carefully. I wish when I
started out someone guided me to identify ideal clients and non-ideal clients,
to save me a lot of time!
What to do about non-ideal clients?
There is no easy solution for non-ideal clients, except that the amount of time
you will save by not working with them anymore. Depending on the firm you are
with, or if you are independent, there are several options such as selling or
transferring to other financial advisors. This is what I call the ideal
capacity process. It takes time, planning, and money to build and implement
this process. This is the number one practice management challenge in the financial
industry!
Where do I start?
I would recommend a few simple things. First, segment your clients properly
between ideal and non-ideal. Second, add up the potential time you will save in
not working with non-ideal clients, such as meetings, updating plans, putting
advice to paper, compliance, communications, and more. This is an easy way to
find 100+ hours in your business this year. Then use that time saved for
yourself, your family, or acquiring ideal clients. This will be life-changing
for you. Now go and spend more time with the ideal people in first class and
see what happens!
How about your goals for your practice in 2021? Practice management
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 comprehensive practice management checklist by
going to our website https://www.advisorpracticemanagement.com/about-us or
clicking here https://practicemanagement.getresponsepages.com/
Our Fee audit checklist for ideal prospects, click here https://feeaudit.getresponsepages.com/
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