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A roadmap to capitalize on your opportunities and address your threats.
Growing from the inside out
What opportunities (and threats) are hiding in your business?
I tend to be an optimist, so let’s start with the opportunities. If you are like many advisors, numerous opportunities exist within your current client relationships such as:
There are also likely threats to your firm’s profitability and revenue (beyond volatile markets), such as:
There is compelling data that should serve as a reminder and warning that retaining your client assets over the long term isn’t a given.
According to Pricemetrix’s 2020 study, "Women as the next wave of growth in U.S. wealth management," 70% of women leave their advisor a year after their spouse’s death. According to a Cerulli Associates report, only 13% of affluent investor’s children stay with their financial advisor.
Now that I have properly scared you, here are three actionable steps to help you capitalize on your opportunities and address your threats:
If you have all your client data in your CRM, this will be an easy exercise. Start with the youngest birthdate in the household, and group family members by generation.
Use this table as a reference:
Generation | Years born | Age as of 2022 |
---|---|---|
Millennial | 1981-1996 | 26-41 |
Gen X | 1980-1965 | 42-57 |
Boomer | 1964-1946 | 58-76 |
Silent | 1945-1928 | 77-90 |
Unless you are working with all ultra-high-net-worth clients, you can generally assume that the household members who identify as baby boomers and the silent generation are (or are close to) in the distribution phase of their lives. Assume that your millennial and Generation X clients are in the accumulation phase.
What percentage of your clients are in the distribution versus accumulation phases?
The higher the percentage in the distribution phase, the more you need to add assets to maintain your revenue. These are also your higher priority targets to focus on in the next step, when you systematically get to know who matters.
You should be able to figure out pretty quickly if you are breaking even, decreasing or growing in revenue based on your net new assets each year without the market’s help (or hindrance).
If you answered “no” to any of the other questions, you have identified an opportunity or threat in your business.
At this point you should have a shortlist of client households who may be the greatest opportunities or threats—those who produce the greatest revenue, but with whom you don’t have a relationship or even know who matters most to your clients. Start with these clients with the goal of understanding who matters to them.
Going forward, systematically get to know who matters to all of your clients. You can do this by adding it to your client review agendas if you aren’t already asking, “who matters most to you?”
The key is to not just ask the question, but to capture their answers in your CRM in a reportable way. Specifically, capture their names, relationship, and birthday or age, and of course anything else important they share. You will want this data in step three.
Once you know who matters there are infinite ways you can connect and serve those people (likely G2 and G3, your clients’ children and grandchildren). Build a scalable way to connect and start to serve who matters using the Ideal Client Persona Toolkit.
Use this article as a roadmap to grow from the inside out.
Stay tuned for a follow-up to this piece, where we explore the Gen X and millennial generations, and their financial perceptions and preferences, to help you best serve your clients today and in the future.