The Advisory Professions Best Web Sites

Bob Veres

Bart Wisniowski, founder and CEO of Advisor Websites in the Canadian city of Vancouver, estimates that his firm has created more than two thousand websites for advisory firms all over the U.S. and Canada. He has the best seat in the house to watch the rapidly evolving state-of-the-art in website design and feature sets in this age of social media, video blogs and smartphones. He and his staff are constantly talking with advisors about what they want and how they want to present themselves – learning and teaching and adding bells and whistles as the profession evolves.

"We're launching websites literally every day," Wisniowski says. "There are always new developments, and we're always running into cool stuff."

In a recent interview, Wisniowski not only talked about the latest developments and trends that he's seeing; he also identified some of the advisory profession's most interesting and creative websites – which can be seen, with commentary, at the end of this article.

Creating a firm's website, Wisniowski says, is like creating a financial plan: It starts with an assessment of goals and objectives. "Are you primarily reaching out to your existing clients?" he says. "Or are you creating an environment that will attract prospects and acquire new clients? Are you active in social media? Are you blogging? In most cases," Wisniowski adds, "there's a combination of these things, but one or two of them is the main focus."

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At the most basic level, Wisniowski recommends that advisors give their website a visual upgrade. The online experience is changing so rapidly that websites created five years ago tend to look antediluvian, stodgy and out-of-touch. "Too often, we see the banner that is the same banner on everybody else's website, with stock photography of a couple holding hands," Wisniowski says. "In the financial services world, there is a definite overuse of stock photography."

This becomes most visible if there is a disconnect between the image and the view out the office window. "If you do business in New Mexico, you should really have New Mexico landscapes and not ocean views on your website," says Wisniowski. "A lot of advisors are still hesitant about pulling the trigger on getting professional headshots and photography, but it makes a huge difference in how professional you appear to a would-be client who is checking you out."

Usability is another issue. Wisniowski says there are definite best practices when it comes to the way your navigation is laid out – although, as we'll see in the actual examples, there is also a lot of variation. He recommends having clear calls to action, big buttons to navigate by – and making the site easy to scan even without your reading glasses. "One of the biggest issues that we see with some of the older websites out there is a small gray font," says Wisniowski. "A lot of the target audience for advisors is older people, and if you are making them squint on your website, they aren't going to stick around. Use large easy-to-read fonts."

Wisniowski also thinks that most advisor websites are visually unfriendly simply because the site is trying to say too much all at once. "Having too much content on your home page makes it cluttered, unusable and really frustrating for somebody to navigate," he says. "A lot of time, you could cut the content in half, and then in half again, and it becomes much friendlier and more inviting." The pruned content doesn't go away; it is moved to back pages, behind the navigation buttons giving access to "blogs," or "about us." Rather than putting an entire blog post on your front page, your site can feature the blog's heading and the first sentence or two. If people want to read more, they can click to a later page.

Mobile functionality

Mobile compatibility has come to the fore no matter what your goal or how proficient you are technologically. "One of the most important things we're emphasizing these days is compatibility with mobile devices," says Wisniowski. "The majority of existing websites that we see are not mobile-friendly – and a lot of advisors don't seem to realize how easy it is to make a website look good on the Android, Windows 8 and iPhone devices that their clients are using. You can make any website mobile-friendly."

Why is it so important to have your website look good on somebody's phone? Wisniowski points to recent research by Google; it found that by the end of next year, more people will be navigating websites through mobile devices and tablets than through traditional desktops.

"People are always on the go," he says. "In our experience, most people who go to an advisor's website are looking for one of three things. They either want to give that person a call, send them an email or they're looking for the map to their office. So," Wisniowski concludes, "you want to make those things very evident. Ideally, with a push of one’s thumb, a prospective client can click on your phone number and it starts dialing your phone. Or they can click on the map, and it starts the navigation app on your mobile device. Or they can send you a quick email with the touch of the thumb."

Unfortunately, most websites – even commercially-developed sites for larger firms – require the user to zoom out and then pinch in to navigate the site. The difference, of course, is the screen size. "If you are sitting in front of your computer, you have about 15 inches worth of real estate to put a lot of pretty pictures and information and calls to action on it," says Wisniowski. "But when you go to a three-inch screen on your mobile device, you really are limited in what you can put on there."

So how do you make your site mobile-friendly? "Most websites have a pretty banner, a really long navigation bar up top, and the contacts on the right side," Wisniowski points out. "When you optimize for mobile devices, you're stripping out a lot of that graphic content, because that's not what the end users are looking for. You're making the phone number a button they can click off their phone. You put in an email launcher where they can start typing in an email. All the content and information is the same – except it's much less cluttered and easier to get to."

Advisor Websites makes this happen automatically for its clients; you click a box to make your new website mobile-friendly. When the box is checked, whenever somebody accesses it from their phone, the device automatically detects the nature of the device and knows that it should display the mobile version of the website. There is no additional cost. "Making the website mobile, from a technical standpoint, is very straightforward," says Wisniowski.

A site to meet your firm’s goals

Once the look-and-feel and mobile display issues are off the table, Wisniowski’s website consultation will turn to the advisory firm's goals. Will your website be used primarily to communicate with existing clients? Many Advisor Websites clients now have a client portal integrated into their websites. "If you're using Junxure ClientView, then why not have a client login button on the front page of the website," Wisniowski proposes. That button redirects clients to their client portal, where you've posted performance statements and the latest run of their financial plan – plus a 'to-do' list that they can check off as tasks are completed by you or the client. "Your clients are not likely to remember a cumbersome way to access your portal, such as URL with text like “clientviewlife/login/” – but they do remember that they deal with your firm," Wisniowski adds. "It's much easier to link through your website."

If, on the other hand, your website is primarily used as a brochure to attract prospects, you might insert a feature that Wisniowski says is becoming increasingly popular with advisory firms: event registration. "Let's say you target doctors and dentists, and schedule a seminar for them," he proposes. In days gone by, you would have used something called the U.S. Postal Service to out invitations, and your assistant would pick up the rotary phone to call them up and ask if they were going to attend.

Now, instead, prospects can register for the seminar right there on your website, reducing your administrative costs and making it easy to give updates. If the venue changes, you can easily update the website and send a reminder by email, rather than reprinting, re-mailing and making a lot of phone calls.

You can even automate some of the followup. "Some advisors have us set it up in such a way that a day before the event, their website sends out a reminder," says Wisniowski. All of this he adds by copying and pasting existing code, which embeds nicely on a modern website.

If you're focused on attracting new clients and using your website as a resource for prospects, then you will also be interested in adding calculator tools that prospects can use. Advisor Websites provides 50 of these free-of-charge, mainly because advisory firms have been asking for them. "Some consumers like to do their own projections," says Wisniowski. "Or after they've met with the advisor, they like to verify some of that information."

These calculators are fairly new, and represent the newest feature of Advisor Websites' service, so Wisniowski is not yet sure how effective they will be. "My own suspicion," he says, "is that once the relationship is established, most clients will trust the advisor to do the math."