Fee Compression is Great for Your Business

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The downward pressure on financial services fees is a major issue. The majority of my conversations with advisors over the past couple years turn to a discussion of the tension on fees being created by robo-advisors and other low-fee competitors. But fee compression is going to be great for your business. It is not something to fear and loathe, but will have a dramatically positive impact on your ability to succeed in the future.

Financial services firms have faced fee compression before. In 1975, regulations mandated that brokerage firms change from fixed to negotiated commissions, which ushered in the introduction of Charles Schwab and other discount brokers. Those in the industry may remember several publications pronouncing the “death of traditional stockbrokers.”

Traditional brokerage firms are still in business, and quite profitably at that.

Investment management firms faced their own “impending doom” with the creation and growth of index funds in the late 1970s. On top of that competitive force, mutual fund firms also had to contend with a growing wave of excessive-fee lawsuits beginning in the early 1980s and continuing into today. We have seen several periods during the past several decades when actively managed funds were said to be a relic of the past. Yet again, we have not seen a dramatic decline in the number of actively managed funds.

There is no reason to believe that fee compression faced by wealth advisors will put them out of business. Instead, advisors can learn from some of the most successful firms to have weathered those previous pricing pressures.

1. Re-focus your efforts on your target audience – Can you describe your target client(s) in 30 seconds or less? That’s the most important 30-second “pitch” you need to master. If you can’t identify for someone – COI, new employee, or partner – who your ideal client is, you have a serious problem. If you can describe your target client(s), when is the last time you reviewed that definition? Are there other target client groups that have developed in your firm over the years? Should they be there? When your industry is evolving that is the optimal time to re-focus your efforts.