Independent Thinking Crucial for Advisors

Beverly FlaxingtonAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Beverly Flaxington is a practice management consultant. She answers questions from advisors facing human resource issues. To submit yours, email us here.

Dear Readers,

For this week’s column, in the wake of the holiday celebrating our country’s independence, I’ll share some independent thinking for advisors to implement, whether it be with their teams, in their practice or with their clients. I’ll keep it brief in the hopes you will find one or two things that resonate.

Standing out in a crowded market is imperative, and that can only happen when you are doing things others are not doing.

External Client Focused:

  1. Have a focus. To market and grow most effectively, a team or firm must know who they are talking to, what they are talking about, and what makes them different from others. An ideal client can’t just be “retirees” — the focus has to be specific enough to be meaningful. I was fortunate enough to speak at the Dentists Advisors’ client conference to their dentist clients a week ago, and it reminded me how important it is to be clear in who you serve and what you offer them.

I won’t breach their confidentiality, but the advisors who attended this conference have created a program that takes into account many different things that are meaningful and important to dentists. Having a niche focus helps with your branding and even roles and responsibilities on the team. From there, knowing what your offering is, and what it is designed around (your niche client) is key. Don’t just talk about what you do and how, talk about why it matters.

2. Tell stories. In all of the years I have been doing this work, I have been continually surprised at how many learning opportunities we offer from which advisors (and others) walk away realizing the high impact of storytelling. Stories can be simple — the best ones should be under a minute in duration.

I find advisors often underestimate the power of what they do. It’s just everyday normal for them, so they don’t realize the life-changing impact they have. Stories help to remind; they help to re-tell and re-sell with clients; and they give clients and team members a way to talk about what the firm does in everyday and compelling language. Share stories widely, and keep telling them.