Ideas for the “Bookends” of Your Advisory Business

Executive summary:

  • Just like a teacher tries to serve every child in their classroom, a financial advisor tries to meet the needs of each client
  • This becomes a little more challenging when considering the “bookends” of the advisory business—the smaller clients and the biggest ones
  • They may have vastly different needs, but all of them are likely to want to keep their tax burden to a minimum
  • We look at different strategies to meet those very different needs

As students across the country start to prepare for year-end exams, there are valuable lessons we can take from the classroom. One of the most important is that no two students learn the same way. Teachers face the challenge of creating a curriculum that caters to the entire class while ensuring that each student can reach their potential. But what about the students who fall outside the norm: the ones who may be slightly behind or those who are far ahead of their peers? How can teachers give them the attention they need without holding back the rest of the class?

When you think about it, financial advice is the same way. No two clients are alike. As financial advisors, you craft a strategy that generally addresses the broad needs of your clients. But you also can fine-tune your approach to meet each client’s unique goals, circumstances, and preferences.

This becomes more important when you consider the “bookends” of your advisory business. Just like in a classroom, you will have clients that may not have the same characteristics as the bulk of your business: those who don’t meet the account minimums, for example, and then those who far exceed them—the high net-worth clients who have complex needs and wants.

While your smallest and your biggest clients may have different wealth-management needs, they all typically share one preference: paying the lowest amount of taxes as possible. Taxes can significantly reduce long-term returns. For investors, minimizing this impact increases the likelihood of achieving their financial goals. For advisors, emphasizing tax-managed strategies can help set them apart from the competition. In investing, being tax-smart is simply smart. Given their different wealth levels, though, can you address your largest and your smallest clients’ tax management preference the same way? Like so many questions in finance and economics, I would argue the answer is: It depends.