Quick.
What’s the chief quality of top
advisors to the affluent? Skill?
Ability? Style? It’s probably
not what you think.
Following a two-year
research-based “random walk”
around the financial advice
industry, “Advisor For
Life”
author Steve Gresham concludes
that the most successful
advisors share a single
distinguishing characteristic:
consistency.
“It’s the
exact same story that’s true of
success in every other
profession, including sports.
It’s not about ability. It’s
about the consistency of that
ability. It’s about the
consistency of the result,” says
One of the
industry’s most original
thinkers, Gresham in his new
book provides insight into the
relationship between advisors
and their millionaire clients.
Among the subjects he tackles:
What do millionaire households
expect from their advisors?
Which tools increase your
success at “closing” an affluent
client? What are the most
important strategies to capture
market share?
Gresham,
director of retail markets for
the $45 billion asset-management
division of The Phoenix
Companies, was a security
analyst at 19 and a registered
investment advisor at 21. Prior
to joining
It doesn’t
take more than a few minutes of
shop talk to understand that
On packaging: Most millionaire
investors, according to
On top of
that, he adds, there has not
been overwhelming acceptance of
full-service financial advice by
baby boomers. “That’s a big
deal,” he says. “A lot of these
people might just continue on in
that path. There’s a package
default out there if you don’t
want to make a decision. Most of
the industry advances will take
place in product creation for
this market — it’s already
happening.”
The bottom
line: Unless handled correctly,
packaged solutions represent
what
On risk
management: The conventional
wisdom is that millionaire
households expect returns. But
what happens when baby boomers
get older and begin to
experience problems, risks,
vulnerabilities?
“What happens when your
89-year-old mother needs care
for her growing Alzheimer’s
condition? What happens when
instead of your mother, it’s
your spouse?”
Going forward, financial
advisors must manage for risk.
“The basis
for marketing and managing a
practice will be your ability to
minimize and prevent risk. Risk
management replaces returns
management as a point of
differentiation of one financial
advisor over another,” says
To help
advisors stay competitive,
• Conduct a systematic audit of risks faced by each client. Identify at least three significant concerns, and create options.
• Do a timing evaluation. List the most important people in your client’s life — family, associates, friends — and project their ages and potential issues at the time of the client’s retirement. Identify risks and protective strategies.
• Create a case study for your client, reviewing solutions. Sort by problem or need, not product. Develop options and competitive alternatives.
• Show you’re smart. “Ironically, after all of this warm and fuzzy holistic view of the world, you will still be held to a standard that says you must be a person who can source interesting alpha-generating investment ideas from time to time. Show you’re smart and plugged in. Regardless of everything, if you can’t show people you’re smart, you’re toast.”
---
Stephen D. Gresham
Executive
Vice President, Director of
Retail Markets,
Headquarters:
His new book: Advisor for Life: Become The Indispensable Financial Advisor To Affluent Families.
Sound Bite: “The notion that the industry is now focused on distribution instead of accumulation would be very alarming to the average client. I’m not aware of any time when a client didn’t think this wasn’t about distribution. Accumulation is for one purpose: to take it out and spend it. It’s tragically sophomoric to refer to a shift in orientation.”

