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by Christine Umpa Filed Under: Client Service for Financial Advisors, Trusted Advisor Nation
Mark Little emphasizes the importance for financial advisors of not merely meeting, but consistently exceeding, the expectations of their affluent clients. He recommends starting by addressing and eliminating any practices that might annoy clients, guided by his list of 37 common irritants. Mark advocates for meticulously documenting all client interactions to ensure they enhance convenience and satisfaction, ultimately elevating the client experience.
advisors that coordinate the finances for
individuals and families.
What the goal should be is to consistently exceed
your clients expectations. So.
Ah, so the goal is what? Consistently meet client expectations?
No, to consistently exceed client expectations.
And I actually have a lot of training on this. The point
I wanted to get with on this video is,
the first question is, where do I start?
So let’s say you’re a financial advisor. You’ve made
a decision that you’re going to offer comprehensive financial
services to highly affluent clients. Okay, great.
The goal is to consistently exceed the expectations
of those affluent clients. Do you start
just by knocking their socks off?
What are we supposed to do to do that? Okay. There’s quite a
bit of training to this. It’s a process, and I’m happy
to share it all with you. But let me start with where you
begin. You don’t begin by knocking their socks off.
You begin by fixing things that
unintentionally annoy them.
So I’ve done the work for you. I’ve gone through lots
of research for affluent clients,
and I’ve come up with a piece of content called 37
easily fixable things that annoy affluent clients.
And I’ll put a link to it in the
description below. There are 37 common financial
advisor practices that successful affluent
clients just absolutely hate. But they may never tell you
that they hate it. That’s the problem. But what’s
happening is because you’re doing things that
might annoy them. It’s kind of like a bank account.
So you hire someone in
your professional life, an accountant, a lawyer, or something like that,
a professional in your life, and you
assume they have above average technical competence.
So you give them a little slack. They do something that annoys
you. Okay. They put it in the client’s bank account.
I can live with that. Okay. It’s annoying, but I can live with that.
Because they’re above average technical competence. Then they do
something else annoying, and then something else annoying. And before you
know it, at some point, there is a line. There is a line over
which you step where you’ve done a cumulative
effect of enough things that irritate the client.
Well, now, all of a sudden, they are open to
talking to other professionals, and they may take their business elsewhere.
So I recommend starting by assessing
all the procedures that you’ve currently got in
place with your clients. Now,
when I say procedure, I mean process.
Now, am I saying for you to review all your documented processes
that affect clients? Yes,
but I’m not expecting that all your processes
right now, at the moment, are documented.
Now that is something that we do recommend. As a matter of fact,
the best way to assure that
you have a consistent process that knocks your client’s
socks off is to document every process that touches
a client. But for right now, just make a list.
Because if there are things that you do routinely for your clients that
are not documented, but you do things a certain way
over and over, let’s call that a process
or a procedure at the moment, and just make a list of everything you can
think of. It could be we
send out a client meeting,
email confirmation, or it’s that
the day before a meeting, my assistant calls and leaves a voicemail
on the client’s mobile device, just reminding
them of the date and time and location of the meeting and so forth.
Those are all processes. So make a list of all that kind of thing.
It could be reports that you and your office
prepare for clients. When they come into your office for a client progress meeting,
you may have developed certain reports that you think
the client loves, and so write down
all of those reports. These are part of your process for serving
clients. I’m saying literally anything that a client
either touches or consumes, you need to put it
on the list as a process so that you can assess it.
And once you’ve got your list, then I want you to go consume
this thing that I’ve created called the 37 easily fixable things that
annoy affluent clients. Now, it’s a recording.
Literally what I did was I went through research.
There are quite a few research studies where they’ve
gone out and they’ve asked affluent or highly
affluent people, tell us what it is that
annoys you the most about your financial advisor. I mean, these surveys
do exist, or they go out and they ask successful
affluent people, is there anything your financial advisor
does that really grates on you, that annoys you?
And so I went through a lot of research
on that sort of thing, and I
came up with what you’re going to hear. It’s going to be 37
common practices that financial advisors do
that, lo and behold, the clients dislike.
And so you can go listen to that,
or I’ve got the link below, or you can download the
transcript. So you can either read it or listen to it.
But what I want you to do, as you’re going through it, I want you
to assess your current procedures and
see if there’s anything that you’re doing that you could adjust
slightly. And even if it’s not
something that the client dislikes, can you flip it and make it
something that impresses the client? So the goal is not just
a low bar. It’s not that we’re just trying to avoid doing
things that irritate our clients. No. As you’re going
through this, things will start to occur to you. And I’m going
to give you some ideas here in a minute of how to think of this.
But you’re going to get some ideas of ways that
maybe it’s some neutral procedure, that you think the client either
appreciates it or they could care less. But it’s the way you have done
things. But you start to think of it in terms of what could I
do to change our procedures to where the clients
are actually impressed?
And so that’s the goal. Now, I did notice a
few things that ran like golden threads through
this research about things that annoy clients.
And this is something that I
figured out, that this is something in the client’s mind.
It’s a perspective that the client has that
you probably know about or you’ve thought about it,
but I’m asking you for this project to put it foremost in your mind,
and here it is. So when a client hires a financial
advisor, it may not be said out loud,
but what the client is secretly hoping is
that somehow, some way, you’re going to
make their life easier.
They’re thinking in their head,
I don’t know how, but in some magical way, I’m hoping
that this advisor and the team are
going to make things more convenient for me. So whatever I’m currently
doing with my financial affairs, it’s going to be easier,
or it’s going to be more convenient because I’ve hired you.
All right? So I
want you to think about the fact that these clients of yours,
they have things in life that they care about
more than they care about you. And believe it
or not, there are things in their life that they care about more than money.
And it’s a pretty short list.
What is it for you? People tend to care about their family,
their friends. People tend to care about their fitness
and their health. They tend to care about their faith. So there are,
I think we can all agree there are things in life that are more important
than money. And what they’re hoping is in
this relationship with you, that of the hours
that they invest each week devoted to those
things that matter more to them than money, they’re secretly
hoping that whatever time they’re spending on those important
things, that because they’ve hired you, you’re going
to create time for them. To do more of that.
All right, so a relationship with an advisor
like you is going to end up being one of two things. It’s either going
to create time for clients to go do other
things that matter more to them, or it’s going to take away
from that time. And you
want to create a reputation in every
process, every procedure. Anytime you touch a client, and whether
it’s you or your assistant or anybody on your team interacting
with your client, you want the reputation to be growing
that, oh, my gosh, you need to work with this advisor.
My advisor and their team make my life easier. They make my life
so convenient. They create time for me to
go do things that really matter the most to me in life.
So I want you to go through your list of procedures with that
in mind, and I’ll give you an example of how this came to my
attention in my own office. So I’ll
tell you candidly what I encountered when
I did this same exercise I’m asking you to do.
And this goes back a few years, but you’ll catch on to
what the project is when I go through this.
So I met with an older client,
and he asked me a question which made me want to
go back and really assess all of our internal processes when
it came to confirming meetings
in my office. So here’s the situation.
This is a few years ago, we had just purchased a new
online software service where clients
could very easily drag files
on their computer into a folder
at our firm, and it would just magically
transfer documents that we need from them
over to our file. Simple and easy.
Once they upload all this stuff to the cloud, they’re done.
I’ve got access to what I need now to back it up a
little bit. The way our office recommends
that you do things is that when
a client has some information in their head, or they’ve got
some documents that only they possess, and you need access
in order to do your job, to either information or documents
that the client has possession of. We create
a little checklist for the client called
items still needed. Okay,
so we become aware of some information
or documents we need. We create this checklist for the client called
items still needed, and we give it to them at the meeting.
Now, here’s what happened that was unbeknownst to me.
My team had put in place a process
where ten days before the client progress meeting,
they would call up the client if they had
not noticed that all the items that we had given them on
the checklist had not yet been uploaded to our system.
You follow me. So what
they would do is call the client up and say, basically,
hey, we noticed that you haven’t had time to upload those
documents that we had put on your item. Still needed checklist.
And so let’s cancel the meeting
for next week and reschedule it.
How much time do you need in order to get that document
and upload it to us? And so then they
would kind of negotiate with the client, and they’d book the meeting two or three
weeks further out. All right, how did I
find out about this? This cute, elderly,
old retired guy is holding a statement in his
hand, and he said,
I just talked to your staff and I
wanted to see if I could just bring this by. Like, can I just
give it to you right now? And I said, sure you can.
And I took the statements, and I said, what made you think you couldn’t?
And he explained to me, well, your assistant called me
a couple of days ago, and we had to reschedule my meeting
for next week with you. And all because these
statements right here, I wasn’t able to figure out how to upload
them to your new system because that would have required,
what? I’ve got to scan them, something. How do
I even do that? And then I can upload them to you. Anyway,
I just got the impression that it was not okay for
me to just drop these off. And I said, well, of course it is.
So I sit down with my staff, and this was what you might
call a wake up call for them. All right? So I
said, first of all, you do realize, and this is to my staff,
I said, you do realize that we work for the client.
The client doesn’t work for us. So we have
been hired to make their life easier.
We have been hired to make their life more convenient.
So first, you don’t tell clients they have
to get us information or documents using some
particular method. You work for
them. So rather than calling up this old gentleman
and saying, hey, we’re canceling your meeting because you don’t give
us your papers properly. No.
Rather than cancel and reschedule the meeting, I think it’s okay
that you called him ten days in advance, but why couldn’t
you just say, look, you’re one of the best clients at
our firm? If it would be easier, on my way home, could I drop
by your house and just pick up that statement and then save you from
having to do anything? Do you start to catch on? This is what
clients are hoping for. Their life is easier because we are
in their life by you requiring them
to use a system that, first of all, he didn’t understand.
And you just kept saying over and over to him, oh, it’s easy.
I can show you how to do it. Well, had it occurred to you that
he doesn’t want to have to learn how to scan documents and upload them to
you? He just wants to get these things
off his plate and give them to us to deal with for him.
Okay, so don’t tell clients how to get
us anything. They can get us the documents any way they want. They want
to drop them off? They can drop them off.
They want to mail
them to us. You offer to send them a self address stamped
envelope and they could just pop it in the mail and get it back to
us that way if that’s what they want. I mean, some of our clients are
older,
and yes, if they want to upload the files
to us using this fancy new system that we’ve got, that’s fine,
too. Whatever’s easier for them. That’s number one,
let me tell you. Number two, you don’t ever call a
client up ten days before the meeting and cancel because
they didn’t finish your homework assignment for them.
That’s never going to happen. You just call them up,
remind them of the items still needed checklist,
go through it with them if they need you to email it to them again
if they ask for it. But in the end, just encourage them
to come to the meeting with what they can.
And so when they get here, I will assess
whether for anything that’s still missing off that list. Is it
because they were unwilling to give it to us or is it because they
were unable to figure out how to get it to us? I mean,
has it occurred to you that maybe they’ve lost some of these things
and you keep hammering them to upload them to the system when what
we should be doing is offering to write a letter to the
institution on their behalf, to replace the missing document
and just have them sign the letter, and we’ll even send the letter off
for them. So our job is to make their life easier,
make their life more convenient. Now, when you go through these
37 things, you’ll get lots of ideas of how to make the
client’s life easier. But don’t mistake and think it’s
things like I’m just describing. There are all
kinds of issues among these 37 things. For example,
things as simple as meeting frequency.
So how often do you meet with clients?
Well, if you can believe it, on the study that I was
looking at, it showed up twice on the top five
things that annoy clients most about their financial advisors.
So the two things that showed up on the top five list is
I never know when I’m going to be meeting with my financial advisor next.
It’s a big complaint, valid complaint, I’d say.
And the other complaint that’s on the top five list is
I meet too frequently with my financial advisor. I get in there and we
talk about nothing. Like there’s not enough going on in my situation
to warrant a meeting that frequently. So you have to
kind of dig beneath that. So I’m thinking, how on earth could these
two things be on the top five list? Turns out they are different
clients with different advisors. Each advisor has a
different problem. In the one case, they have a
meeting schedule that’s too frequent, maybe quarterly,
and there’s just not enough to discuss to make it a robust,
meaningful meeting. So they’re meeting too frequently. Big complaint.
The client who says, I don’t know when I’m meeting with my
advisor next, I think we can all agree that’s a valid complaint,
so don’t let that happen.
You should have a meeting frequency. Don’t just sit there
quietly and don’t call the client. No, we recommend,
and if you ever get into our training, we’ll go through this more thoroughly.
We recommend and we’ve developed something called the three meeting process.
You’re meeting with the client every four months and
you book all meetings for the next twelve months out,
twelve months at a time. So every client not only
knows when they’re meeting with you, but they know when they’re meeting with you
over the next year, they know that they’ve got three meetings on the schedule,
and if they need more, they can call you.
So the objective of the meeting
should be, and this will tick off a few other complaints on the
37 things that annoy affluent clients,
but you should have a robust meeting agenda. You should
never call a meeting if there’s nothing to talk about.
The objective for every client progress meeting needs
to be that both spouses leave
the meeting with a smile on their face and
they’re saying to each other, man, that was
a great meeting. I’m glad I didn’t miss that meeting.
I was needed in this meeting. My contribution
was required. And this is both spouses saying this.
So the idea of creating a more robust agenda often
comes up when you go through the 37 things that
annoy clients. We even teach in our
program, and I’ll just share this with you, that you should open every
client progress meeting with a statement that sounds something like this.
So I’m glad this time worked out for us to
meet. And let me tell you the objective of today’s meeting.
The goal of the meeting today is for you, both of you, to walk
out of this meeting with an overwhelming sense of
confidence that you’re making progress towards
your goals. Now, talk about setting a high bar.
Now, the question is, how do you create the agenda that will ensure that
outcome? I’m just saying these
are the things that you can fix. Things that if
you’re not having a robust agenda when you meet with clients,
you can fix that. So I’m going to leave it there. I’m giving you some
examples of what I’m talking about.
I leave it up to you to go make the commitment to yourself that you’re
going to go through all your current processes and procedures and
then go through my 37 easily fixable things
that annoy affluent clients. And you’re going to fix them.
And if you can, you’re going to flip it around to impress them.
So where did you start with this project of consistently exceeding
client expectations? Really easy.
You started by identifying and eliminating
everything that irritates them. How about that?
And so I’m going to leave it there.
We have a lot that we can offer to help you
if things come up. As you go through these 37 things that you have questions
about, just leave comments in this video. Love to hear
what your feedback is after you go through this project. So that’s
it for me. I’m Mark Little and I’ll look forward to seeing
you next time.
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