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We teach Financial Advisors how to become 'The Only Game In Town'
by Aireen Inocian Filed Under: Client Service for Financial Advisors, Trusted Advisor Nation
Mark Little emphasizes that financial advisory is not just about managing assets but also guiding clients through emotional decisions that could jeopardize their financial strategies. He highlights the importance of preemptive communication and establishing fundamental investment principles to help clients navigate fears and avoid making impulsive, potentially harmful financial decisions.
of 1981,
981. I’ve been around the block, and the
one thing that I can tell you with almost complete authority
is that we are in a completely different business
than most financial advisors realize.
So let me go through it with you and see if this makes sense
to you. And even clients think we’re
in a different business than we’re actually in.
So clients and financial advisors
all believe that the business that we’re in is
what we were actually hired to do. So in my case,
I came out of the investment channel of our
industry. So I thought for a long time, we were hired
by clients as investment managers, and so we
managed investments, and that’s the business we’re in.
No. Financial planners create financial plans.
They think, oh, I’m in the financial planning business. No.
Estate planners, tax advisors,
so forth. People in our industry and even the clients
think that it’s all about financial products or financial services,
and that’s the business that a financial advisor in.
Here’s the problem. I’ve been working with affluent
clients for many, many decades, and the problem is, at some point,
a client in a long term relationship will
come to you with a terrible idea.
They will get nervous. There’s some fear based
issue that will drive their emotions, and they will
call and ask for an appointment, or they’ll call in a panic,
and they will proceed to recommend some just
really terrible, terrible idea, something that if
they take action on this emotion based idea
of theirs, it could and quite often has,
in my experience, just completely blown up
their financial strategy. I could give
you examples of this. I mean, I’ve been doing this for more
than four decades, so I’ve seen clients call in with
all kinds of crazy stuff, but currently
it could be coming to a financial advisor and
saying, hey, I know it’s not part of the
plan, but I’m reading the headlines. There’s war breaking out
all over the world. I think I’d like to just sell everything and
put the cash on the sideline, and then when
things settle down, we’ll start moving it back in again. Or the
political environment is just so tumultuous right
now. If so and so gets elected
as president, then that’s it.
I’m out. I’m selling everything. It’s just going to
get too crazy, and I don’t want to be
in the financial markets when it happens. So I’d like to move
all of it, or most of it, into a little side account.
Just sit in cash and wait until the coast is
clear. Or it could be just the know.
I’ve been reading for several years that we’re going to have a recession. We’re going
to have a recession. And I just watched CNBC
or I watched the business news channel and I
heard a bunch of experts talking about how earnings have been
inching up during this supposed we’re going to have a recession
and that can’t last forever. Things are so overpriced in the market
right now, it’s very risky.
I just would like to move to cash. So you get the idea.
So at that moment when the client calls in or
at that moment when the client comes in and you’re sitting there
talking to them about this brilliant
idea that they just woke up at three in the morning and had
last night, that moment, that moment where they’ve
pitched this grotesque idea and
that moment where it’s now your turn, it’s your turn to
talk. They want to know your reaction to what
they are just now proposing. That right there,
that’s the business we’re really in now, most financial
advisors, and I’m not talking about you,
you may be laughing right now and saying, oh yeah, I’ve lived that moment many,
many times. Well let me tell you, having dealt with financial
advisors, I’ve been in the business 40 years, but I’ve
been dealing with other financial advisors in this way
since 2002. So I’ve had a lot of experience talking
about this topic with many, many high end,
let’s call them world class financial advisors. And I will tell
you, even at a high level of experience and a high level of
skill, most financial advisors are unskilled
when it comes to that moment.
Like what to say in response to something, you initially
are hearing this and you think it’s a joke. No,
most financial advisors are either unskilled
or maybe it’s better to say unprepared, like they haven’t really
thought through. Here’s what I’m going to say.
To have a coherent and concise and powerful conversation
about this knitwit idea being
proposed by a highly affluent, highly successful
person who in every other part of their life they’ve
been successful. So they think they’re approaching this from a very
rational, very sensible. They think what they’re proposing
is just the best idea in the world,
the most safe and the most obvious
idea in the world.
When they say these things, that’s when you’re needed the most.
And I’m telling you from experience, most financial advisors choke in
that moment. They say stuff, but it’s not compelling.
And then the client makes one of the worst financial decisions in the
world and then what do they do? Well, at some point they’re talking
with their friends years later and they’re saying, what’s your
experience with your financial advisor? And they say, well,
I haven’t done that great, actually. I’ve lost
money since I’ve been with them. But they kind of forget that moment where
they blew up their own strategy. And whether they do or
don’t fire their financial advisor is sort of beside the point.
The point is they make a decision that is terrible and
it really throws off everything in their financial strategy.
And so what am I actually saying here?
Well, this is a skill issue. I’m saying to be prepared
now, I recommend a preemptive approach.
As a matter of fact, I’ve been dealing with this issue for so long
that I know a preemptive approach works
just when you’re talking with a client in the early stages
of the relationship. And if this moment has never occurred
with a client of yours, then now is the
time to begin preemptive conversations. I’m talking about just regular
routine meetings where you meet with the client.
This is where you’re prepared in advance to
say things that later when they come to you with
this terrible idea that you have planted
seeds in the past of how you’re going to
respond in a situation like that. So what
I do and what I train for advisors in our program
is that you develop some investment principles,
some fundamental investment principles. And that’s
what I’ve done years ago when I first sit down with
a brand new client, they say, well, let’s do it. Let’s start working together.
And I go, well, one last thing before we move forward. I have
these three fundamental investment principles and I need
to discuss them with you. And if these three
fundamental investment principles sound logical to
you, well, then we can move forward. But if these three fundamental
principles don’t sound solid to you, well,
then it’s probably not going to be a good fit to work together because
everything we do is around these sound principles. And so
then you explain what your principles are.
Now, we have full training on this, but I’m saying you can
do this on your own. You can establish your core. You can say
what really makes an investment portfolio
successful. Put yourself in a kind of a flash forward
situation. Let’s say you work with a client for 2030 years.
They’re at the end of their life. They’re looking back over their investment
returns, and it’s highly successful. What are
the fundamental principles that had to be in place for that to
be true? So that’s what I’m saying.
Sit down with a piece of paper, start taking notes as
to what you think are the fundamental principles, and then
craft a skilled communication around
this. What I’m saying is communication
is a skill, and this is the most important
part of your craft. You are in the communication business
when the client comes to you with a disastrous idea
that’s going to ruin their financial strategy. Just craft two or
three short conversations so that you can plant
these seeds about your fundamental investment
principles two or three times every year.
Little short conversations that you can just throw it
in there and in the course of your routine client progress
meetings or phone calls with a client throughout the year, just kind of throw it
in. Just long as we always remember the three
fundamental investment principles, everything’s going to be okay. Now,
this is a preemptive conversation before they start to really hit
the panic button and panic and come to you with a terrible idea.
So this will do what? This will ensure that
your client is not surprised that when they do
come to you in that moment with a really horrible idea,
that you are, in essence,
reiterating sound principles. Not only that you have
been saying over and over throughout the years, two or three times every
single year, but it’s something that you
can recall that they agreed to and agreed
in principle to before you even started working
together, and that this brilliant idea of
theirs to blow up their financial strategy violates
one or all of these financial principles.
And then how do you handle when they come to you in that moment
and they are now quiet? They want to know your reaction to
this rotten idea.
The strategy that I teach, and it really works well,
is don’t start attacking their idea, even if what
you’re doing is recalling conversations you’ve had with them in the
past. Preemptive conversations. Don’t argue.
They are in an emotional state. This will not work, this arguing
strategy. So this is not the moment to exert your
skills as an experienced financial advisor. And you
should believe me, because I’ve been in this business for x number of years.
No, it’s not the intellectual part of their brain that’s
working at the moment. It’s the fear panic button that’s
in their head. And the only thing that will work is
questions. Say, okay,
so explain what you mean. So they come
with an idea. They want to move to cash. What do you mean
move to cash? And for how long and what’s the process?
You’re recommending to know when the coast is clear and
we get back in, because this sort of a strategy creates
additional problems in the future. We’ve got to get back
in and just ask questions.
How did you come to this conclusion? When did you come to this conclusion?
Do you see now how by asking questions,
it’s a low emotion situation, you’re reducing,
in essence, the drama of the whole thing, and it
gives them time to calm down. And once they start talking rationally in
response to very good, well prepared questions,
well, then you can explain
that this violates all the fundamental investment principles,
or at least one of the fundamental investment principles.
And you can say the truth. You can say, look, people have tried
to do this over the decades. This is called timing the market or whatever it
is that they’re describing to you. And you just say,
no investor has been able to do what you’re describing consistently
over the years. As a matter of fact, the ones who try blow
up their investment strategy and always look back on it and regret it.
Well, that’s all I have. So you could sit down and create your fundamental
investment principles, begin having these preemptive conversations
anytime before the moment they come to you. Because if
you wait and start dealing with this conversation skillfully,
at the moment they are about to jump off the cliff,
it’ll be too late. The only way to talk them
down off the cliff that I have found is to earn
the right by having conversations that they will remember
later about. I’m calling them
the fundamental investment principles, the thing that works. So you
can create your own, I know you can do it, or you can join our
program and jump in the river and we’ll share
all these client focused tactics and strategies that have worked so
well over the years. But either way, be prepared for that
moment. That is the business we’re all really in.
We’re there to protect the client. We’re there to help them achieve their financial
objectives. And they don’t achieve their
goals if they blow up their strategy every few
number of years. And it’s your job to prevent
that from happening. If there’s any possible way you can do it,
and through skilled conversation that’s
prepared well in advance, you can do that.
So that’s it. And we
wish you every future success with this.
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