Financial advisors often struggle with a frustrating disconnect: prospective clients typically seek help for a specific, often technical financial problem, yet the value they ultimately appreciate most has little to do with that original issue. Clients arrive asking whether they are saving enough, how much they can spend, or whether they need life insurance. They rarely, if ever, ask for clarity, peace of mind, or a deeper sense of purpose. And they almost never request “life planning” or personal transformation. Yet, 18 to 24 months into a relationship, the language clients use to describe why they value their advisor centers not on the problem that was solved, but on how they feel – less worried, more confident, more aligned, and more at ease about their future.
This dynamic reflects two distinct 'modes' of financial planning. The first is problem-to-solve planning, which addresses the 'presenting' issue that brings a client through the door. These are the functional, tangible concerns at the base of the value pyramid: organizing finances, reducing risk, determining retirement readiness, securing insurance coverage, or optimizing investments.
In this 185th episode of Kitces & Carl, Michael Kitces and client communication expert Carl Richards discuss this oft-transformative journey from the presenting problem to the deeper ones. The presenting problem merely acts as an entry point into the relationship. Attempting to lead instead with abstract promises of 'transformation' risks missing the reality that most prospects don't yet have language for those higher-order benefits, nor are they actively shopping for them.
However, as clients experience life transitions, the advisor's role expands beyond technical problem-solving. In moments of transition, what began as a quantitative planning exercise evolves into education, organization, and emotional steadiness. The technical solution matters immensely, but the intangible value of reassurance and guidance is truly transformative in the long run. It is in these transformative journeys – retirement transitions, widowhood, divorce, business exits, or long arcs of wealth accumulation – that advisors often build their strongest client relationships and referral sources. Clients who experience meaningful change with their advisor frequently become passionate advocates, even if they struggle to articulate exactly why. What the advisor may describe as financial purpose or clear goals, the client will likely describe as a lack of worry or burden!
Ultimately, the key insight is that while most clients will continue to arrive with concrete financial questions, advisors who recognize those problems as gateways to deeper engagement can deliver far greater value than technical expertise alone. By addressing the immediate issue while remaining attuned to the broader life context, advisors position themselves to support clients through the transitions that ultimately define their financial (and holistic) well-being. In doing so, they move beyond simply answering financial questions, instead becoming trusted partners in their clients' evolving lives: creating relationships that are not only more durable and referable, but also more fulfilling for the advisor and more impactful for the people they serve!




