Welcome everyone! Welcome to the 478th episode of the Financial Advisor Success Podcast!
My guest on today's podcast is Kendra Wright. Kendra is the owner of Rebel Media Agency, a marketing firm based in Austin, Texas, that helps RIAs establish and execute clear marketing strategies.
What's unique about Kendra, though, is how her experience working with a range of financial advisory firms has allowed her to identify four ways that advisor marketing funnels break and the solutions that can help firms establish more effective marketing practices.
In this episode, we talk in-depth about how Kendra finds that many advisors lack what she calls "ideal client clarity" and attempt to market themselves to a broad audience (making it harder for potential clients to understand whether the advisor can solve their particular pain points), why Kendra thinks that getting "ideal client clarity" doesn't necessarily require an advisor to adopt a single hyper-specific niche, but rather the ability to identify one (or more) profiles of the clients they most enjoy working with and who can afford to pay for the advisor's services, and how Kendra completed this exercise with her own firm, zeroing in on working with particular types of RIAs instead of a broader pool of potential advisor clients.
We also talk about how Kendra finds that advisors can improve their marketing funnels by engaging in what she calls "channel focus", identifying the marketing channels (for example, YouTube or in-person seminars) where their ideal clients are most likely to engage with the advisor's content (and why having multiple ideal client types might require focusing on separate channels for each), why Kendra thinks that "channel focus" is also a function of identifying a medium that reflects an advisor's strengths when it comes to content creation (for instance, advisors who are strong writers might choose to create a blog or long LinkedIn posts, while those who prefer verbal communication might start a podcast), and how Kendra finds that focusing on creating content tailored for a particular marketing channel can help advisors differentiate themselves from those who cast a wider net across channels (but not stand out in any particular one).
And be certain to listen to the end, where Kendra shares why she thinks the best advisor content talks about painful, urgent problems their ideal client is likely to face (rather than more general "helpful" content that could otherwise be found through a Google search or AI prompt), why Kendra thinks it's important for advisory firms to have effective calls to action in their marketing and on their websites that make it easy for prospective clients to take the next step (and to make it clear that the firm is currently accepting new clients in the first place), and how Kendra has ultimately found success not by growing her marketing agency as large as possible but rather by gaining flexibility (and greater satisfaction) by focusing on a smaller number of (profitable) clients she enjoys working with.
So, whether you're interested in learning about the different ways marketing funnels can "break", how to create "ideal client clarity" to get your marketing off on the right foot, or how to better move consumers from content to client, then we hope you enjoy this episode of the Financial Advisor Success podcast, with Kendra Wright.




