Enjoy the current installment of "weekend reading for financial planners" - this week’s edition kicks off with the huge news this week that the budget compromise in Congress will include a "crackdown" that ends the popular Social Security claiming strategies of File-and-Suspend and Restricted Application, with only a narrow period of "grandfathering" for retirees who planned to use these rules in the near future. Also in the news this week was a fresh industry benchmarking study finding that tech-savvy advisory firms are increasing their productivity lead over the rest, with the most tech-savvy firms having on average 40% more AUM and serving 55% more clients.
From there, we have a slew of practice management articles this week, including: the results from the recent FA Insight benchmarking study, finding that advisory firms who pay their employees more end out being more profitable thanks to more productive employees; a discussion of how important it is to have a rigorous hiring process to find the best employees (or outsource to a firm that can do it for you!); the importance (and difficulty) of advisors creating their own transition plan about how they will someday "gracefully" exit their advisory business; the story of how one advisory firm successfully transitioned from AUM to retainer fees; why it's important to change your sales process with prospective clients if you're not closing at least 30% of them; whether advisory firms that pay the ticket charges for trades in client portfolios are introducing untenable conflicts of interest; and the rules for most of the major brokerage/custodian firms about how they handle client losses if a clients' financial accounts are hacked.
We wrap up with three interesting articles: the first critiques some of the "convoluted logic" that brokerage firms and insurance companies have been putting forth as self-interested objections to the DOL's fiduciary proposal; the second looks at some of the "myths" that wirehouses have used to claim why they remain a superior place for their advisors to build a business, even as RIA market share grows and an increasing volume of brokers decide to break away; and the last is a great reminder about the value of establishing a "Mastermind Group" of peer advisors to help you get better ideas to improve your business, have a group to bounce your own ideas off of, and to provide a level of accountability to help ensure that you take the steps you have committed to in order to improve yourself.
Enjoy the reading!