Enjoy the current installment of "weekend reading for financial planners" - this week's edition kicks off with an announcement by FINRA that it is re-proposing its rule that would require all broker-dealers to include a link on their websites to BrokerCheck so consumers can check up on the regulatory record of their prospective advisors; the move has been and remains controversial, as consumer advocates suggest it may still not be thorough enough (the links may not necessarily be required on every single part of an advisor's website and digital presence), while others note that it may increase the number of requests to FINRA for expungement of prior regulatory infractions as they receive more attention.
From there, we have several technical financial planning articles this week, including updated rules on the employer "pay or play" insurance mandate that will delay the rollout for some firms another year until 2016 (and provide some leniency to the rest on the thresholds where the penalty will apply), and a look at the recent CBO report projecting that Obamacare will reduce worker hours by the equivalent of 2 million jobs not because firms will lay off employees but because early retirees will have more financial planning flexibility to retire early with greater access to health insurance. There's also a look at whether peer-to-peer (P2P) platforms like Prosper or Lending Club might have a role in generating higher yield for clients, some research on how delaying Social Security is similar to buying TIPS bonds but at much better real yields, and how the idea of not saving for college in order to qualify for financial aid may be a myth that produces far more harm than benefit.
We also have several practice management articles this week, from some ideas about how to improve your seminar marketing approach (hint: focus more on the time you spend before and after the presentation, and not just on the presentation itself), to how to craft a "pitch book" to communicate your services to prospective clients, to a discussion of how to address clients that are being "overserviced" by not cutting the work that you do for clients but figuring out in collaboration with them how to charge more for what you do.
We wrap up with three interesting articles: the first is a profile of a new advisor CRM software called Wealthbox that debuted at the T3 Advisor Technology conference this week; the second is a profile of financial planner Harold Evensky, an advisor and advisory firm owner who has long been a leader in the financial planning profession, and is now shifting to focus more of his time developing and advocating for research that will be more relevant to financial planning practitioners; and the last is an interest discussion by industry commentator Bob Veres on whether in the end oversight of RIAs - when you include oversight of the custodians they use - may not actually be much less than the oversight of FINRA-regulated advisors after all. And be certain to check out Bill Winterberg's "Bits & Bytes" video on the latest in advisor tech news at the end!
Enjoy the reading!