Enjoy the current installment of "weekend reading for financial planners" with a special focus on practice management and technology topics! This week's reading kicks off, though, with news from the CFP Board's ongoing saga in the Camarda lawsuit; the latest development is that the CFP Board declined to answer a large number of questions in a deposition with its staff counsel, in turn prompting the Camardas to ask a Federal judge to sanction the CFP Board for failure to comply with the deposition and the CFP Board maintaining that the questions from the Camarda attorneys are just a "fishing expedition" beyond the scope of their actual case.
From there, we also have an article on the recently announced SEC regulatory priorities for 2014, which includes a deeper look at "reverse churning" inactivity in fee-based AUM accounts, the activities of dual-registered advisors, how advisors handle IRA rollovers (dovetailing on the DOL's anticipated new fiduciary rules), and a big push for more investment adviser examinations. There's also a discussion of whether robo-advisors may finally start to become a threat to advisors - or not - as Wealthfront announced this week that it has crossed the $500M AUM mark, after being at little more than $100M a year ago.
We also have a number of additional practice management and technology articles this week, including: two interesting industry studies released this week, where the first shows that wealthy clientele are increasingly adopting a multi-advisor approach and not consolidating advice and assets with just one person, and the second study finding that while advisor client retention is consistently high, there is a noticeable dip in retention for advisors 2-4 years after a client relationship begins (suggesting a clear area for focus for advisors who want to boost retention); an article looking at how best to build relationships with centers of influence (based on a live panel where attorneys and accountants were asked to rate advisors' "pitches" to them); some very practical tips about how to dramatically increase how many meetings you're conducting and the amount of face time you're getting with your clients; and two technology articles by Bill Winterberg, the first looking at some helpful productivity apps, and the second a review of how to use the free Google Forms service to conduct based survey and client data gathering activity.
We wrap up with three interesting articles: the first is a remarkably good list of all the conventional practice management wisdom that is often repeatedly but rarely implemented in full, presented as a series of potential "mistakes" that advisors should avoid; the second is an article about the latest research on persuasion and how to (ethically) influence clients to act; and the last is a fascinating interview with popular personal finance blogger "Mr. Money Mustache" who retired at the age of 30 and now writes about how to retire early with a modest lifestyle, built around a message not of Scrooge-like frugality but a simple focus on enjoying the things that matter the most in life and letting go of the rest of our spending excesses (and some light chastisement towards financial planners that perhaps we focus too much on saving for old-age affluence and not enough on managing spending). Enjoy the reading!