Enjoy the current installment of "weekend reading for financial planners" practice management edition! This week's reading kicks off with an interesting interview with "robo-advisor" Betterment CEO Jon Stein, who seems to be shifting in acknowledging that perhaps his platform will be more likely to co-exist with advisors than compete directly with them (though that doesn't slow Stein from a lofty goal for a whopping $100B of AUM in 5-7 years!).
From there, we have a long array of practice management articles this week, including: an overview of the results of the 2013 FA Insight People and Pay industry benchmarking study; a discussion by practice management consultant Angie Herbers of the most common fatal succession planning mistake (focusing too much on valuation) and how to manage it; an interesting survey of new advisors that highlights what a subset of "quick starters" are doing to succeed (growing their businesses to more than $50M of AUM in under 5 years); how female advisors, while still forming a small minority of total advisors, are actually winning on some key advisor metrics for success; how "big data" solutions are coming soon to help advisors better manage their practices and serve their clients, with an initial glimpse at two new offerings; and a review of the latest Redtail Document Imaging software solution for advisors.
There are also some articles specifically about marketing and business development, including: an overview of 3 services that help advisors to better market and grow; how some advisors are having extraordinary new business success by attracting clients through Yelp, albeit while operating in a "grey" area of compliance; and some guidance from Bill Winterberg on how advisors can get started with video on their websites.
We wrap up with three interesting articles: the first is a good discussion from Mark Tibergien about what it really means when firm owners say they want staff and especially future partners to "act more like an owner"; the second is a look at the latest trends in website development for financial advisors and some examples of the advisory world's best advisor websites; and the last is a discussion of how advisors need to look beyond classic business metrics to really measure "success" or risk evolving their businesses in ways they didn't intend. Enjoy the reading!