Your Filter

Digital Noise Filter

Turning the noise into value.

Are You Building On Purpose?

The first six micro-modules of Infinite Advisor Alpha allow you to set your unique foundation for trust so you can promise your behavior and expect reciprocal actions… which means you only work with trusted partners… which means you have started to design your digital noise filter. (Discover More About Micro-Value Development)

Based on the ideal clients you want to work with, the foundational categories of your relevant value (for which they will gladly pay) are at your fingertips.

Your Filter will build the foundation and set the standards for getting and keeping ideal clients…

  • Earning trust
  • Creating meaningful touch points
  • Promising behavior
  • Making your competency, character, and concern tangible.

Do You Have A Filter?

The first six modules create the foundation for the design of your unique digital noise filter.

Module seven empowers you to use the word NO as a strategy… your filter in action.

Modules 8-12 will empower you to add to your filter by…  defining your process, creating an omnipresent user experience – UX, (which is rapidly replacing the old fashioned client experience – CX) Defining topics of meaningful engagement, designing questions that matter, and gathering feedback required to remain relevant.


Are You Where You Want To Be?

  • Never be complacent.
  • Design a simple model that people can understand.
  • Learn how to ask distinctive questions.
  • Gather feedback that matters.

“Where you want to be” is the state of perpetual relevance…a never ending journey.

The only way to get there (where you want to be) is to design your unique filter.

This is the journey that will help you design your unique filter… to remain relevant in a robo-world.

The journey to perpetual relevance is never-ending.

The journey to your infinite relevance begins with a single step…

The journey to perpetual advisor relevance begins with Purpose… and it never ends,

Enjoy your journey.

 

 

Beware of The Reverse-Churn

Advisor Beware

 

 


Reverse-Churn


Advisors must be able to justify their value to charge fees in a robo world.

In the digital age of transparency, financial advisors can’t afford to have their reputations sullied by insinuations or accusations (or litigation) tying them to the unseemly act of reverse-churning accounts of unwitting clients.

If your not sure what reverse-churning is… ReverseChurn.com

The process of the value that the advisor brings to the lives of his or her clients must be made tangible for digital delivery, consumption, refinement, and verification.

To validate the fees advisors must begin to charge, in lieu of commissions, deep introspection of unique advisor value is requisite for survival in these changing times of financial services.

The best way for advisors to grasp this concept is by beginning to structure their businesses from a perspective of purpose. They must acknowledge a shared-purpose with their ideal audience to convey precisely why anyone should trust them with their wealth.

Once the cornerstone of a client-centered purpose is defined, a purpose-driven business model is the best way for any advisor to survive and thrive in this modern robo-world.

To avoid the heartache of the reverse-churn, start building your business on purpose.

Tap or click the image below to go to the purpose-driven branding modules of Tangible Alpha created by Grant Barger.

 

Good Stuff Curated

The Good Stuff

 

This article says so many things about the state of the  financial services industry… great read.

Curated Content Worth Reading

The Markings of a True Destination RIA
The decisions we make over the next five years will radically shape our ability to compete, and even survive.

The ball doesn’t lie, and neither does the math. As an industry, our client
acquisition rate has slowed from 7.1 percent in 2014 to 5.8 percent in 2016, asset
growth has dropped from 10.6 percent in 2014 to 8.9 percent in 2016, and revenue
growth has deteriorated from 14.4 percent to 6.6 percent over the same period,
according to the 2016 FA Insight Study of Advisory Firms by TD Ameritrade.
To add insult to injury, in a recent blog titled “The Unhappiest Successful Advisors:
Accidental Business Owners,” Michael Kitces called firms with $100 million to
$300 million of assets under management “accidental business owners.” He said,
“once you grow past about $100 million of AUM, you don’t make any more money
until you reach $1 billion.” This, he said, is because of the level of reinvestment in
people and technology required to account for your firm’s growing pains. All of this
reminds me of my high school basketball coach, who told us at the start of the
season, “Not only are you guys really un-athletic, but you have no sense of how to
play the game.”

Meanwhile, Tim Buckley, the new CEO of Vanguard says our jobs as advisors are at
risk as the firm’s robo advice platform ticks above $100 billion in assets. At the
same time, Morgan Stanley’s wealth unit just hit record revenues for the fourth
quarter of 2017. The report of the wirehouses’ death has been greatly exaggerated.
It certainly feels like an us-against-them climate in financial services. On one side,
the upstart entrepreneurs who chart their own course and wear many hats, all
while building a business that provides for principals and team members. On the
other side are industry Goliaths with the resources to out-scale, out-advertise, and
out-tech most of us. According to Cerulli’s U.S. RIA Marketplace 2017 study, the
687 firms with more than $1 billion in AUM oversee 59 percent of all assets in the
registered investment advisor channel. The 3,605 RIAs in the $100 million to $500
million AUM range, on the other hand, have 19.8 percent of RIA assets. The larger
destination firms have figured out scale and repeatable growth, and it’s in the
numbers.

The battle lines have been drawn. The decisions we make over the next five years
will radically shape our ability to compete and, for many, survive.
The good news is many technology vendors, platform providers, strategic
acquirers, and other resources can help firms build a destination firm that will
attract clients, recruit next-generation talent, build scale, and develop resources to
facilitate regional acquisitions.

Technology: A destination firm needs a digitally integrated operating system for
its middle and back offices, one that lets advisors and staff focus on clients 80
percent of the time. The right tech is crucial to attract next generation clients and
advisors. While Gen Xers aren’t digital natives, we’re close. We expect a digital
experience with on-demand access to our financial lives untethered by geography
and time. With the proliferation of digital tools at our fingertips, this level of
services is table stakes today.

Differentiation: Draw a 20-mile radius around your office and review the
websites of your competition. You’ll find interchangeable marketing points like
“independent,” “fiduciary,” “CFP,” “life planning,” “open architecture,” “trust,”
“discipline,” or “100 years of experience.” You get the idea. We all look the same to
the outside world, and a potential client or recruit will see your firm the same way.
The client experience must go well beyond a math exercise and a retirement
number with a few goals. They can get this kind of low-touch service cheaper at any
given robo. In addition to the traditional financial planning, we need to present
experience at the confluence of a client’s personal values and their financial
resources influenced by behavior finance. This discipline, rightfully, is proving
critical to the success of clients living their best financial lives.

Growth: Our industry relies on referrals to grow. Joe Duran, CEO of United
Capital, reminds advisors that once we exhaust our sphere of influence, our growth
plateaus. Attracting next-generation talent or acquisitions requires a systematic
growth program. We’ll need a cohesive, digital marketing and branding strategy
that ties a stand-out client experience to the firm culture. For mature businesses,
the average age of the client skews to the age of the principals. Without a clear path
to attract next-generation advisors to backfill the aging client base, established
firms tend to follow the life cycle of their clients, with the unintended consequence
of sunsetting the firms’ value.

Training, Coaching and Business Management: I see firms doing really
smart things on the staff side of the equation. They cross-train to mitigate personal
dependencies in operational functions, build and maintain operating manuals, and
hire professional operators to manage the middle and back offices. They wisely
consult with custodians or other third-party firms on best practices. However, it’s
rare to find firms improving their client experience with the same rigor. To what
end is the benefit of a scalable operation when most advisors reach capacity at 150
households or so? The answer isn’t to find clones of ourselves, but to foster a
digitally driven client experience that wraps advisors in a system where there are
degrees of consistencies throughout the client journey. We all cannot be world class
at everything and the right resources can bolster blind spots.

Equity Value: Roll-ups and strategic acquirers offer sellers the option to take a
portion of the valuation in equity. Sellers who opt for equity in a strategic acquirer
or roll-up fundamentally believe the value of the buying firm will “perform” better
than the equity in their business over a period. If an internal succession plan or an
acquisition strategy is in the works, you must make the same case. If a nextgeneration
advisor, who probably will need to take a personal loan to fund the
transaction and sees flat growth with limited infrastructure or scale, he may not be
willing to take the risk as a buyer. It is reported that owners prefer an internal
succession plan to an outside buyer, but we’re asking a lot of employees to now
start acting like entrepreneurs. Creating a destination firm will ensure enterprise
value and make the underlying equity worth owning and betting on. The RIA
industry faces challenges from well-funded and well-known brands that are used to
serving our community. As a principal of a nationally branded, multi-office RIA
with more than $21 billion of AUM, we realize every day that we must disrupt
ourselves to remain relevant or someone else certainly will. Disruptive technologies
redefine the rules of what it means to be a consumer, and financial services is not
getting off the hook. The next decade will test the entrepreneurial grit of the RIA
industry, and I really like our chances.
Get your firm destination-ready.

Matt Brinker is the head of national partner development at United Capital.
Follow him at @mkbrinker. 

Make It Happen

 

 

 

 

 

 

The elements of your advisor alpha must be defined by you, for digital detection from your ideal audience. Your value must elicit a feeling from prospects. And you must be able to gather feedback from your clients… You must know how your alpha makes them feel. These requisites for success will only be made available to you, if and when you make your advisor alpha tangible.
This is exactly why I feel that this is the greatest time in the history of financial services to become a trusted steward of wealth.
Your alpha must become tangible.
Make it happen.

Part 2 of 3 Expanding The Gap

Expanding the Gap

Part 2

THE POWER TO CONTROL THE PERCEPTION OF YOUR VALUE

Part Two of Three

Once your ideal audience knows how much you care, you gotta show ’em how much you know.

Competency

 

In our experiences through the decades we have found that the way people learn is different… each person’s style of learning is as unique as his fingerprint. We go to great lengths to demonstrate exactly how advisors can create meaningful exponential outcomes through our multitude of micro-moments. Each time we publish content we try to tell the story a little bit differently… a little bit better.

In part two of our three part (reverse order) series on advisor value we go over the second leg of the three legged stool. (You need all three to sit at the table.)

 


 

The Value Gap

Part 2

Character Competency and Concern


 

Defining and Designing Your Competency

 

Your behavior is the guiding force behind the perception of your value. Are you competent enough for… whatever is often judged by your behavior. How do you respond in certain situations? How do you proactively prepare for others? 

Your behavior is the single most important factor in controlling the perception of your relevance. And it is for that reason that you must promise it. The single most important aspect of trust and integrity is your accountability. Will you do the things you say you will do to make good on your purpose? 

To survive in a robo world you must promise your behavior and you must be able to walk the talk.

In order for you to promise your behavior you must have a system in place to design what you can promise to the world. But before you can design your unique system of promise delivery you must define the terms that justify your promises. The terms of your value must be defined… they will be defined. And if you are not the one defining your value, someone else will gladly do it for you. Your firm, your competitors, and your clients will be the ones who define your value. You can’t afford that. 

Your relevance is controlled by the one who defines your value… It needs to be you. You must define your value or you risk everything. 

 


 

End of Part Two