Measuring Your Success
Measuring Your Success
Adding content every day, even on the holidays, is what I live to do… this little gem should help make more sense of what we are trying to accomplish… with more simplicity.
What do the letters that follow your name really mean to your clients?
You can NOT rely on industry generated campaigns to differentiate your value. You must become empowered to do this yourself. If you are lacking the confidence to define exactly what makes you so special, we have something to help you boost your confidence… enough to help you define your authentic relevant value…make it tangible for digital consumption… and maximize your relevance for years to come. If you have a minute, you have time to get started right now.
You won’t survive if you let this industry define your differentiation.
It’s nobody’s business but yours.
CFP Board’s new ad campaign to target client emotional well-being
By Kenneth Corbin
Published June 29 2018
The CFP Board is gearing up to launch a new phase of its marketing campaign, this time focusing on the emotional well-being of clients.
In the fall, the board plans to release a new wave of advertisements across multiple media platforms to tout the CFP designation as the gold standard of financial advice. The campaign builds on market research conducted on consumer sentiment of the planning profession.
In focus groups, consumers who worked with a planner reported feeling more “confident, optimistic, secure and at ease,” according to Kevin Keller, the CFP Board’s CEO.
“That is the opposite of the worry and stress that were cited by people who did not have a financial plan,” Keller said in an online presentation outlining the board’s business objectives.
“We’re finding that people realize they need help with financial planning, and they envision specific emotional benefits from doing so. That is quite powerful,” Keller said.
The CFP Board credits its advertising and public relations campaign with boosting awareness of the financial planning profession and the CFP credential.
The new campaign is scheduled to go into production this summer. It will hit airwaves, print media and online publications after Labor Day.
The Let’s Make a Plan campaign, launched in April 2011, has not been without controversy. Some CFPs have grumbled about funding the effort through a hike in their certificant fees.
To date, the board has spent $73 million on the campaign, which now carries a nearly $12 million annual budget.
That “might seem like a lot to most people, but in the world of advertising it’s just a drop in the bucket,” said Susan John, the chairwoman-elect of the CFP Board’s board of directors, during the online presentation.
The CFP Board credits its advertising and public relations campaign with boosting awareness of the financial planning profession and the CFP credential.
The board is also expanding its diversity initiative beyond the gender imbalance in the planning field to focus on racial and ethnic minorities.
Building on its Women’s Initiative, the CFP Board is now looking to promote the profession to other underrepresented groups, with a diversity summit scheduled in October in New York, according to John.
The board is also touting its new code of ethics and standards of conduct. The new code will take effect October 2019.It will require advisors to act as fiduciaries at all times, a stipulation that has met with some resistance among CFPs, many of whom are brokers.
“I would respectfully disagree that it’s going to be that hard for advisors to comply with the standard of putting your client’s best interest first any time you’re delivering financial advice,” said Richard Salmen, the chairman of the CFP Board’s board of directors, during the presentation.
Salmen rejects the notion that some CFPs will let their certification lapse as a result of the always-on fiduciary requirement. Instead, he argues there is emerging awareness about fiduciary responsibilities among investors spurred on by the highly publicized debate over the Department of Labor’s now-defunct fiduciary rule. He says he is frequently asked whether he is a fiduciary or CFP by prospective clients.
Clients ask whether their advisors are obligated to act as fiduciaries all the time, both Salmen and John say. They are also looking for holistic planning services more frequently, rather than just periodic investment advice.
“There are consumers that are now aware enough and educated enough to know what to ask for,” Salmen said. “And that, to me, is going to drive the future marketplace for financial planning advice.”
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You get paid for having them… check that. You get paid for sharing them. Your opinions are what your audience pays you for. Your wisdom, knowledge, experience, process… your advisor alpha. You get paid because you have genuine concerns (opinions) about the well being of your clients. You must be able to share your genuine concerns with your audience 24/7. You can’t do that unless you have defined your opinions. You must define and publish your opinions in order to remain relevant.
Your beliefs and opinions must be published in the form of genuine concerns and fundamental truths. Your ideal audience must be able to have tangible access to your value 24/7… even when you are not available. Especially when you are not available. Your genuine concerns about your clients well-being is a major part of the differentiation you need to set yourself apart from your perceived peers. Your genuine concerns must become accessible 24/7 to gather valuable feedback from the right audience. You must publish your genuine concerns to filter out the bad clients and bring in the good ones. Your beliefs and opinions must be defined by you and updated by you if you are to remain relevant.
In order to define your beliefs and opinions you must first discover them.
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.)
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?
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.