Northwestern Mutual is making a big push to expand its field force this year.
The insurance titan and giant IBD said it plans to add more than 5,000 financial professionals to its field force in 2025, citing increased demand for personal financial guidance and a growing gap in advisor supply.
The Milwaukee-based company said the recruitment effort will span full-time financial advisors, representatives, and college interns.
The hiring push comes as Americans continue to report high levels of financial insecurity, with Northwestern Mutual’s most recent Planning and Progress Study showing nearly one-third of adults feel uncertain about their financial future.
Beyond that need, Northwestern Mutual Chief Field Officer John Roberts highlighted an oncoming tidal wave of advisor retirements within the next decade, as well as the greater-than-ever prevalence of workers considering a career change.
“These converging trends are creating an unprecedented opportunity for the financial services industry, and for mission-minded professionals ready to elevate not only their careers, but the lives of others,” Roberts said in a statement.
The firm also stressed its previous research indicating Americans need $1.46 million to retire comfortably – though advisors have questioned that "magic number."
The company also emphasized the role of financial professionals in fostering client confidence. Among Americans who work with a financial advisor, 64 percent report feeling financially secure, compared to 29 percent of those without one, the study noted.
Despite the growing influence of artificial intelligence tools and automated platforms, human advice remains in high demand. According to the study, 54 percent of respondents said they trust financial advisors more than AI for core financial planning tasks, compared to 15 percent who prefer digital-only solutions.
Another 2024 report by McKinsey & Company estimates that the industry will face a shortfall of approximately 100,000 advisors within a decade. The pain could be especially acute for insurance broker-dealers, with one recent estimate by Cerulli projecting a negative CAGR of 2.6 percent for such firms in the five years ending in 2028.
Northwestern Mutual said it would continue to invest in training and mentorship programs to support the development of new professionals. The firm also highlighted its college internship program as a key talent pipeline.
Over the past decade, numerous major insurers have chosen to focus on their core strengths by offloading their broker-dealer operations. That includes Voya Financial agreeing to sell its brokerage and advisory assets to Cetera in 2021, and the more recent strategic partnership between Prudential and LPL that was completed last year, which saw more than 2,800 financial advisors within Prudential's wealth management operations get transitioned onto LPL's platform.
Within its 22,000 strong network of financial advisors and team members as of 2024, Northwestern Mutual says it had 8,013 financial advisors at the end of 2024. That's compared to the end of 2022, when it reported employing 7,499 full-time financial professionals across the country.
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