LPL promotes two executives, does away with 'marketing'

Mimi Bock and Ryan Parker to get new responsibilities
JUL 03, 2014
LPL Financial continues to shake up its management two months after Derek Bruton, its popular managing director for independent adviser services, resigned suddenly. The company Thursday afternoon announced the promotion of two executives, Mimi Bock and Ryan Parker, to managing directors. Both Ms. Bock and Mr. Parker are veterans of the financial services industry. Ms. Bock has more than 25 years of experience and worked at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney before joining LPL in 2012. Mr. Parker has been in the financial services industry for 17 years, and was a managing director at Russell Investments before moving last year to LPL. It's the first step in LPL's effort to reaffirm that the company is fully committed to its 13,600 affiliated registered reps and financial advisers, said Robert Moore, president of LPL Financial. “The power of affiliation” is the renewed focus, Mr. Moore said. “We want to declare that and be very explicit about that.” The company said the latest personnel moves were unrelated to Mr. Bruton's resignation. “This change had nothing to do with Derek’s departure, although it did validate the talent and strong bench strength we have at LPL Financial,” spokeswoman Betsy Weinberger said. LPL is eliminating the position of chief marketing officer, which had been held by Joan Khoury. She is leaving the company at the end of August. As a result of these changes, most of LPL's existing marketing work and training teams will move to Ms. Bock's team. Formerly executive vice president of independent adviser services for business consulting, Ms. Bock will become managing director for client experience and training. Mr. Parker is being promoted to managing director for investment and planning solutions, which will now include advisory, investment, insurance and financial planning offerings. Previously, he was executive vice president. Both will report to Mr. Moore. The company is not going to use the term “marketing” anymore, Mr. Moore said in an interview Thursday afternoon. “We are taking marketing and transferring that to client experience and training,” he said. That includes a program to train new financial advisers in partnership with the company's existing advisers, he said. Last August, LPL pulled the plug on a training program for new advisers, NestWise, which was focused on clients with less than $100,000 in assets, known in the industry as the “mass market.” Mr. Bruton was allowed to resign “in light of the company's concerns about [his] interactions with other employees,” the company said in April. Days later, it appointed William Morrissey as managing director of its independent adviser services group, replacing Mr. Bruton.

Latest News

Why uncertainty is making behavioral coaching more valuable than ever
Why uncertainty is making behavioral coaching more valuable than ever

Markets have always been unpredictable. What has changed is the amount of information investors are trying to process and the growing role advisors play in helping clients avoid emotional decisions

Florida investor hits real estate syndicator with fraud suit over $750K
Florida investor hits real estate syndicator with fraud suit over $750K

Six apartment deals, one "big account," and $2.7M in undocumented insider loans. Now the lawsuit lands

Chicago’s 'Mr. Finance' posed as advisor in loan scheme, according to Illinois regulators
Chicago’s 'Mr. Finance' posed as advisor in loan scheme, according to Illinois regulators

The Illinois order refers to Brandon Ellington’s investment program as a “Ponzi-like scheme.”

Bezos calls for zero income tax on bottom half of earners
Bezos calls for zero income tax on bottom half of earners

But the Amazon executive chair seems to want it both ways, arguing that taxing the ultra-wealthy won't help struggling Americans.

Why the Charity Parity Act matters for retired clients in 401(k)s
Why the Charity Parity Act matters for retired clients in 401(k)s

Northern Trust planning leader sees the bill extending qualified charitable distributions to employer plans as a potential positive step — but advisors shouldn't overlook bigger holes in the strategy.

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management

SPONSORED Durability over scale: What actually defines a great advisory firm

Growth may get the headlines, but in my experience, longevity is earned through structure, culture, and discipline