Avoiding management overload by delegating

Avoiding management overload by delegating
Julia Carlson learned to manage her fast-growing practice by spreading responsibility and accountability across the leadership team.
NOV 09, 2018

Julia Carlson never had much trouble attracting clients to the advisory firm she launched in 2009. But when she started growing by about $40 million a year, she began to recognize the firm's lack of business structure was a potential calamity in the making. Ms. Carlson, who manages $240 million as the founder and chief executive of Financial Freedom Wealth Management Group, saw her responsibilities as a business manager expanding, which was taking time away from her true strengths. "I was trying to manage everything, and I'm a horrible manager, because I'm more of a visionary," she said. "We never had a formal structure that gave us a track to run on." Even as she was building her client base and assets were growing, Ms. Carlson was managing a business with five different offices spread across Oregon. She was worried that growth might stagnate as she "tried to hold on to all the different aspects of the company." Lisa Dion, founder of the consulting firm Strategic Advisor Solutions, said Ms. Carlson's challenge is common among advisory firms that grow quickly but without a formal plan for building and managing the business part of the firm. "Most firms need a foundation for growth, but Julia already had that because she was already growing," Ms. Dion said. "But she needed a clear vision for growth so that the firm wasn't running her." Starting from the premise that "When everything is important, nothing is important," Ms. Dion helped Ms. Carlson identify and establish specific goals, and most importantly, delegate responsibility. Even though Ms. Carlson wasn't ready to give up her ownership stake in the business, one of the first steps was to create a top-level leadership team that would "take ownership" of helping to manage the business, she said. The advisory firm has 12 employees, including four client-facing professionals. Ms. Carlson created a three-person leadership team that includes herself. "Before the leadership team was just me, but now it's me and two others," she said. "I'm now delegating to others, so everyone has their goals and end results." To make sure there is action behind the structure, the leadership team meets weekly, and the status of specific goals will be measured against a scorecard. The scorecard, which Ms. Dion helped create, includes a range of near-term, ongoing, and longer-term objectives and projects that focus on revenues, assets under management, the development of a digital advice platform, the status of website inquiries and how many prospect meetings produce new clients. "You take big things you want to accomplish and then break them down into smaller pieces, and if you're way off track, the other teammates will find ways to help," Ms. Carlson said. "It's like having a pulse for your business, and instead of going to everyone and trying to find out what's going on, everyone goes to the Google doc." Tip sheet: • Create an accountability chart, which is different from an organizational chart, so that everyone is held accountable for specific tasks and projects. • Develop a scorecard system to keep tabs on what is happening throughout the company, so owners and managers can stay abreast of projects and goals without having everyone report to one person. • Develop measurable performance indicators that focus on both leading and lagging indicators of business growth. • Have all potential hires take a personality test to determine if and how they will best fit into the organization. This is key to building a team of people with different sets of strengths.

Latest News

SEC to lose Hester Peirce, deepening a commissioner crisis
SEC to lose Hester Peirce, deepening a commissioner crisis

The "Crypto Mom" departure would leave the SEC commission with just two members and no Democratic commissioners on the panel.

Florida B-D, RIA owner pitches bold long-term plan to sell to advisors
Florida B-D, RIA owner pitches bold long-term plan to sell to advisors

IFP Securities’ owner, Bill Hamm, has a long-term plan for the firm and its 279 financial advisors.

Fintech bytes: Vanilla, Wealth.com forge new estate planning partnerships
Fintech bytes: Vanilla, Wealth.com forge new estate planning partnerships

Meanwhile, a Osaic and Envestnet ink a new adaptive wealthtech partnership to better support the firm's 10,000-plus advisors, and RIA-focused VastAdvisor unveils native integrations with leading CRMs.

Fiduciary failure: Ex-advisor who sold practice fined after clients lost millions
Fiduciary failure: Ex-advisor who sold practice fined after clients lost millions

A former Alabama investment advisor and ex-Kestra rep has been permanently barred and penalized after clients he promised to protect got caught in a $2.6 million fraud.

Why the evolution of ETFs is changing the due diligence equation
Why the evolution of ETFs is changing the due diligence equation

As more active strategies get packaged into the ETF wrapper, advisors and investors have to look beyond expense ratios as the benchmark for value.

SPONSORED Are hedge funds the missing ingredient?

Wellington explores how multi strategy hedge funds may enhance diversification

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