Move beyond mere advertising with these 9 questions

Consider more-thoughtful questions to round out a fully fledged plan.
FEB 20, 2014
Advisers' marketing plans often focus on tactics, such as advertising, social media and public relations, without a strategy for selecting those tactics. By asking more-thoughtful questions, advisers can align their audience, message and tactics to increase revenue. 1. What do I offer that differs from my competitors? Most advisers start with the basics: I offer comprehensive financial planning for high-net-worth clients. Great — so do thousands of other advisers. Try the “rule of logical opposites.” Your competitors will never claim they offer inferior customer service, so claiming good customer service won't differentiate you. Keep at this until you find that unique value proposition that resonates with you and your best clients. 2. What are my growth goals? The answer isn't always more clients. Maybe you need more assets from existing clients, or different clients altogether. Review your client list and look for the sweet spot: the right combination of the time they consume, assets accumulated and revenue produced. Knowing whether you need more clients, more assets or both guides your marketing. 3. Who is my target? Based on your client list review, target your message. If your review revealed a large number of clients with small accounts but the potential for gathering more assets, focus messages on client retention, referrals and revealing more assets. If you have a small number of clients who you feel have the majority of their assets with you already, include retention and referral messages, then use what you know about them to find prospects like them. 4. What are my competitors doing and saying? Think about the marketing strategies and messages your competitors use, then look for the markets or channels they may ignore. For example, if Elite Firm is targeting your community's ultrahigh-net-worth, the mass affluent market may be underserved. 5. Do I have my core marketing components in place? Your answers to the questions above comprise your core brand. Now ensure you have the following: logo, tag line and brand design/color scheme; updated, brand-consistent website with adviser and staff photos, services offered and contact info; client welcome kit; brand-consistent office signage; and business cards. 6. Where can I have the biggest impact? Small budgets do best when concentrated in a single effort for a specific period of time, rather than spread thinly over long periods or multiple tactics. If you target business owners, a well-worked networking event may provide more leads (at lower cost) than one radio ad during the college team's half-time show. A full-page color ad in a lifestyle magazine for six months may reach more high-net-worth women than a year's worth of smaller ads in the daily newspaper. 7. How will I measure results? An easy way is consistently asking prospects, “How did you hear about me?” Be prepared for multiple answers — your message probably hit the target several times before he took action. 8. Can I commit? Marketing and marriage often suffer from the same affliction: lack of commitment. Marketing campaigns can take months or years to reach their full potential. Set and manage your own expectations, or you'll never get a true reading of what does and doesn't work for you. 9. Can I afford professional help? Spend your time meeting with clients and prospects, not agonizing over wording for an ad or calling venues for an event. Get professional help if you need it. Depending on your target market, and your ideas for strategies and tactics, you might need an advertising agency, event planner, freelance copywriter or customer contact manager. Kirk Hulett is executive vice president of strategy and practice management at Securities America Inc. He also hosts a biweekly practice management podcast on www.advisorpod.com.

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