Where are the women? Bridging the gender gap in the advice business

Where are the women? Bridging the gender gap in the advice business
Tips for what advisers can do to build awareness of who they are, what they do and what they represent.
MAR 20, 2015
When Ashely Herb, a personal financial planning student at Kansas State University, decided to change her major from accounting, she had a lot of convincing to do. The biggest hurdle, Ms. Herb told the audience at the Women Adviser Summit in Chicago Wednesday, was persuading her father that it was going to be OK. “He looked at me and said, 'I don't want you to sell insurance for the rest of your life,'” she recalled. Ms. Herb made a case for her decision by doing research on the profession and finding out what a job as a financial planner would entail, what kinds of opportunities there are in the profession and what kind of salary she could expect to make. “There's so much more I can do with this” than just selling insurance, she said. (More: What draws women advisers to certain IBDs) As the proportion of women who have a certified financial planner designation has stalled at 23% for the past 10 years, the financial advice industry has struggled to change the perception of the profession to attract more new female professionals like Ms. Herb. “A lot of women think it's so math-related that you have to practically be a scientist to get into it,” Marilyn Dimitroff, director of wealth management and principal at Planning Alternatives. “The focus of it is actually much more behavior than math.” At the summit, Ms. Herb and Ms. Dimitroff and professionals from the CFP Board and the University of Illinois offered their tips for what financial advisers can do to help bridge the gender gap in the industry. GET THE WORD OUT Now that Ms. Herb has switched her focus to studying personal financial planning, she said she finds she also has to explain what the profession is to her peers. Ms. Herb's experience is in keeping with the CFP Board's research, according to Eleanor Blayney, consumer advocate for the CFP Board. “There is not good awareness of who we are, what we represent and what we do,” she said. In a survey completed by the CFP Board, almost half of men in financial services said they are aware about the financial planning profession and know about the CFP designation versus just 25% of women. That 25% of women, however, is far more likely to pursue the designation, Ms. Blayney said, which makes it crucial to get the world out about the profession to more women. (More: Lynn Faust: Blazing a trail for women in advice) “If you are a CFP, explain to another woman, a student, your daughter, why you became a CFP, why you became a financial planner and what you found,” Ms. Blayney said. “I think that goes a long way.” LEND A HAND Ms. Dimitroff said her firm is actively helping to encourage high school and college students to consider careers as financial advisers by inviting them to come and spend a day at the office. The firm recently hosted a high school student who was able to sit in on a meeting about pricing financial planning. “That kind of 101 experience has been really valuable in terms of helping students understand what we do,” Ms. Dimitroff said. Paul Ellinger, head of agricultural and consumer economics at the University of Illinois, said that professionals who are willing to spend time with students the way Ms. Dimitroff's colleagues does offer aspiring professionals a priceless experience. The University of Illinois currently has 100 students in its personal financial planning program, which was established five years ago. “Be a mentor. Reach out to someone like [Ms. Herb] or to a university to be a mentor,” Mr. Ellinger said. This story has been updated to indicate that Ms. Herb attends Kansas State University.

Latest News

Volatility has been roiling the markets. But advisors have got the tools to deal with it
Volatility has been roiling the markets. But advisors have got the tools to deal with it

Market volatility can be stressful, but it also represents opportunity for advisors and their clients.

JPMorgan's succession clock is ticking — and this time, insiders say it's real
JPMorgan's succession clock is ticking — and this time, insiders say it's real

After years of mixed signals and shifting timelines from Jamie Dimon, Wall Street sources suggest the race to lead JPMorgan Chase has entered its decisive stretch.

How FINRA's updated gift rule forces firms to rethink compliance workflows
How FINRA's updated gift rule forces firms to rethink compliance workflows

Advisors and broker-dealers adjusting to the March 2026 threshold change face bigger challenges around back-end monitoring than the new dollar limit itself.

Has Corient expanded again with another international acquisition?
Has Corient expanded again with another international acquisition?

Wealth management firm has seen an aggressive period of growth in the past year.

AI spending in asset management tops $100m as agent adoption stalls
AI spending in asset management tops $100m as agent adoption stalls

Survey reveals widening gap between investment ambition and workforce readiness across the sector

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.