As the old
saying goes, “you only get one chance to make a first impression.” By the same
token, you only get one chance to leave a
lasting impression. At a time when four out five of high-net-worth individuals are
considering leaving their advisors at any given time, can you afford
to take a chance with your hard-won clients?
According to our recent Wealth Advisor Confidence Survey™ conducted in
association with The Financial Awareness Foundation, webinars, and low-cost, low-effort
social media channels such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat are
among the least most effective communication channels used by surveyed
financial planners, wealth advisors, estate planners and CPAs. % of Respondents Finding Channels “Very” or “Extremely” Valuable
CHANNEL
|
Advisors expecting to grow by
double-digits in 2018
|
All other Advisors
|
Gap
|
Public speaking
|
75%
|
59%
|
+16%
|
Writing articles for publication
|
69%
|
48%
|
+21%
|
Writing books/eBooks
|
54%
|
48%
|
+6%
|
Being quoted in the press
|
54%
|
30%
|
+24%
|
Blogging
|
48%
|
29%
|
+19%
|
Producing videos
|
48%
|
17%
|
+31%
|
Hosting client events
|
44%
|
35%
|
+9%
|
Publishing on LinkedIn
|
32%
|
20%
|
+12%
|
Webinars
|
22%
|
23%
|
-1%
|
Tweeting
|
4%
|
13%
|
-9%
|
Facebook
|
7%
|
13%
|
-6%
|
Instragram, Pinterest, Snapchat
|
4%
|
6%
|
-2%
|
Source: HB Publishing & Marketing
CO, LLC and The Financial Awareness Foundation,2017
Last week’s
post has more about the most effective channels for advisors.
Further, advisors
that expected to grow by double digits over the next 12 months were less likely
to use these low-cost channels than their less confident peers
By contrast, advisors who expect to grow by double digits over the next year are MORE likely than other advisors to blog, write articles for publication, produce videos and publish on LinkedIn.
In other words, the channels that require the most time and thought are the ones that high-performing advisors are most likely to use….we didn’t say most expensive. We just said the ones requiring the most mental “heavy lifting.”
By contrast, advisors who expect to grow by double digits over the next year are MORE likely than other advisors to blog, write articles for publication, produce videos and publish on LinkedIn.
In other words, the channels that require the most time and thought are the ones that high-performing advisors are most likely to use….we didn’t say most expensive. We just said the ones requiring the most mental “heavy lifting.”
Sure, but won’t
social media endear you to Millennial clients, prospects and workers? Not
exactly. Turns out that advisors in their 30s and 40s are generally less likely
than their older peers to find webinars and social media effective forms of
client communication (see table below).
% of Respondents Finding Channels “Very” or “Extremely” Valuable
CHANNEL
|
Advisors
age 30-39 |
Advisors
age 40-49 |
Advisors age 50+
|
Under 50 vs over 50*
|
Webinars
|
0%
|
22%
|
29%
|
16%
less likely |
Tweeting
|
0%
|
11%
|
10%
|
1%
more likely |
Facebook
|
0%
|
0%
|
14%
|
14%
less likely |
Instagram, Pinterest, Snapchat
|
0%
|
0%
|
7%
|
7%
less likely |
Source: HB Publishing & Marketing
CO, LLC and The Financial Awareness Foundation,2017
* Age 30-49 combined vs. Age 50-70+ combined
* Age 30-49 combined vs. Age 50-70+ combined
*** Is this what you’re finding among your own clients? Take the Wealth Advisor Confidence Survey™ and see how you stack up to
your peers (5 minutes, rapid results).
Conclusion
As my grandfather always said, “you get what you pay for.” Don’t cut corners when it comes to communicating clients. Be timely and be relevant. But unless you’re the President, take the time to put some thought into what you are saying, before you post, Tweet or publish. Or, as they say in academic circles, “publish or perish!”
TAGS:
Client communication, Wealth Advisor Confidence Survey 2017, best client
communication toolsConclusion
As my grandfather always said, “you get what you pay for.” Don’t cut corners when it comes to communicating clients. Be timely and be relevant. But unless you’re the President, take the time to put some thought into what you are saying, before you post, Tweet or publish. Or, as they say in academic circles, “publish or perish!”