First the good news: Four in five survey respondents (81%) told us they expect their
firms to have positive revenue grow in 2021. That’s up from 75 percent who felt
this buoyant at this time a year ago. Further, nearly two in five respondents (37%)
expect to see double-digit revenue growth in 2021 (i.e. 10% or greater)--up
from just one in four firms (28%) before the onset of the pandemic.
But when you start looking at the types of practices each of the 300-plus
respondents run, the differences in growth expectations are striking. For
instance, nearly all (98%) CFP/Wealth advisors survey expect to see topline revenue
growth in 2021, compared to just 75 percent of CPAs and 71 percent of Estate
Attorneys and Planned Giving Officers.
Further, Wealth Advisors were far more likely than other types of
advisors to anticipate double-digit revenue growth over the next 12
months.
Our data
indicates three in five Wealth Advisors (60%) expect to grow by 10-percent or
more in 2021, compared to two in five (40%) Estate Attorneys/Planned Giving
officers and less than one in four (23%) CPAs.
Expecting Double-Digit Revenue Growth in 2021
|
CPA Trendlines, HB Publishing & Marketing Company, LLC;
Investments & Wealth Institute, and The Financial Awareness Foundation, 2021.
All rights reserved
“Wealth Managers, by their very nature, tend to be more
optimistic than attorneys and CPAs,” observed Randy Hubschmidt, Partner, Fortis
Family Wealth (Valley Forge, PA). “Attorneys are largely trained how to
keep others (counterparties to contracts) from doing things. Similarly, CPAs
tend to be backwards looking – they report history whether that is financial
statement history or tax reporting history.” By contrast, Hubschmidt said wealth
managers tend to be trained in finance, which is a forward-looking discipline and
“less worried about the past.”
To a certain extent, CPA Karen Koch, Senior Director,
Source Advisors (Louisville, KY) agreed. “Whether a CPA, wealth
advisor, or attorney, we all struggle with how to grow the business even though
our clients continually ask for more services. We are uncertain how to
incorporate client needs to a revenue stream.” According to Koch, the future
growth of accounting firms is likely going to include strategic relationships
with vendors that can offer expertise not typically found within a professional
services firm. “We need to assure our clients we are the trusted advisor
that knows how to deliver fully defensible services with a team approach,” Koch
added.
While wealth advisors have been the most confident advisors throughout
the five-year history of our survey, estate planners showed the largest uptick
in optimism over the past year. Two in five estate planners/giving officers
(40%) expect to grow their
revenue by double-digits in
2021 To put that into perspective, less than three in 10 estate planners
(29%) expected double-digit growth at this time a year ago.
Wakeup Call
Estate Planner Randy Fox, Founder, Two Hawks Consulting
(Skokie, IL) told me recently that potential tax upheaval and likely
lowering of the estate tax exemption is driving more clients to planners’
doors. Fox also said COVID-19 woke up a lot of people to the fragility of life.
“When we see 40-year-old friends and 30-year-old coworkers dying in the
hospital, there’s a heightened sense of one’s own mortality,” related Fox. “Everyone
knows someone who died unexpectedly or was in crisis mode during the darkest
days of the pandemic. It’s especially sad to see young and middle-aged adults
gravely ill in the hospital without having health care powers of attorney
identified. Talk about a huge wakeup call.”
Estate planner Hyman Darling, Partner,
Bacon Wilson, PC (Springfield, MA) noted that more people than ever are aging
in place and are concerned about their future financial situations. He
also said parents are taking the initiative to plan for long term care, estate
taxes and addressing the issue of possibly “outliving” their savings. “Financial
planning companies are adding staff and developing new products to assist with
these issues, thus more planners will be marketing these strategies to the
clients.”
Kyle Walters, CIMA has the unique perspective of
a wealth advisor who has merge with several regional accounting firms to form Dallas-based
L&H CPAs. According to Walters, most CPAs are analytical
numbers people who have been drawn to their profession because they like the
sense of balance, order and control it demands (i.e., Debits = Credits).
However, with that mindset, Walters said it’s harder for CPAs than others to
get inside their heads and modify their habits or behaviors. “There’s no
standard, reg or best practice to follow when it comes to navigating the ‘gray
areas’ in a client’s financial life. Instead of one or two tax deadlines per
year, it’s an ongoing process in which they clients need their CPA all year
round. Their expert advice—not their ability to fill out rows and columns for
the government—is what clients increasingly value,” added Walters.
That’s something that wealth advisors and estate planners long ago figured out.
*** Ping me
any time if you’d like a copy of the 2021 survey findings or would like us to
present the findings to your firm or professional organization.
Conclusion
Our 2021 survey is a joint initiative of CPA Trendlines, Elite Resource Team,
The Financial Awareness Foundation, the Investments & Wealth
Institute and HB Publishing & Marketing Company. A total of 309 financial advisors from
throughout North America took part in a 25-question online survey during the
first quarter of 2021. Respondents received no financial or in-kind incentives
to complete the survey other than a promise to receive a pre-publication copy
of the results. Sincere thanks to my co-authors Rick Telberg (CPA Trendlines) and Valentino Sabuco
(The Financial Awareness
Foundation).
What’s your take? I’d like to hear from you.
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