| Lifestyle
planning and elder counseling: Differentiate yourself with new approach
to older clients
Barry LaValley
Picture your
business five years from now: Close to one in three clients will
be over 55. And with your clients all five years older, you'll probably
be discussing issues with them that you don't talk about today.
To serve this client base effectively, you will have spent time
understanding all of the key issues associated with retirement lifestyle
planning, elder counseling, bereavement and legacy planning —
you even attained a professional designation that tells your marketplace
that you specialize in retirement lifestyle or eldercare planning.
In fact, your
expertise in helping clients over the age of 55 with their specific
issues has become your brand in the marketplace. It has enabled
you to differentiate yourself from all of the other advisors out
there...
Let's return
to 2006. This is a great time to develop new business. Think about
it — seldom have we seen so many "disaffected" clients
questioning their relationship with their advisors.
Performance
has been an issue with many, and communication between advisors
and clients has often been strained. If your client relationships
have not been negatively affected over the past two years, then
you truly have something to offer the marketplace in general.
No
magic bullet
I wish that I could give you the "magic bullet" that would
automatically turn prospects into clients. Many advisors believe
that if they just phone or visit prospects, they can convince them
to become clients. Of course, there is more to it than that —
prospects have to believe that they can get something different
from you.
You may be trying
to market yourself to prospects by telling them you are a better
financial planner or a superior investment picker. While your present
clients may be able to vouch for you, your prospects will likely
take this approach with a grain of salt.
A
different position
You really have to be different when you sell yourself, or there
will be no compelling reason for a prospect to become your client.
If you are going to be seen as truly different, then you will have
to position yourself in a different market than your competition.
More
than a simple strategy
The lifestyle-planning approach is not just a planning strategy
that means you ask your client more questions about their life goals.
It combines elements of personal coaching, education on life transitions
and lifestyle issues, and places money in the context of the client's
life.
The advantage
in positioning yourself as a retirement lifestyle planner is that
you carve out an area that is virgin territory for most advisors
and create a marketing focus to build your prospecting strategy
on.
As a retirement
lifestyle specialist, you place financial planning in the context
of life issues that are important to 10 million Canadian baby boomers
and over 80 million Americans approaching this life transition.
Specializing
in seniors
In recent years, several certification programs have been introduced
or become more popular. These programs are aimed at helping advisors
better understand over-50 market, not just the financial aspects
but the emotional and lifestyle implications of over-50.
I can't name
many financial advisors in Canada who have positioned themselves
as specialists in the over-50 market. While it is true that many
seasoned advisors have become experts in the eldercare market simply
because their clients were aging, I have yet to see anyone use this
as a marketing differentiator. In the U.S., for example, a growing
number of advisors are specializing in the over-50 demographic and
using this as a marketing program.
Getting
ready for the next wave
Think about your position in your market. You know that there are
increasing numbers of 55-plus clients out there who are looking
for something different. Typically, they are not as interested in
accumulation strategies as they were when they were 35. Where do
they go to get financial planning assistance from an advisor who
specifically focuses on issues pertaining to this demographic?
There aren't
that many ways to set you apart, but this is a way that makes sense.
To become familiar with all of the things that you need to understand
in order to hold yourself out as a "CSA," it might be
worth taking the program offered by the CSA and getting your certification
(check out their Web site at www.canadacsa.com or www.csa-csa.com
in the US).
If you look
where your marketplace is going, it makes good sense to position
yourself and the services you offer to meet the needs of tomorrow's
clients. That's why the life-planning approach and eldercare planning
will be the next wave in the financial services industry.
Barry
LaValley is the President of The Retirement Lifestyle Center and
a partner in The Life First Approach. His book, "Put the life
into your practice" can be found at www.lifefirstapproach.com. |