Current economic and environmental conditions have created a unique situation for advisors. The demand for financial advice has skyrocketed over the past two years. At the same time, the pandemic and the subsequent great resignation have created a tight labor market where advisors are competing across industries for talent. These factors combined have left advisors pushing capacity, struggling to keep up with demand. Not only can client experience suffer as a result, but advisors themselves can also buckle under the stress and burnout. To address these challenges, advisors must use creative solutions that allow them to serve clients efficiently and comprehensively while also securing the talent and technology that can help them scale to meet demand.  

Solution 1: Automate with Technology

The right technology implemented in the right way can free up tremendous amounts of time for advisors and staff. Many CRMs, on demand marketing tools, and portfolio management software have built in functionality that lets an advisor automate many administrative tasks and communications. Client portals also allow clients to enter their information directly into the system, eliminating some data entry tasks while giving clients access to data they would otherwise need to get from an advisor or their team. This allows advisors and staff to focus more of their time on relationship building, prospecting, strategic initiatives, and client solution development, rather than on menial tasks.

Solution 2: Fine Tune Processes to Create Efficiency

Knowing what to do when not only creates consistency in practice operations and client experience, but it also allows you to do it faster than without it. Evaluate your processes and look for redundancies that can be eliminated as well as time sucking bottlenecks. Leverage best practices from peers and franchise consultants and look for turnkey processes wherever possible.

Solution 3: Leverage Outsourcing 

Many advisors are tapping into the power of outsourcing in many areas of their practice, especially in client meeting prep and financial plan production. Advisors recognize that their unique value proposition lies in their ability to generate prospects and to develop the client relationship. Not all advisors have enough demand to justify hiring a full-time staff member to handle meeting prep and planning. So, purchasing service on an ad hoc basis not only allows them to scale up and down to meet demand, but it also lets them do so in a way that is more cost effective than hiring someone in-house. It also allows an advisor to tap into specialized expertise and to appear as though they have a bigger team than they actually do.

Solution 4: Tap Into Recruiting and Onboarding Services

Sometimes it is necessary to hire an employee to meet demand. But developing job descriptions, posting ads, sorting through resumes, and vetting through candidates is a time consuming and frustrating endeavor. Though its necessary it can take valuable time away from serving clients. Not to mention it’s not a skill that every advisor possesses. Leveraging a third-party recruiting service allows you to outsource a significant portion of the busy work related to finding a team member. Pairing it with a new hire training service ensures that you not only find the right candidate, but that you also get them up and running quickly, so they can truly help the advisor meet the needs of clients.

Meeting increased demand under these unusual economic and environmental conditions requires a new way of thinking about your practice. Looking for opportunities to streamline and improve processes while leveraging technology will help you create a predictable and manageable workflow. Tapping into outsourced services for client meeting prep, financial planning, recruiting, and new hire training allows you to achieve scale without a huge investment. Combined, these solutions will allow you to navigate the capacity crisis facing the industry and continue to do business in a way that makes you proud.

Are You Facing Capacity Challenges?

When the demands of your practice exceed your ability to deliver, you need smart, scalable solutions that can grow with you and your practice.

About the Author: Ben Thelen

Ben Thelen serves as Vice President for Key Management Group. As a former financial advisor, Ben brings an intimate knowledge of the inner workings of a financial practice together with sound practice management principles. He uses this knowledge to help advisors identify key gaps and opportunities, design practice management systems, and implement solutions to help advisors improve client experience, practice efficiency, and drive growth.

Share This Post

Subscribe to Keys to Success

Receive timely articles and news on upcoming webinars and events by subscribing Keys to Success.


For articles and white papers on acquisitions and successions, please go to our sister site Advisor Legacy.

Related Posts

  • Your financial advisor practice is growing, and to keep growing you know you need help. Many advisors who reach this point believe the next move is to hire an AFA. Unfortunately, this is one area where many advisors make their biggest– and most costly–mistakes. Before pulling the AFA trigger, ask yourself these questions.

    Are You […]

  • Many advisors venture out on their own in order to grow a vibrant book of business. As the client roster grows, the need to bring on more help to manage clients also grows. But the skills that make you a great financial advisor do not make you a great practice leader. To effectively transition from […]

  • Your practice will go through many stages of development as you start, grow, and eventually leave the business. In order to successfully develop your practice along the way, it’s important to know where to focus your efforts and what your practice should look like in each stage.

    Typically, a financial practice will go through four stages […]

  • There are many elements that define the success of a practice–the quality of clients, delivery of service, recurring revenue, and more.

    Ultimately, the value of a practice comes down to profitability. A number of factors affect profitability, but one of the most significant is the amount of resources spent supporting low value clients.

    Generally speaking, any investment […]

  • As your practice grows, you may find yourself considering bringing on a Junior Advisor to help you manage your book of business so you can keep your focus on growing and building the practice.

    Ideally, this arrangement should help you not only grow in volume, but also improve the profitability and strength of your firm. Unfortunately, […]