Far from the infamous annuity sales pitches made over rubbery catered meals, seminars can play a crucial role in a financial advisor’s marketing strategy, helping to boost the client base.
But advisory teams must design seminars that build trust with their target customers, and they need to follow up with attendees in a way that drives conversions and referrals, according to a marketing expert and two registered investment advisory firm founders speaking on a panel at the
Advisors and wealth management firms
“If you’re empathetic, and you lean in and care about what they care about, that’s half the battle,” Bogich said. “We do about 70 seminars a day, and you can see the really good presenters are the ones who are empathetic, who understand the audience, talk to the audience about the audience’s issue and spend a whole lot less time talking about them.”
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Niche or generalist seminars?
He acknowledged that there is “a credibility aspect that you have to bring to the table,” but he added that the “human connection” of a thoughtful, interactive presentation will go much further toward winning clients than spending half of a 50-minute talk running down a curriculum vitae.
In addition, he suggested that advisors learn how technology tools can help automate follow-up contacts and that they decide whether to be a generalist or
Chicago-based registered investment advisory firm
“Trust goes hand-in-hand with your ability to educate the client. If you are educating the client, then they are subconsciously building trust towards you, right?” Corral said. “The way that we try to establish that trust is we lead heavily with education throughout our seminar. So our seminar isn’t just, like, ‘So how much money do you have, and let’s talk about investment, allocation strategies.'”
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Quality over quantity
Instead, they begin with a “little concept,” such as aligning an employee’s leave time to the right classifications and figuring out whether they could have days off left over that will result in extra paid time on the job, he noted.
“Are you overinsured through your group life insurance program, and you didn’t even realize that the cost was going to go up in the next five years, and you have outside life insurance?” Corral said. “Just that little tidbit of knowledge got you to save $200-$300 a month. And so little opportunities like that build trust. The way that we design our seminar is, we’re not talking about the investment side of things until actually the very end. So, at that point, we’ve provided so much value to you that, to some degree or another, you’ve formulated some level of trust.”
Naperville, Illinois-based
In its fourth year tying seminars into its
“Very few times the first touch is going to result in a sale. It will be a matter of follow-up,” Langford said. “The type of follow-up matters, as opposed to just the frequency. If you meet with somebody the first time on an investment or financial planning or wealth management engagement and then follow up and say, ‘Hey, are you ready to get together again?’ That’s not as juicy as sending them a note saying, ‘Hey, I was thinking about our last meeting. In the last meeting, you were talking about X, Y and Z. I’ve been doing some work on it and I have some thoughts I’d like to share. Are you free next week?’ Generally, the more value-add in the follow up, the more likely you are to get a positive response. But you have to absolutely keep at it.”
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