Foreign.
Speaker BWelcome to Ditch the Suits podcast, where we share insights nobody in the financial services industry wants you to know about.
Speaker BWe're here to help you get the most from your money in life.
Speaker BSo buckle up and welcome to Ditch the Suits.
Speaker AIt's time.
Speaker AThis is the first time we've been together in a room.
Speaker AHi.
Speaker BOh, here we are.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AFirst recording in three, four years.
Speaker BFour plus years.
Speaker AHow long ago was it?
Speaker BYeah, January 2021.
Speaker ARecording the same room.
Speaker AWelcome to our new studio.
Speaker AThis is exciting today.
Speaker BVery exciting.
Speaker AYeah, it should be a little bit more fun.
Speaker ANormally we're yelling at each other through a wall.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt's pretty hard to communicate with a co host when you can't see them and, you know, there's like no visual.
Speaker BI'm just going to jump in.
Speaker BAre you going to jump in?
Speaker BSo we've survived this far four years in, you know, getting to this point, but now being in the same room, we actually get to interact.
Speaker AWell, the other thing is nice too.
Speaker AThere's normally like a lag on our Internet.
Speaker ASo you're like over here talking, I'm over there trying to hear what say, and we can't really figure out if we're talking.
Speaker BIt's like a bad dubbed European movie.
Speaker BBut we figured it out now.
Speaker BYeah, just like that.
Speaker AJust like that.
Speaker AAll right, well, I guess we got to get started today.
Speaker ASo we're going to talk about the state of the financial industry.
Speaker AWe've got a survey that we were looking at online, and one of the things that we want to do is bring perspective about how the financial industry works.
Speaker AWhat are other clients thinking about or other people out in the community who use financial advisors?
Speaker AWhat are they thinking about?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AAnd kind of what are some takeaways from that and maybe even from a perspective standpoint, what can our listeners take to say, how do I better engage with financial advisors?
Speaker AAnd maybe what should I be looking for?
Speaker AOr what are the pitfalls?
Speaker ASo we've got this survey and it talks about trust and performance as a top quality that people are looking for in a financial advisor.
Speaker AAnd the question is, for people listening, is it trust, is it performance, or is it something completely different?
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AAnd we'll go through the survey kind of what it says.
Speaker AWe'll talk about where the survey comes from and everything.
Speaker ABut my question was too, going through the survey was, does it just have to be one thing?
Speaker ADoes it have to be a winner or loser here?
Speaker AOr could there be like multiple things that people are actually looking at?
Speaker AA financial advisor saying, this is really?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AI want to work with a financial advisor.
Speaker AThis is what's really important to me.
Speaker AAnd like, for example, don't you think that you deserve to work with somebody that you can both trust and who performs well?
Speaker ALike if you go to a doctor, let's say you're gonna go to a surgeon, you're gonna have heart surgery and you really trust a heart surgeon, but they're really not a good surgeon.
Speaker AYeah, that's a little bit of a concern.
Speaker AOr they're a really good surgeon, but you can't trust them because sometimes they operate on like, you know, different parts of you that you didn't like actually ask them to operate on.
Speaker AI know it's funny, but still, it's like, shouldn't you be able to have trust and performance?
Speaker AHave your cake and eat it too.
Speaker AI don't know why we have to, you know, shortchange ourselves.
Speaker ASo I think through this we're going to talk about a paradigm shift a little bit from, you know, you can, I think you can expect more than just one or the other.
Speaker ABut we want to look at what maybe the general market is saying and maybe what's trying to shape and drive the industry.
Speaker ASo welcome to our discussion and hopefully we're going to help our listeners raise their expectations a little bit.
Speaker BYeah, and I always like, I mean, this is a brand new series today, so welcome in to Ditch the Suits.
Speaker BI'm Steve Campbell, senior marketing director at Seed Planning Group.
Speaker BAnd for the first time in the same room we got Travis Moss, our CEO at.
Speaker AHe's the one with the hair.
Speaker BYeah, the one with the hair.
Speaker BIn case this is your first time seeing us in four years, this is the differentiation.
Speaker ABut for the other guy.
Speaker AI think they just call me the other guy.
Speaker BYeah, that's what's in the show credits.
Speaker BBut Seed is a fee only financial planning firm.
Speaker BSo we have a fiduciary obligation to put our clients best interests first.
Speaker BAnd the show has been four years of us bringing our experiences day to day what we're seeing day in, day out to help you as a listener really get the most from your money in life.
Speaker BAnd this is going to be a fun one because it's a brand new series.
Speaker BSo if you're brand new to ditch the Suits, Travis does a really nice job of coming up with topics and we give you series one episode at a time, really digestible.
Speaker BAnd these are always fun ones because this is not necessarily our own data.
Speaker BThis is what the Internet and individuals are saying.
Speaker BAnd we're just going to kind of extrapolate it a little bit.
Speaker BLike, what does this actually mean for you as a listener?
Speaker BDoes it apply to you?
Speaker BAnd we got some cool stuff we're going to put in the show notes.
Speaker BSo make sure you pay attention to those, those links for where these surveys are as well as maybe our own survey because we'd like some information from you too as well.
Speaker AYeah, we want some feedback.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd I think this is going to be more fun.
Speaker AI think it's a lot more interactive being able to sit next to you and with this beautiful fake fern between us.
Speaker ALike the visual is really good.
Speaker AI think the energy is really good.
Speaker ASo we should have a little bit of fun today.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd this is just the beginning.
Speaker BSo let's go.
Speaker BLet's pause and hear a word from our sponsor.
Speaker BThis episode is brought to you by the One Big Thing podcast.
Speaker BIf you're in the thick of life as a parent or a spouse and just trying to grow as a person, then you won't want to miss this show.
Speaker BHosted by Steve Campbell, the One Big Thing is an interview style podcast where he brings you guests from all walks of life.
Speaker BPicture professional athletes, influencers, business owners, and even some rockin stay at home moms.
Speaker BEach episode will bring you as a listener, a life hack or a way of looking at life that will help you move from inspiration to transform.
Speaker BListen to the One Big Thing podcast and all major podcast platforms today.
Speaker BSo Travis got this survey, trust her performance.
Speaker BAnd you know, we get callers all the time who really don't understand how our industry works.
Speaker BAnd you've done a really nice job of trying to address the industry, help people understand that.
Speaker BUnfortunately it is a huge marketing machine.
Speaker BYou know, story based selling is what keeps people in.
Speaker BBut now you got individuals, they're on podcasts because they care about their money, they care about their family, they want to make good decisions.
Speaker BAnd so to have a larger conversation around, really what's more important to you?
Speaker BIs it trust or performance?
Speaker BAnd why do you have to give away one, maybe not to have the other?
Speaker BSo talk to us about the importance of why this episode matters.
Speaker AWell, it's hard work.
Speaker AI think if you want good results in anything, it's hard work.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWe were picking on doctors there.
Speaker AIf you want good results with your medical, you need to go find the right doctors.
Speaker AIf you go to the dentist or an eye doctor, if you go to an attorney, if you go to an accountant, if you, I mean, how many people will interview more than one roofer, you know, and get more than one quote, you know, or somebody.
Speaker AThey're gonna invite somebody into the house to babysit your kids.
Speaker AYou know, I think with financial planning and investments and stuff, we just want it to be easy.
Speaker ACause it's confusing and the industry does everything I think it can to make it even more confusing because like hey look, if you can't figure it out, you have to hire us.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd I think people should hire people because maybe they can't figure it out but also because there's a big time commitment for it and they're like look, I could properly figure it out.
Speaker AI could probably make it my second job, but I don't want to.
Speaker AI'll go like live my life and have fun.
Speaker AI want my money working for me and I don't want to have to run everything.
Speaker AThat's a better reason than feeling like oh, I'm just helpless because they say I'm helpless and so I need to hire somebody.
Speaker AAnd I think that that gets at the whole thing between trust and performance.
Speaker ASo we have this article that was written on wealthmanagement.com so that's just somehow I got on that subscribe to that and I get these articles every day from wealth Management and this one happened to be titled Investors Value Trust in Advisors more than performance and it's from January of this year so this is kind of cool.
Speaker ATheir conclusion from the survey is that trust is the most important thing.
Speaker AI think the survey says a lot more than that but.
Speaker ABut it definitely kind of like that's the end result.
Speaker AI think it's maybe a little bit of a guided survey but.
Speaker ABut it's certainly something to talk about because the financial industry, if you Google least trusted industries, I think politicians are probably first, weather people probably second and financial advisors might be third somewhere on there.
Speaker AYou know what I think people trust car salesmen sometimes more than they trust investment people.
Speaker BSad state of affairs.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou know used car sales, right?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo this survey was conducted by Cap and Tel I no idea what what this company is.
Speaker AI didn't, I didn't dig into the behind the scenes on the survey.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AI just think that the talking points from the survey are at least worth discussing which is a business to business fintech company.
Speaker AYou and they use logica logica I guess L I G I C a research to collect a survey from August to September last year.
Speaker ASo they reached out to a thousand investors and they said a thousand investors, give us your opinions.
Speaker AIn order to qualify for the survey you had to have more than $50,000 of investable assets and also work with a financial advisor.
Speaker ASo they wanted to know people who are actually engaged with a financial advisor, not people who are hypothetical about it.
Speaker AA couple of things that I would say there.
Speaker AFirst and foremost, $50,000 investable assets, probably not enough assets unless you understand the demographics of the underlying group to really, you know, use this as a, as an authority.
Speaker AAnd what I mean by that is if anybody's ever played like Texas Hold'em on the weekend with their friends, and if it's a $20 buy in, people do wacky stuff, right?
Speaker AThey don't really care.
Speaker AIt's only 20, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker AIn the investing world, $50,000, although it's your money and it's a lot of money to you in the investing world.
Speaker AI mean, that doesn't even meet the minimums for a lot of firms.
Speaker ASo those folks maybe are limited in options or limited in experience and maybe not as interested.
Speaker AA lot of times we'll have retirement investors that are a bit older or a bit younger and they've accumulated some retirement monies in a 401 plan.
Speaker AIt's kind of like found money to them.
Speaker AIt's not that important yet.
Speaker ASo they don't really have like whatever happens to it, happens to it.
Speaker AAnd So I think $50,000, if you did a poll with investors that had a million dollars performance, is probably gonna be a little bit higher.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd they're gonna approach the trust part a little bit differently.
Speaker AI think when you have less money and you're so reliant on it, or you just, you don't wanna have to pay attention, maybe trust is a little bit more of an issue.
Speaker BWell, and I find that the three factors are fascinating.
Speaker BThe thousand investors, I mean, that's a pretty roundabout number, right?
Speaker BIt's not like you went out and interviewed 50 people and got them, but 50,000 like you said.
Speaker BOkay, is that really a valuable number to start with?
Speaker BAnd then even just you and I have talked about the word financial advisor.
Speaker BWhat does that mean to you?
Speaker BBecause we just had Jess Blake on, she crushed four episodes talking about a real financial advisor.
Speaker BA real financial advisor, not a so.
Speaker ACalled a real one.
Speaker BA real planner who has credentials next to her name.
Speaker BAnd we talked about you're a certified trust and fiduciary advisor.
Speaker BTo us, that's awesome.
Speaker BBut to you as a consumer, like, what does that mean to you?
Speaker BAnd when you see cfp, when you see some of these designations, does that really mean that there's more professionalism or did they Just study really hard, cram first continuing ed and pass an exam so they could use it.
Speaker AYou can be a CFP and be an insurance agent.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so when you say financial advisor, you get insurance agents, you got brokers, people at banks, registered representative, we've done episodes in the past.
Speaker ARegistered representatives, you've got investment advisor representatives, you got captive people, you've got people can do whatever.
Speaker AYou got fee only, you got fee based, which is just a joke of a term.
Speaker AAnd then you got commission advisors.
Speaker ASo you've got like all these so called financial advisors.
Speaker AAnd a lot of them are just product or program salespeople.
Speaker AAnd so when I go out and I ask you know, a thousand people with $50,000 of assets who have a financial advisor, I probably ought to also categorize it and say these are a thousand people that work with insurance agen as their primary advisor.
Speaker AOr these are a thousand people that work with, you know, brokers as their primary advisor or fee only planners as their primary primary advisor.
Speaker AI think that you'd probably get some, some more variation in the answers here.
Speaker BYeah, I'd also be curious too because again, talking with people for the first time.
Speaker BCallers love connecting with you guys.
Speaker BSometimes people even think they're 401k providers.
Speaker BThey're financial advisor.
Speaker BLike I got a guy and it's just the guy everyone else has at your job that gives you 15 minutes to sit down in the lunch cafeteria.
Speaker AI got a guy we're going to bring on later.
Speaker AThis, I didn't tell you about that yet, but I got a guy who's gonna, who was one of those guys.
Speaker BBreaking news.
Speaker AHe was one of those guys.
Speaker AHe used to go into the lunchrooms and work with people.
Speaker ANow he's a full fledged financial planner.
Speaker BOh, I, I know who you're.
Speaker BYeah, I'm drinking what you're saying.
Speaker AYeah, we signed him up today.
Speaker AIt was a big, it was a big deal.
Speaker AHe didn't have a choice.
Speaker BHe didn't have a choice.
Speaker ANo, he did, he did.
Speaker AIt wasn't much of a choice.
Speaker ABut, but even just we asked him.
Speaker BWhat day, even just that survey, it's great, the number, it's cool to know you have a baseline figure.
Speaker BSo a thousand people gotta have $50,000 and then they claim that they have a financial advisor.
Speaker BAnd it's like even two, you get a call from a third party logica and it's like, do you have a financial advisor?
Speaker BI wonder how many people are like crap.
Speaker BYes I do.
Speaker BAnd it's like, do you really.
Speaker BSo the term financial advisor to could be my kid.
Speaker BSo called in just, just as a point, because we got new listeners.
Speaker BI love the idea that you said fee based.
Speaker BWhat a, what a ridiculous word.
Speaker BAnd I, I sometimes correct people when they say, yeah, seeds, fee based.
Speaker BAnd I say, no, we're not, we're not.
Speaker BWe're fee only.
Speaker BAnd it's never to be demeaning to individuals, but I want them to really understand that when we say fee only, it means our people are salaried, no sales.
Speaker BThe commissions, they aren't there.
Speaker BFee based means you can operate in one of two ways.
Speaker BHybrid, flat fee.
Speaker BAnd it's very confusing for individuals.
Speaker BSo I know we're picking up a lot of new listeners today.
Speaker BThe words matter.
Speaker BAnd I think that's really important because when it's overwhelming, it's easy to go, yeah, yeah, I got it.
Speaker BBut the words really, really do matter.
Speaker BAnd we've recorded, we've written blogs about it.
Speaker BUnderstanding termin and what you're getting into is really the baseline start for most people.
Speaker BThey got to understand.
Speaker ASo let's go back to the survey.
Speaker A72% of people, their number one thing with financial advisors, they want somebody they can trust.
Speaker ASo 72%, it's like almost three out of four.
Speaker AI thought that was interesting, especially because of some of the other answers.
Speaker A39% said that to get trust, when I see a proven track record, which is kind of funny.
Speaker ASo they want to make sure that there's performance there in order to earn the trust.
Speaker A39% are saying that performance is part of the trust equation.
Speaker AThat means 61% of people are basically saying, I'm not worried about performance.
Speaker AI just want to make sure you don't steal my money from me.
Speaker AThat's like, as an industry, that's appalling.
Speaker AIt's absolutely appalling that more people are worried about being robbed or ripped off than they are about whether or not they actually get any performance, which is just another interesting thing.
Speaker ALike, how do you gauge trust?
Speaker AI trust you because I like you.
Speaker AWe go golfing together, we go to church together or something like that.
Speaker AAnd if I'm not performing but I'm kind of presenting myself as though I'm performing, isn't that undermining trust?
Speaker ASo, like, this is where I'm going with this.
Speaker AI really think that trust and performance have to walk together, not separate.
Speaker A31% said that both equipping them with knowledge to make informed financial decisions and personalized advice could help them develop trust.
Speaker ASo at Least a third of the people out there are saying, look, if you could actually be a financial planner and educate me and army with knowledge so that I better understand my financial situation, I'm going to trust you more.
Speaker ASo you've got 39% of people say, if you have a track record, I'm going to appreciate that.
Speaker AAnd then 31% of people say, if you could educate me or help me understand things better, I'm going to trust you more.
Speaker AWhy isn't that number higher?
Speaker AWhy aren't more people saying, I want to see performance and you better educate me, you better help me.
Speaker AI'm hiring you to help me, not sell me stuff.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd you and I have talked about.
Speaker BThe word trust is fascinating because there's layers to saying the word trust.
Speaker BIf you come to me as your financial advisor and say, hey, what do I do with my taxes?
Speaker BAnd you go, travis, sorry, I can't give you tax advice.
Speaker BIs trust being established that I acknowledged I can't give you tax advice?
Speaker BYou know what I mean?
Speaker BLike with individuals, are they being told by financial professionals what they can and can't do?
Speaker BSo that's establishing trust.
Speaker BBut it may be that a professional is also not giving the full value or getting into planning.
Speaker BAnd so the word trust is fascinating.
Speaker BIs it just that I know you're not gonna steal my money?
Speaker BIs that trust?
Speaker BOkay, that's fine.
Speaker BBut what is also not being discussed?
Speaker BIs it being forthright?
Speaker BIs it communication that's building trust?
Speaker BThere's a lot of moving factors.
Speaker AWell, how do you.
Speaker AIf you wanna trust somebody?
Speaker AIs it, this person has a ton of confidence.
Speaker AThis person went to Ivy League.
Speaker AThis person has a cfp.
Speaker AThis person looks right, right?
Speaker AThey're wearing the right suit or the right clothes, are very clean looking.
Speaker AThey look like they've got their stuff together.
Speaker AHow do you actually get trust?
Speaker AWe've talked about.
Speaker AWe did an episode years ago where we gave out questions to ask your financial advisor.
Speaker AAnd people still call up and ask for that.
Speaker AYou know, what was it?
Speaker AThe 13 questions ask your financial advisor or ask somebody when you're interviewing them to be your financial advisor.
Speaker ALike, how do you establish that you trust somebody outside of the superficial?
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike, I want more than your credential.
Speaker AI want to know more than your credential.
Speaker AThere's plenty of people out there with credentials that suck at what they do in real life.
Speaker AThey're book smart, they're street dumb, right?
Speaker AAnd when you're doing financial planning, you actually need street smart because your life doesn't happen the way the book says your life happens by all the chance and all those strange turns that not only are happening to you, but everybody in your life.
Speaker AAnd books can't cover all of that.
Speaker AAnd so how do you apply it?
Speaker AThat's the art of financial planning.
Speaker ASo I want somebody who's.
Speaker AI need to interview them and really, really understand.
Speaker AIs there death behind the sales pitch?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIs there death behind.
Speaker AIt's like, you can't judge a book by the COVID but it's very easy to judge a book by a cover in this space.
Speaker BWell, and I could just.
Speaker BOkay, so we're talking money.
Speaker BMaybe it's overwhelming.
Speaker BLike, what are you guys talking about?
Speaker BI got four kids, right?
Speaker BIf I go hire a babysitter, if baseline trust is.
Speaker BI trust when I come home, these kids are still gonna be here.
Speaker BLike, is that the baseline that I'm paying a babysitter?
Speaker BOr is it like, if I come home, I'm gonna know you gave them a bath, you fed them good stuff.
Speaker BThey didn't sit in front of a tv.
Speaker BLike, we understand in the natural sense when we hire individuals what we're looking for.
Speaker BBut I think sometimes when it comes to money and finance, it's like, I don't understand it, so I want to avoid it.
Speaker ATerminology is what it comes out to be.
Speaker AYou know, we were getting into a.
Speaker AWe're doing some consulting for a foundation, and they have a advisor that they work with.
Speaker AWe help them kind of understand what that advisor is doing for them.
Speaker AAnd, you know, the other advisor's using these big words, and they're just flat out twisting things, and we're like, that's not what that means.
Speaker AThis is what it actually means.
Speaker AThat's salesmanship.
Speaker AThere's some reason they're doing that.
Speaker ADon't know why, but there's some reason.
Speaker AThey're explaining it in a certain way, and the client's smart enough to pick up on it.
Speaker AThey don't know how to necessarily decipher it.
Speaker AOr they're like, they do this for a living.
Speaker AThey must be right.
Speaker AThey're a big multibillion dollar firm, but at the end of the day, they're just trying to collect and retain assets, and they're using all kinds of sales gimmicks to try to do it.
Speaker APlaying with their verbiage.
Speaker ASo back to our survey, though.
Speaker A50% said that investment experience is important.
Speaker ASo let me get this straight.
Speaker AYou're going for financial advice to somebody which is going to be heavily influenced by how you invest your money.
Speaker AAnd people do this all the time.
Speaker AMy financial advisors and do investments.
Speaker AI, you know, I just go and get index funds.
Speaker ABecause he says nobody can, you know, predict investments and stuff.
Speaker AThen he can't give you advice on anything those investments are going to touch.
Speaker ASo if he's trying to do a projection and he projects you at 8 and a half percent and he doesn't know anything about investments, how did he know that?
Speaker A8 and a half percent with the right percentage to use, based on how you're investing.
Speaker AIt's a very interesting thing.
Speaker AYou're getting financial advice now.
Speaker AIt doesn't mean you have to have an investment guru.
Speaker AI think there's a difference between somebody who's in the weeds on portfolio management versus somebody who understands diversification, correlation, stuff like that.
Speaker ANot the candidates.
Speaker AModern portfolio theory.
Speaker AYou're supposed to have five different mutual funds.
Speaker ALook at my pie chart stuff.
Speaker AActual correlation and understanding how things move based on causation.
Speaker AAnd when there's no causation, when it's just simply, completely uncorrelated kind of events that are happening or performance based on the events that are happening.
Speaker AYou need people who understand investments better and aren't just trying to sell you, because that was a wholesaler that took them out to lunch or something, which is very, very common for the industry.
Speaker ASo it struck me that 50% of people are like, investment experience is important.
Speaker BShould be 100% or even just the world you and I came from that we were taught.
Speaker BI manage the managers.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou remember that?
Speaker BIt was like, I'm your relationship person, and I get to help and pick what mutual funds we use and what managers.
Speaker BAnd I know when we should get rid of them.
Speaker BSo when you say investment performance, if you're always saying it's somebody else's fault, how are you also making decisions in that?
Speaker BSo it's a pretty interesting.
Speaker BOnly 50% view investment experience as important.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AAnd I just butchered the whole correlation diversification part.
Speaker AI trip over the.
Speaker BIt's fine.
Speaker BWe're four years in.
Speaker BPeople are forgiving.
Speaker AThey're.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAt this point, they're used to it.
Speaker AFor me, 46% said that they wanted the bill.
Speaker ATheir advisor to have the ability to look at the whole financial picture.
Speaker BAnd what does that even mean?
Speaker ASo you.
Speaker ASo let's flip this over.
Speaker ABecause a lot of people are working with an investment advisor, not a financial planner.
Speaker AYeah, Right.
Speaker AOr an insurance advisor.
Speaker ASo you got somebody who's selling you investments or insurance products.
Speaker BMm.
Speaker AAnd 46% is saying, I'd really like Somebody who looks at the whole picture.
Speaker AYou are buying investment products or insurance products, and then you're trying to figure out the financial plan that makes them work.
Speaker AYou should have the financial plan first, and then you find the investments that fit the financial plan.
Speaker AThe financial plan is your life, right?
Speaker ASo you're giving somebody else your money and then saying, tell me how to live my life.
Speaker AYou should be figuring out how to live your life and then telling somebody else, here's my money.
Speaker AMake it happen.
Speaker AWe have a backwards.
Speaker AIt's the inverse.
Speaker BWhat a novel idea.
Speaker BWell, and even too, the whole financial picture, if your financial planner or advisor, whoever you use, is just helping you aggregate accounts onto one platform so you can see your 401k and your IRA, that's not looking at the whole picture from a financial planning standpoint, that's just pulling in data.
Speaker BAnd so it's interesting.
Speaker BWhen 46 or whatever the number is, 46, say the whole financial picture, like, what does that actually mean in the realm of planning, you know?
Speaker AWell, we know what it means because people come in, they're like, yeah, I mean, we had a client one time, they came in, they were paying $50,000 a year to this financial advisor, and they had CFPs and attorneys and CPAs on staff and an investment guru.
Speaker AAnd they had never been through financial planning.
Speaker AI mean, like, we put together a financial plan, they're like, yeah, they kind of did this when we first started working with them years ago, and they never revisited it.
Speaker AIt's like, you're not.
Speaker AYou're paying a lot of money for somebody to basically run a generic portfolio for you.
Speaker BOr even just the stuff we just went through with Jess for four episodes.
Speaker BYou say tax planning, people go.
Speaker BPeople do that?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BFinancial planners do that, or estate planning.
Speaker BSo really interesting.
Speaker BGo through some of these other numbers because I think they're pretty enlightening, too.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe other one, I think that was really important on this particular list was 34% said that they wanted their advisor to have the ability to explain their approach to managing client finances.
Speaker AThat's a must for everybody, right?
Speaker ALike, you're going to watch my kids.
Speaker AWhat's your approach if one of them swallows a penny?
Speaker ALike, what do you do?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AOr what's your approach if one of them falls on, hits their head?
Speaker ALike, you want to know these things.
Speaker AYou want to know that the person's going to be competent, is not going to panic and just leave them.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThey're going to actually deal with whatever the problem is.
Speaker ABut 34% said that they would love it if their advisor could explain their approach to managing client finances.
Speaker AYou are hiring somebody to manage your finances when you buy investments from somebody.
Speaker ASo let's say you don't do financial planning, because a lot of people, I don't need financial planning.
Speaker ABut you give your money into an investment, you are turning your money over to a company to run it for you.
Speaker AYou really owe it to yourself to ask that company or that salesperson or that person in charge.
Speaker AI want to know what your approach is to handling my finances.
Speaker AI want to know what I can hold you accountable.
Speaker AWhat are you specifically responsible?
Speaker AI want a black and white in writing.
Speaker AI want to understand what you see your job is and where my job is.
Speaker AWhere's this line crossed between it being my fault or your fault?
Speaker AYou know, however this thing plays out, because you know what?
Speaker AA good advisor should be good with that, hey, this is the line.
Speaker AI think we're doing such a great job, and if we do such a great job, then I can come to you and say, hey, you want to do more of this, right?
Speaker ABut if this is the line and we're not doing a bad job, you don't want them saying, oh, that's your fault.
Speaker AI had a client one time who hired us.
Speaker AThey said, well, I went to my advisor and I asked them why we weren't making more money.
Speaker AAnd the advisor says, well, we'll make you more aggressive.
Speaker AThe underlying, they were in mutual funds.
Speaker AThe underlying funds were in the bottom 10 percentile of the industry, of the peer groups.
Speaker AI mean, like, every single one of them, it wasn't that they needed to be more aggressive.
Speaker AIt's that they had some of the worst mutual funds out there that you could possibly buy.
Speaker BPick better funds.
Speaker BAnd I think this one is interesting.
Speaker BNext, it says 23% said proactive communication.
Speaker BAnd again, I think if we go back to the original data, there's 1,000 people.
Speaker BSo just looking at the numbers, you hear 23%, it's like, oh, what does that mean?
Speaker BThat means 230 out of 1,000 people said that they want their advisor to be polite.
Speaker BHey, Travis, it's Steve.
Speaker BI was thinking of you.
Speaker BHey, there's a couple of moves we want to make before year end.
Speaker BAnd it's like, oh, I find value in that.
Speaker BWhat does the other group of people want?
Speaker BYou go back to the investment number.
Speaker BOnly 500 people are as concerned about investment experience.
Speaker BOr 720 of a thousand said, I want someone I can trust.
Speaker BSo these numbers, when you take 1,000 people, almost half the group.
Speaker BThere's some big holes and it's like, what are we signing up for?
Speaker ABut still, what is trust?
Speaker ATrust to me is proactive communication.
Speaker ATrust to me as you're looking at the big picture.
Speaker ATrust to me is that you actually know what you're doing.
Speaker AAll of these things are a part of trust.
Speaker AYou should not say, well, you know, I trust them because so and so told me I should trust them.
Speaker ASo it doesn't matter if you're not getting performance or if you're getting things that don't jive with your life.
Speaker AYou can go to your planner and say, we need to get these in line or I have to fire you.
Speaker AWe have to make a change.
Speaker AIf you've been in charge of anybody at work, or if you've had a babysitter, or if you hired somebody to build your porch, you can fire them if they do a bad job.
Speaker AAnd it's the same thing with your financial advisors.
Speaker ALook, I expect to be able to trust you.
Speaker ADon't do things that run the trust bank down.
Speaker ABut at the same time, you still gotta do your job, damn it.
Speaker BWell, and we think about, right, if you have a million dollar ira, we view that as our retirement money.
Speaker BBut if your neighbor down the street, you gave them a million dollars, wouldn't you expect they'd report back what they were doing with the money you gave them and communicating with you?
Speaker BAnd we'd go, well, of course they would need to tell me what they invested in and where we did.
Speaker BBut when it comes to our IRA in the financial world, we don't hold those same kind of accountability standards too.
Speaker BHow many people we talk to go, yeah, I don't know when the next time I'm speaking to my advisor is or when I'm going to meet you.
Speaker BAnd you're paying them significant amounts of money for investment management.
Speaker BSo it's just alarming.
Speaker AYeah, well, you know, the premise of investing is you're buying a company, right?
Speaker AOr a portion of a company.
Speaker ASo if you break this down to like the most basic nature of it, I'm going to trust you with my money, but you better make me some more money, right?
Speaker ALike, you don't buy an investment and say, it's okay if I lose all my money because I really trust the CEO.
Speaker ANo, you buy an investment and say, look, I really trust you, but you better perform.
Speaker AAnd if you don't perform, we're going to have to make a change at the top.
Speaker ASo then we have why clients Leave an advisor.
Speaker AAnd I think we got to kind of hit this fast because we run up on time today.
Speaker ABut 61% said that they no longer.
Speaker AThey would leave their advisor because they no longer trust them.
Speaker AThat's the top reason why they would leave.
Speaker ASo I'm going to say that something else happens in there.
Speaker AI think trust is kind of like a cop out, like how and like we've talked about.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo one of these other things happen.
Speaker AThey never hear from them.
Speaker AThey don't know their financial planning, the investment performance isn't there.
Speaker AThey don't have experience.
Speaker ASo they, they erodes trust out over time.
Speaker AYou want to do the next one?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo then we had.
Speaker BWe have 54.
Speaker A54.
Speaker BSo 54.
Speaker BThey would look for a new advisor if their investments perform below their expectations.
Speaker BNow only 50% of these people said that it was important to have good investments, but now are gonna fire them if they don't do it.
Speaker BI don't understand.
Speaker BI mean, I know how math works.
Speaker ABecause they're making a hiring decision based on trust and not checking all the boxes based on track record and those things.
Speaker AAnd then they get into it and they don't get the results and they're like, what the heck's going on?
Speaker AYou gotta do more due diligence on the way in so that you don't have to say, I'm gonna fire them over performance.
Speaker AA good advisor, you shouldn't be firing them over performance.
Speaker ACause the market does what it does.
Speaker AAnd you should have an investment thesis that's being followed.
Speaker AYou should be firing them when they're not following through with things that they say they're gonna do that they should be doing.
Speaker AOr when they're not adjusting the plan to your life situation and they're constantly behind the eight ball.
Speaker AThat's when you should be firing them.
Speaker AThe performance thing, a good advisor, that's a bad reason to fire them.
Speaker AUnless there's something chronic related to it, which there can be.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut again, it comes down to investment thesis.
Speaker AHow many people have ever asked their advisor, what's your investment thesis?
Speaker AAnd didn't get something generic that looks like they got it from Wikipedia.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAll right, so then we had 46% said that they would look for a replacement if their advisor didn't communicate clearly.
Speaker AHowever, back to the other question.
Speaker AOnly 34% said or 23% said they needed proactive communication.
Speaker BSo half of that number said that they valued proactive communication.
Speaker BAnd now almost 50% want to replace them if they don't communicate.
Speaker BClearly.
Speaker AWhich means you're not thinking about that when you're hiring somebody.
Speaker ABut once you're in the relationship, you're like, oh, buyer's remorse.
Speaker ASo as you go into the relationship, ask them, what's your communication?
Speaker AHow often should I hear from you if I want to get a hold of you, how do I get a hold of you?
Speaker AHow often?
Speaker ALike if you hire a solo planner, it's just one planner all by himself.
Speaker AHow often do they go on vacation or get sick?
Speaker ABecause who are you going to talk to when they're on vacation?
Speaker AThey're in the Grand Caymans on the money that you're paying them.
Speaker AAnd yet you need something and you have to wait for them to get back in town.
Speaker AThat's not a good situation.
Speaker AThat's good if you don't have a lot and you can get a good deal on the planning or something like that, and you're trying to stretch dollars and you're willing to deal with the fact that you have kind of like blackout periods.
Speaker ABut it's not good if you're running a money business.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker AIf you got million plus dollars, you're running a money business.
Speaker AYou need your executives that you've hired on the job, or if they're not there, they're number two's on the job.
Speaker AYou kind of need that type of thing going on.
Speaker AYou want to hit the last one.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo 45% of the thousand people surveyed, so 450 people, said they would leave if the overall client experience was not good.
Speaker BAnd how do you even judge what client experiences?
Speaker ABeauty in the eye of the beholder?
Speaker AYou know, it's just like some people like a lot of calls.
Speaker ASome people don't like phone calls.
Speaker ASome people like emails.
Speaker ASome people, you know what I mean?
Speaker ALike, it's just some people like in person, some people.
Speaker ASo I think that that's a really subjective thing.
Speaker AI think you should choose a firm that fits the way that you want to operate.
Speaker AYou know, you should be asking the firm, can I have in person meetings?
Speaker ADo we do virtual?
Speaker AYou know, I really think people should spend a little bit more time.
Speaker AYou're hiring somebody who you are going to be telling very intimate things to.
Speaker AYou're going to be telling them all about your life, all about your relationship with your kids, all about these things, all about your hopes and your dreams and where things came from and where things are going.
Speaker AYou really ought to be looking at when I walk into this office or when I talk to their staff, you know, how Do I feel, do I feel like I belong here?
Speaker AWe talked about this in episodes when we moved to Tennessee about, you know, relocating.
Speaker AYou need to.
Speaker APeople who are thinking about relocating, retirement need to relocate to a community that when they go out and they meet people they're not going to be fighting with all the time.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIf you're really politically charged, don't move to the opposite kind of political community.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker AIf there's certain things that are triggering to you or important to you, don't go to somebody else's house and tell them they have to change their house.
Speaker AJust, just find a place where you belong and go there.
Speaker AAnd I think a good planner will tell you that if you don't belong with a good planner, they're going to say, look, this doesn't work.
Speaker ACan we get you a new home?
Speaker ACan we find someplace where you're going to get better value out of this?
Speaker AAnd we're not going to feel the stress that we feel because you're expecting something and we can't deliver on that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd at the end of the day, I mean, everyone prices their business differently.
Speaker BBut working with a financial professional is not the cheapest endeavor ever.
Speaker BAnd so if you just had a line item on your budget that said, we spent 40 grand every year on X, someone would look at that and go, we spent 40.
Speaker AWhich is, by the way, we charge.
Speaker ANo, not clients paying.
Speaker BSee a lot of clients that are paying a so called financial advisor, they.
Speaker ACome in and they meet with us for the first time.
Speaker AThey're like, I'm paying 40 grand, 40 grand.
Speaker BAnd that's like, what are you getting if you had to write a check every year for 40 year?
Speaker BBut we don't because it comes out of investments and other things.
Speaker BSo when you talk about the overall experience, if that proactive communication isn't there on tax planning and things you can do, then, you know, this raises the alarm.
Speaker BAnd why don't you then for the last talk about these two questions and I'll tell them about the survey in the show notes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI'm also thinking, you know, 40 grand a client, that's pretty good.
Speaker AImagine like we could have a yacht if we charge 40 grand.
Speaker BWe just got into the same room for the first time in four years.
Speaker BSo this is good.
Speaker AI guess we're not doing it yet.
Speaker AWe'll take donations though.
Speaker AWe'll let other people come on the yacht.
Speaker BThat'd be fun.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd just no yacht.
Speaker AIt's too much.
Speaker BSo you got these two questions and we created a survey.
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker ASo we have a survey.
Speaker AWhat we were asking for our listeners.
Speaker AYou can explain the survey.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker ABecause I don't actually know where it lives.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BSo there was two questions that we posed.
Speaker BIt's a very short survey.
Speaker BWe'll have it in the show notes that you guys can fill out.
Speaker BIt's kind of open answer, but there's two questions that we're thinking of.
Speaker BWhat do you think as a listener?
Speaker BDitch the suits.
Speaker BWhat do you think is the most important thing when selecting a financial advisor?
Speaker BThat's question one.
Speaker BAnd then as we talked about in this survey, there was reasons you would leave.
Speaker BQuestion two is, why would you consider leaving your current financial advisor?
Speaker BSo you don't have to put your name or anything with this, but we'll.
Speaker AHave no name, no email, no nothing.
Speaker AJust give us some info.
Speaker BTravis and I are interested from you guys as listeners as ditch the suits.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWe just said what these thousand people said was important to them.
Speaker BBut we want to know from you as our listener base, what's important to you.
Speaker BSo we'll have this link in our show notes.
Speaker BIf you need it, get in contact with Travis or myself.
Speaker BYou can head to ditchthesuits.com, we'll personally send you the link.
Speaker BBecause at the end of the day, I think is what people forget.
Speaker BYou and I are real human beings that interact with people every day.
Speaker BAnd so it's always funny to me when people call in from the show and I'm like, yes, Steve from Seed.
Speaker BAnd they're like, it's the guy from the podcast.
Speaker BWe're real people.
Speaker BSo if you guys want to get in touch with ushoots.com no, we have a screening system to just keep him at bay.
Speaker AToo many rings.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThe experience is really important.
Speaker BBut at the end of the day, very quick survey you guys can take and just do it, because we'd love to hear from you in terms of.
Speaker AWhat's that for people, too?
Speaker ABecause I think when you hear it like this, when we talk about it, if you're trying to make a decision to hire somebody, or maybe you've been working with somebody for a while and it's maybe not working out or you have second thoughts, this is a really good way to think about this, and it'll give you a little bit of shape to that kind of that next discussion that you probably need to have and that next decision that you need to make.
Speaker AAnd more importantly, if you can share with us other perspectives, we can share that with the Listeners as well.
Speaker AAnd I think that that helps other people make better decisions.
Speaker ASo we have some thoughts just to close this out.
Speaker ATrust and performance.
Speaker ASo here's our big takeaway, right?
Speaker AWe try to do like one takeaway every.
Speaker AEvery you could.
Speaker AOur listeners get to take something home with them.
Speaker ABasically.
Speaker ATrust requires vetting, and that includes establishing expectations on performance.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo when you say that you trust somebody, you haven't really fully committed to that unless you've established expectations on the performance.
Speaker APerformance is not just investment.
Speaker APerformance says, you said that we would have meetings every six months or every three months.
Speaker AYou said that this, this, and this would happen on these times.
Speaker AYou said that the investment thesis is xyz.
Speaker AAre we performing to the investment thesis?
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AI can't control if the market goes up or down, but I can control if we're staying on track.
Speaker ASo you need to establish that ahead of time.
Speaker AIf you can establish, if you have trust for them and you establish the expectations and you manage your advisor to the expectations, or if you have a good advisor, they manage themselves to your expectations and they say, see, these were your expectations.
Speaker ALook, we beat the expectations, right?
Speaker AOr we're lagging a little bit.
Speaker AThis is what we're gonna do to fix that.
Speaker AYou know, we do that.
Speaker AWe revamped our newsletter to help clients participate with that interaction with expectations.
Speaker AHow do we do a better job on that?
Speaker ATo me, that's where the trust lives.
Speaker ABecause then you clearly will know, maybe this is smoke and mirrors trust or this is real trust.
Speaker AI'm really getting what I'm paying for.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker BAnd then my final thought is, don't wait for something to go wrong to realize it's time for a change.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIf we say proactive communication and trust is important and they didn't send you money when they said they would, or your investments went way down and you don't know why, that raises the alarm that, okay, what's going on with this practice?
Speaker BAs you, as a listener, though, think about the value.
Speaker BAre you getting questions answered proactively about your taxes or your estate or the other parts of your life that are important to you, your kids, and how to make all those things come together?
Speaker BDon't wait for something to go wrong to say, maybe it's time for a change.
Speaker BJust think about, in a perfect world, what would bring you greatest peace of mind?
Speaker BKnowing every year what to do with your taxes, knowing to make sure your kids are taken care of.
Speaker BIf you're getting those things, then I think trust is a good baseline.
Speaker BBut again, humor us take the survey.
Speaker BThanks for bearing with us in our first in real room time.
Speaker BWe try to keep episodes to about 30 minutes.
Speaker BSo for the first time being together, we weren't too chatty today.
Speaker BBut we got another episode coming up after this.
Speaker BThank you for being our guest on Ditch the Suits.
Speaker BAnd until next time, here's to getting the most of your money in life.