You never get a second chance to make a first impression. For financial advisors, the first impression is vital. Nearly half of all clients who leave their advisors did so within the first two years of the relationship.1 Asset consolidation is also more likely to happen early on; one wealth management group tracked how much their assets grew in the first three years of client relationships and found that, on average, 75% of the growth took place in the first six months.2
Client onboarding is where advisors make their first impression on clients. But according to Max McQuiston, a practice management consultant at Capital Group, it can be a missed opportunity. That’s because many advisors focus only on what they need to get from clients and not enough on what clients get from them.
“During onboarding, you want to become an expert on your new client. You’re focused on what you need to get from them: answers to questions, forms filled out, assets transferred in, a list of goals and fears,” he notes. “And that’s all important. But what feeling are they getting from you?”
Even if advisors have considered the client experience during onboarding, many fail to create a formal, documented, repeatable process. “It’s not enough to make one new client feel good,” McQuiston says. “You need to make sure every new client feels good. Are you setting your team up to do that?”
Many advisors don’t realize that the onboarding process represents a critical opportunity to get referrals. “In our experience working with thousands of advisors around the country every year, referrals from brand-new clients can represent as much as a third of all the referrals a firm receives in a given year,” he says.
Here’s how advisors can make the client onboarding process repeatable and a potential source of referrals.