Planning is not a one-time event
“We believe that planning and finances are a living and breathing thing,” Spaulding says. “You never really get to say, ‘I did it. It's done. I finished it.’” People get raises or change jobs, marry or divorce, or face unexpected obstacles, like a global pandemic. As life changes, there is new financial territory to navigate.
Because of that, Spaulding says her business model is to get paid on an annual basis to do the planning. The firm puts a proposal together outlining the scope of the work from the start. “How our firm has it structured is that we charge an upfront annual fee. And then we quote the second-year fee right off the bat. So the client knows what they're getting into,” she says.
Her clients, primarily businessowners and entrepreneurs, tend to have three characteristics: They have great cash flow, and they tend to have high net worth, but “they have no money,” Spaulding says. In other words, they are not sitting on sizable brokerage accounts needing to be managed. For this reason, they can get overlooked by other advisors.
Spaulding says her role is to think much more holistically. “We do a lot around goal planning. We do a lot around cash flow models. In my opinion, cash flow runs the show,” she says. “I don't care if you have a high net worth or a low net worth. Everybody's pretty much just worried about what their cash flow is and how they can afford their lifestyle.” In addition to traditional investment analysis, retirement planning, estate planning, education and college planning, her firm also focuses on debt reduction, financial independence and risk management strategies, including everything from health insurance to identity theft insurance.
While her team does offer investment management, they are just as happy to work with other clients’ advisors. “You are hiring us to be your architect,” is how Spaulding says she describes it to clients. “You need a plan. Right now, you have advisors, but you don't have a plan. And we need to take a couple steps back and say, ’What's your one-year, three-year and 30-year goals? And how are we building plans to get there?’”