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10 New Year's Resolutions from Advisors

From weathmanagement.com
Added on January 2014 in Other Ideas
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Summary:WealthManagement.com asked advisors to submit their resolutions for 2014. Some are business-related, some personal. Some of them may even provide inspiration that you can use for your own practice.

Wealthy Clients With Young Kids: What Advisors Should Know

From Financial Planning
Added on December 2013 in Other Ideas
1 visitor like this article | Viewed 64 times | 0 comment

Summary: Take note this year of how often your clients’ holiday cards feature their children as the focal point. Children — particularly those still living at home — play a key role in the determining the values, priorities and mindset of their parents.
In fact, wealthy investors with young children share a number of key characteristics, needs and values that set them apart from childless clients and even empty nesters.
 

Millennial Women More Interested in Finance, but Lack Confidence

From Think Advisor
Added on December 2013 in Other Ideas
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Summary: Younger women are more interested in financial issues than their older counterparts, but lack to confidence to take action on those interests, according to a study from Allianz Life. As part of its 2013 Women, Power and Money Study, which was conducted in December 2012, Allianz released further data that focuses on the youngest respondents, those between 25 and 34.

How to Work Better With Couple Clients

From On Wall Street
Added on December 2013 in Other Ideas
2 visitors like this article | Viewed 60 times | 0 comment

Summary: Only 42% of couples who have advisors work with them jointly, according to a new Fidelity study  -- and that’s a problem, according to experts at the custodial operation. In the remaining 58% of couples, male partners manage the advisor relationship while their significant others don’t participate.
 

Understanding Generation Me

From Financial Advisor Magazine
Added on December 2013 in Other Ideas
2 visitors like this article | Viewed 61 times | 0 comment

Summary: If you want to forge a relationship with clients under the age of 48, the highly coveted Generation X and Gen Y clients, that means knowing how to talk to them. It’s more than knowing their Twitter habits. It means understanding patterns of affluent societies throughout history and how the children of those societies see themselves.That was the message delivered by Cam Marston, president of Generational Insights and a demographics researcher, speaking at Fidelity’s Inside Track NYC conference for advisors on October 30 in Midtown Manhattan.
 

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