Added on March 2014 in Other Ideas
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Summary: For advisors, technological change can seem both lightning fast and very slow. As Victor Fetter, LPL Financial’s chief information officer, pointed out in his keynote session at February’s Technology Tools for Today conference, the broad technology themes for advisors — the cloud, mobile, social tools and business intelligence — are largely unchanged from a year ago. In fact, almost every session or product announcement at the conference was in some way tied to one of those themes.
Added on March 2014 in Other Ideas
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Summary: She's working hard to help more advisors bridge the gap. The author of “Moving Forward on Your Own: A Financial Guidebook for Widows,” Rehl has been a financial advisor for 17 years and is a widow herself. Now the president of Rehl WEALTH Collaborations LLC in Land O’Lakes, Fla., she has relinquished her RIA hat to focus on assisting widows and their advisors. In view of this client segment's growing importance, I recently asked her what advisors need to know to serve widows better.
Added on March 2014 in Other Ideas
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Summary:We’ve all heard the stories of advisors who have successfully grown their firms with dramatic strategies: radio shows, seminars, a newspaper column, referrals from accountants or a tight niche focus (executives at a large local company, vineyard owners, dry cleaners, widows, etc.). Okay, are you ready for the secret to life, the universe, and advisory firm growth.
Added on March 2014 in Other Ideas
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Summary:Most of Sophia Bera's financial planning clients have never met her in person, and they don't seem to care.Bera, a newly minted financial advisor in Minneapolis, operates almost completely online. The majority of her clients are twentysomething millennials, and most of them are outside Minnesota.
Added on March 2014 in Other Ideas
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Summary: The study, The Financial Capability of Young Adults—A Generational View, found that low levels of financial literacy hamper most Millennials (age18-34), with only 24 percent of Millennials able to answer four or five questions on a five-question financial literacy quiz correctly. And among young Millennials – those 18 to 26 – only 18 percent were able to answer four or five questions correctly.