The Ideal Practice: Balancing The Clients Wants and Your Needs

Heresy: The Professionals’ needs matter as much as the Clients’ wants.

It shouldn’t be heresy to say this aloud of course….

But; the ideal practice is one which surely achieves this balance isn’t it? After all, practitioners are trying to earn a living and meet the wants and needs of their own families whilst trying to appease regulators & industry stakeholders, as well as deliver what their clients want.

Balance must be found.

Everyone who matters agrees that it is entirely inappropriate if the balance is so far out that the clients wants become irrelevant. That is; any business which is all about extorting clients and essentially disregards what is good or right for them is not a good business. It is probably not even operating legally actually, let alone ethically.

The other end of the philosophical spectrum does however get airtime and certainly has some support from some industry stakeholders. That view fundamentally is; the clients wants are paramount and the practitioners needs irrelevant . In this paradigm practitioners become social workers and profit is sinful. There is actually a slightly evangelical feel to this school of thought….it is unbalanced.

Either extreme is unhealthy and will not constitute an “ideal practice” for most practitioners.

The essential premise driving this line of thinking (which appears to be gathering momentum and support) is the necessity for professional advisers to become the Trusted Adviser. Naturally (goes the thinking) all advisers must be a professional. With that word “professional” being defined philosophically by the evangelists as that role where it is realistically only the clients interests which matter, the school of thought has it now that the goal for every adviser must be to achieve Trusted Adviser in order to be defined as a professional.

Related: Advisors: Client Focus or Compliance Focus?

I would be the first to agree that “Trusted Adviser” requires absolute professionalism in all aspects. I would also agree that for many practitioners becoming the Trusted Adviser to their clients is the ideal, and presents the opportunity for a viable business model. In fact the work on “The Trusted Adviser” by Maister, Green & Galford is essential reading for any aspiring professional in my view, and one of the top dozen or so books that I could point to as “career-changing” from my own perspective in that it re-shaped much of my own thinking many years ago. In that work they laid out a pathway for becoming the Trusted Adviser which was absolutely spot on.

Here’s the thing though: you can be professional without being A professional. Professionalism is about behaviour and values and ethics. Being A professional is about those things too as well as technical competency and proficiency.

Being A professional may not actually be the goal for many advisers today – or maybe it is but it shouldn’t be. Running a professional business may be the goal, but that is not the same thing as being the Trusted Adviser personally.

What is wrong with being a Trusted Brand?

There are plenty of great businesses which do wonderful things for many consumers in financial services, but which do not give advice at all. There are plenty which deliver superb value in areas that consumers value, but which restrict their offering to a particular knowledge set or product suite.

They are Trusted Brands . But they are not Trusted Advisers. And that is ok.

For practitioners today who are contemplating the many changes (known and unknown) which are required to make the transition to The Trusted Adviser Who Is A Professional as defined by the rule-makers and opinion-makers there is often a strong sense of imbalance about both the process and the end result. The process of transition becomes one which is a price they simply do not want to pay….discomfort, inconvenience, cost, foregoing a great lifestyle….all valid reasons for practitioners perhaps feeling uneasy about heading down that path. The end result is equally unpalatable from a business perspective for many. Philosophically it may be fine – they can agree with the view that Trusted Adviser firms have a fiduciary duty and avoid any possibility of conflicted advice (if that is even possible). But they just don’t want to do the things on a daily basis which practitioners like that have to do. It begins to look like a business they would hate to work in, let alone own and try and build.

Maister et al provided a great pointer for those practitioners who feel uneasy about the prospect of their businesses and their lives getting out of balance. There are other viable financial services advice or service models which may perhaps better balance the practitioners and the clients needs.

What is wrong with being a Trusted Brand? Being an adviser who operates under the umbrella of a great institutional brand and only deals with the institutions products doesn’t make one any less professional. Professionalism is about behaviour and ethics after all. Frankly we only have to look around the market to see that many many consumers place enormous faith in institutional Trusted Brands and are quite happy to continue using them. That is a viable model which may well balance up the practitioners needs with client wants.

Creating your own Trusted Brand which perhaps retails products or solutions, or maybe both, is a viable option. You can be a trusted person operating a Trusted Brand without necessarily going all the way along the career development path to Trusted Adviser operating under a fiduciary standard.

The goal should be to find the right balance between your commercial needs as a practitioner and the positioning you wish to achieve professionally with what clients want and will pay for.

Don’t be afraid in these times of change to unsubscribe from the prevailing school of thought about how a practice or a practitioner must develop. Instead, think about balancing your needs with the clients wants, and the type of business you should be trying to build will become much clearer.