Archive for March, 2009

The Fuel to Double Your Business

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Most business owners think that to grow their business, it takes more money or more personnel.  But maybe another ingredient is more important, the ingredient of trust in business.

As an illustration of the importance of trust in business, consider the financial crisis.  It’s not a financial crisis or liquidity, it’s a crisis of trust.  One day, Lehman Brother’s trading partners stop trusting Lehman.  So they withheld business, decided not to extend credit and Lehman had to declare bankruptcy. Consider the banks slowness to lend—they don’t trust that the loan will get repaid.  Or consider the credit card company’s reduction in credit lines because they don’t trust that the cardholders will pay.

In fact, the main reason that the US has the largest economy is because its residents have had the most trust in one another.  We consider signatures on contracts to be binding (because we trust the legal system to enforce signed contracts) and in most business transactions, we even rely on the other party’s word.  But now, we see what happens when trust comes into question.  Parties stop dealing with one another and the economy shrinks. Other countries have smaller economies because they have less developed systems of trust and we are now have a taste of what goes on in other economies.

Trust has the same impact on the micro-economy of your business as it does on global trade. Your prospect does not buy from you because the investment has a “terrific ROI.”  They buy from you because they trust you.  In their eyes, you are the “trusted advisor.”  If a stranger approaches you on the street, hands you a dollar and says “I will sell you this dollar for a dime,” the fantastic ROI is insignificant compared to your skepticism that something is fishy.  You don’t trust the stranger and you turn down the guaranteed 900% ROI.  Your prospect feels the same way.

Your prospects don’t become your clients because you have great financial options.  They become your client because they trust you.  The next several posts will deal with the issue of how you build trust so that you can rapidly convert prospects to clients.

“You can have all the facts and figures, all the supporting evidence, all the endorsement that you want, but if you don’t command trust, you won’t get anywhere.”
–Naill Fitzgerald, Former Chairman, Unilever

Share This Post

When Financial Advisors Miss the Big Picture

Friday, March 20th, 2009

It’s important to understand the big picture and how to make money as a financial advisor.
Your goal is to have face to face meetings with prospects who meet two criteria:
1. The prospect has money in their control (i.e. not tied up in a 401k)
2. The prospect is interested in opportunities to do better with their money

If you have any additional criteria, you will lose money as an advisor.  For example, if you have a third criteria that the prospect have interest in annuities because you sell annuities, this will cost you a lot of sales because there is NO PROSPECT who cares about annuities.  Prospects care about their objectives such as
1. Safety of principal
2. Tax relief
3. Liquidity
IT’S YOUR JOB TO SHOW PROSPECTS HOW THEIR OBJECTIVES ARE CONSISTENT WITH YOUR PRODUCTS AND SERVICES.  THEY DON’T COME TO YOU INTERESTED IN ANNUITIES OR MANAGED ACCOUNTS OR ANYTHING ELSE OTHER THAN THEIR OBJECTIVES.

Most advisors miss this concept and rather than focusing on the maximum number of appointments with prospects who meet the two criteria above, the advisor will call the prospect to determine their interest in annuities, managed money, life insurance , etc.  But such a call makes it obvious to the prospect that your interest is in YOUR PRODUCTS AND SERVICE  and not their objectives.  That’s why you don’t get the number of appointments you should.

Let’s provide an example.  We run a lot of ads on the Internet to find consumers interested in financial topics.  The ad which got the all time best response was for a booklet about ways to increase social security income.  This is a HOT TOPIC for seniors.  But every advisor told us “I don’t want those leads.  I can’t make any money talking to people about social security.”

This is unfortunately a near sighted view that keeps most advisors poor.  Many of these prospects meet the two criteria above but because the advisor is SO FOCUSED ON THEIR OWN AGENDA, THEIR OWN PRODUCTS AND SERVICES, they will never have an appointment with viable prospects who could become good clients.

Focus on the big picture–meet with people you can help and don’t focus on your products and services.  They are merely tools to help people accomplish their objectives, tools that don’t need to be discussed until the last 10% of your conversation.

Share This Post