Money talks, but it isn't everything to advisors, who industry-wide have reported a sizable lack of engagement with their jobs in recent months, according to business research and consulting firm J.D. Power.
"Advisors … are craving information on how to be better businesspeople, how to create relationships, how to manage my practice," said Keith Bossey, a managing director at J.D. Power, in an industry panel webinar Thursday called "Increasing Advisor Satisfaction: The Power of Collaboration and Professional Development."
However, Bossey said, the firm's research showed that "less than half of advisors rated their firm in the top two (levels) on professional development" in its rating scale, reflecting that many feel unsupported in reaching their full potential at their current jobs.
Read more: Commonwealth, Stifel and Raymond James get top advisor satisfaction grades, dethroning Edward Jones
The webinar shared and discussed additional findings from a J.D. Power report released in July that polled over 4,000 advisors at both employee and independent firms to learn about what they needed to stay engaged in their work and what was missing in their current firms.
Other panelists at the event included moderator Anita Heisl, the chief engagement officer at 4U Platform and Julie Genjac, the vice president and managing director of applied insights at asset management company Hartford Funds.
Read more: Attracting the next generation of advisors, with Hartford Funds VP Julie Genjac
4U Platform is a fintech company that streamlines secure, compliant content-sharing among different wealth management industry firms. 4U clients include Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Morningstar and T. Rowe Price. Hartford is a client of 4U and frequently shares professional development content on its platform, Genjac said in the event, adding that it also offers trainings in different settings to advisors around the industry.
Scroll down for three key takeaways from the webinar and to learn how firms can improve their engagement with their advisors.