With many independent financial advisors employing or working with family members, one of the largest firms in the channel is building specific programs and tools for such teams.
An admittedly "unscientific" internal poll that drew more than 700 responses on the internal financial advisor desktop platform of Commonwealth Financial Network revealed that half the participants are part of what it calls "family practices," or an advisory firm in which an advisor and a relative of a planner are on the same staff, according to Kristine McManus, Commonwealth's chief advisor growth officer. She also cited research from a firm called Collaborative Consulting suggesting 40% to 50% of independent advisory practices fit the label.
The findings highlight how "family dynamics" can make an impact on
"Our goal is to really help our advisors with all of these issues," McManus said.
Commonwealth, which is
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Working with family members brings the satisfaction of spending more time with a spouse or a son or daughter while building a business, but it can also pose challenges without the right boundaries between home and the office and an understanding of everyone's job roles, according to advisors
Hauppauge, New York-based
"I'm so passionate about what we're growing here," Denise said, crediting a family-like approach at Carson that recently saw more than a half dozen staff members from the corporate office attend their son's hockey game, as well as long-term relationships with the practice's clients. "Some of them have known our boys since they were born," she added.
The pair views the understanding of the firm she gained as a part-time marketing guru and the acknowledgement of the fact that Larry is an early riser while Denise is more of a night owl as integral to their success. With her advice and guidance to Larry to "be more himself on social media"
National wealth management firms like Carson and Commonwealth can help advisors tap into the benefits while avoiding the risks by aiding in discussions about a loved one's role in a practice, Larry said.
"Without having that kind of direction, it causes a lot of friction, because nobody knows who or what is supposed to be doing what," he said. "Having that practice management or business consulting is really helpful in that regard."
Commonwealth tries to assist its teams that may have spouses, parents, siblings or other family relationships with those discussions through methods like Predictive Index behavioral assessments that identify staff members' strengths and weaknesses, according to McManus. The consultations often include discussions on how to keep long-term employees engaged with the business while outside the founding family and the best approach to take for instances where one child has joined the business but another prefers to stay away entirely.
"We just introduced five firms to each other," McManus said. "There are lots of these things that we can do to help them over and above the programming and content that we develop. They always learn from each other."