Hiring a financial advisor is an incredibly personal – and important – decision. This is someone who will be perusing the intimate details of your financial life and could potentially hold your future retirement success in their hands. Most experts agree that anyone would benefit from working with a financial advisor, no matter their level of income. However, not all financial advisors will be a good fit for you. Before you start working with a financial professional, it’s a good idea to ask them these five questions.
Your financial advisor isn’t there to judge you, their job is to help you make the best of any financial situation. This could mean helping you manage aging parents and younger children, preventing financial potholes, building a succession plan for your business, developing a new plan now that you are divorced, or figuring out how to retire early. Finding a financial professional with experience working with other clients similar to you, with a comparable attitude towards risk and similar needs, is a good first step.
The best option is to learn from an individual who has already proven their chops on their own money, before they decide to test out their theories on your retirement account. Far from being rude, your financial advisor is likely to expect this question and probably has an answer ready to share. Hearing their strategy for growth may help you determine whether or not they would be a good fit for your long-term goals.
A fiduciary agreement, also known as being held to a fiduciary standard, means that your financial planning professional is required to place your interests above their own — even when it means they make less money on a trade or sale. Non-disclosure agreements are especially important for high net worth individuals, as this reinforces the standards of privacy required for anyone handling your personal and financial information.
Financial advisors are often making money from a variety of sources: direct hourly or flat-fee payments from clients for managing financial interests and a percentage or cost for assets under management. It’s important to know exactly how your advisor is compensated before you make a final decision (but it’s important to remember that you often get what you pay for!)
While most professionals are interested in telling you about fantastic success stories, understanding where something went wrong is just as important to future learnings. Having a candid discussion up-front about how things can go wrong or what helps them go right is an important conversation and will also help you determine if you can trust the advisor.
Most people find working with a financial planner to shed light on many financial factors they had not considered. You may learn more about financial principles and ways to improve your family fortune – or simply get a plan in place that leaves you feeling more comfortable about your future.
If you would like to schedule a conversation with one of our talented Lead Advisors, contact us today.
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