Advisers with the skills to help clients through transitions such as divorce, widowhood, career changes and other situations will find they have an especially loyal clientele. But these clients take more patience and empathy than the average client, an expert warned.
"It's true that people in transition take a lot more time," said Susan Bradley, founder of The Sudden Money Institute. "But you generally have a client for life, and you have a great referral source."
The key to retaining or attracting clients during such life changes is to focus on the personal side, not the technical planning aspects, which, of course, also have to be there, Ms. Bradley said at the
InvestmentNews Women Adviser Summit in Washington on Tuesday.
(More: How to talk to clients who have just been widowed)
"We need to help people in transitions become a bigger, better version of themselves," she said.
During such periods, clients often experience difficulties thinking straight and making decisions. Advisers can help by making them feel more comfortable with uncertain timelines, showing them they have control over their lives and keeping them "safe" until their thinking capacity returns, she said.
"Transitions are an opportunity for you as a financial adviser," said Carol Weinberg, a partner at NCA Financial Planners, at the summit.
More advisers need to learn how to help people get through these challenging life events.
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"Let's start coping with the idea that life just happens," Ms. Weinberg said.
Ms. Bradley suggested using four questions to help ease concerns of clients during transitions:
• Is there anything else you want to talk about today?
• Is anything leaving you unsettled today?
• If you feel disconnected from the advice I'm telling you, what will I see from you and is it OK if I ask you about it if I see it?
• Are there expectations of other people that need to be considered as you are making decisions?