Why Clients Leave Their Financial Advisor (2024)

Morningstar recently published an article titled “Why Do Investors ‘Break Up’ With Their Financial Advisor?” It’s a great article, based on data from 184 investors who fired their financial advisors. The top reasons for their actions were:

  • Quality of financial advice/services (32% of responses)
  • Quality of relationship with an advisor (21%)
  • Cost of services (17%)
  • Unhappiness with returns (11%)
  • Comfort in handling their own finances (10%)
  • Absence of quality communication (9%)

The article presented three ways in which advisors could protect against clients leaving:

  • Understand each client and their goals.
  • Communicate your value.
  • Set return expectations early.

What Creates a Bond With Clients

Having spent more than 35 years as a financial advisor in my own practice, I’ve unfortunately had my share of clients leaving (not a lot, but each one felt like a personal loss), and I’ve commiserated with peers when they’ve lost clients. The thing is, we all do our best for our clients. We take our roles seriously—and it hurts when someone leaves! Below is what I learned during my time as an advisor about why clients leave.

As Theodore Roosevelt said, “No one cares how much you know until they know how much you care.” There is no truer statement when it comes to financial advisors and their clients.

Finances tend to be highly personal because they are closely tied to people’s sense of identity, self-worth, and well-being. Once a client engages an advisor, it is a personal bond. And that bond will only be broken if a crack in the relationship grows into something large enough to break trust.

As an analogy, think of a close friendship. You’ve made an investment in the relationship and you have a bond. When your friend forgets your birthday, it’s a crack. After your friend apologizes, you forgive them and your relationship continues. This is because the bond has been nurtured over time and the trust level is strong enough to overcome small issues. But if your friend doesn’t apologize and then stands you up several times or talks behind your back, the crack grows into such a large crevasse that the friendship cannot survive.

Like a good friendship, a good client relationship can survive small cracks as long as there is a strong bond of trust and communication. The key is being aware of the small cracks while reinforcing trust through communication.

But none of this will work unless you truly care!

If you are concerned about losing your revenue stream, that’s not enough. You must be concerned with your clients’ well-being, knowing that they entrusted you with their life savings. If you can’t relate to each client as if they were your sibling, parent, or grandparent, your link with clients is merely a business transaction, not a true bond. How do you show that you really care? It’s about knowledge and communication. To be a true fiduciary to your clients, you must continually expand your knowledge, hire top-quality people, and set your practice up to do the best job possible. And you must communicate and serve clients as if each is your most important client. You must keep in touch regularly, with emails, phone calls, meetings, newsletters, webinars, seminars, and client events. You must return phone calls and emails right away. You must take time, listen to your clients’ concerns and questions, and answer with thorough, well-thought-out, honest, individualized information.

It’s really a simple formula:

  • Care about your clients.
  • Do the best job possible.
  • Communicate!

What Causes Cracks

For the most part, clients are not financial experts. Their money is very important to them, and they are insecure—especially at times of volatility. When the markets drop, they need reassurance. It’s not the portfolio loss that causes clients to leave, it’s a crack that needs attention.

When market declines happen, your clients will react in one or more ways, including fear, insecurity, questioning of approach and fees, and exasperation.

Fear

Fear is an emotional reaction. Citing facts and figures will not mitigate these feelings. To counteract fear, you should be reminding clients of long-term strategy on an ongoing basis. Pulling out this justification only during down markets will not calm fears. If you have been reinforcing a steady approach to investing, during market downturns you should reach out to clients (a group email is fine) letting them know that you are on top of things—rebalancing, harvesting tax losses—and that this is just normal fluctuation. Offer clients the opportunity to talk or meet. This will calm fears and strengthen bonds with your clients.

Insecurity

Insecurity is different from fear. It is more specific to the client’s particular situation—they are insecure about their long-term financial security. If you have sent an email to clients during a downturn, it is likely that the insecure clients will contact you. If they have not, you should know who those clients are to reach out to them! For these clients, remind them of their financial plan that took volatility into account. Offer to rerun their financial projections and their risk tolerance analysis. When they are reminded of the solid approach their strategy was based on, their insecurities will be eased.

Questioning Strategy

Sometimes clients will question strategy. After all, according to Michael Kitces, “Diversification means always having to say you’re sorry.” Why? Because diversification will still result in portfolios declining in down markets and not increasing as much during up markets. I remember during the dot-com boom, a potential new client asked why he should invest with me to earn 8% when he could get 30% on his own? After a discussion, it was obvious there was not a match, so I wished him the best. Sometimes, you can’t keep a client. If they can’t handle the long-term strategy that they agreed to on the Investment Policy Statement (which you have, right?), it might be time to part ways.

Questioning Fees

When markets drop, advisor fees feel more material to clients. Some wonder whether the fees are worth it. Again, if you haven’t been demonstrating your value all along, you’re going to have a tough time doing so when the market is down. Sending an email to clients reminds them that you are on the job. Also, be sure to communicate how much tax dollars you are saving from tax-loss harvesting and how rebalancing has limited their downside. Explain how their bonds are still paying interest and their stocks are still paying dividends. And show how diversification has protected them from extreme drops. More important, periodically summarize all the value-added services you’ve provided, such as mortgage advice, college funding strategies, tax planning, and so on. In the long run, clients won’t leave for fees. They will leave for exasperation.

Exasperation

Exasperation occurs when a client has lost trust. It can occur after long periods of not communicating, inattention to their accounts, no personalized attention, lack of thoughtful answers, or worse—unreturned emails or phone calls. Not paying attention to details leads to a lack of confidence and, ultimately, lost trust.

Other Reasons

Of course, even the most well-intentioned advisors providing the best service and communication possible will lose clients. Some other reasons clients leave advisors include lack of expertise, incompatibility, and life changes.

Lack of Expertise

If a client thinks that their advisor lacks expertise or is not keeping up with industry trends, they might look for an advisor with greater expertise or more-specialized knowledge.

Incompatibility

I always say clients should look for the “four c’s” in an advisor: compensation (fee-only), competence (experience), credentials (PFS, CFP), and comfort. Because money is personal, comfort is important. Sometimes, clients might simply feel they are not compatible with their advisor’s communication style, investment philosophy, or other personal aspects. This can lead to a breakdown in the client-advisor relationship and lead them to seek out an advisor with whom they feel more comfortable.

Life Changes

Finally, clients may choose to leave their advisors owing to changes in their personal or financial circ*mstances. For example, if a client moves to a new city, they might want a local advisor. Sometimes, when a client experiences a significant change in their income or financial situation, they may decide that they need an advisor with a different set of skills or expertise.

Summary

Happy clients will not leave advisors because of fees (as long as they aren’t unreasonably high), periodic market downturns, a hot tip, or even a referral from a friend. Clients who feel cared for and trust their advisors will continue to be clients. It is up to the advisors to protect their bond.

The opinions expressed here are the author’s. Morningstar values diversity of thought and publishes a broad range of viewpoints.

Why Clients Leave Their Financial Advisor (2024)

FAQs

Why do clients leave a financial advisor? ›

Clients can part ways with their advisors due to poor communication, mismatched expectations, underperformance, lack of personalized advice, trust issues, high fees, and inadequate financial education.

How long does the average client stay with their financial advisor? ›

For instance – did you know that according to a study1 from Etrade Advisor Sales in 2019 – the average percentage of clients that leave during a given year is 20% within a year. And 25% within one-two years. Or - put another way - roughly one-fourth of new clients may leave within the first two years.

When should you leave your financial advisor? ›

Poor performance, high fees, strained communication and stagnant advice are among the reasons to look for a new advisor. Kevin Voigt is a freelance writer covering personal loans and investing topics for NerdWallet.

Why do so many financial advisors quit? ›

Lack Of Fulfillment

They are required to spend their days selling products and services they don't believe in. Far too many advisors find themselves working 9-5 (or worse) at a job that doesn't fulfill them or make them happy.

How does a financial advisor end a relationship? ›

You can either call or email your advisor - but letting them know you're leaving and why is a nice thing to do. Your new advisor will actually do all the work of transitioning the accounts for you. A simple email like this would work great...

How do I know if my financial advisor is bad? ›

If your financial advisor isn't paying enough attention to you, isn't listening to you, or is confusing you, it may be time to call it quits and find one willing to go the extra mile to work with you, serve your best interests and to keep you as a client.

How often do people switch financial advisors? ›

People often switch financial advisors when they experience significant life changes or feel their current advisor is no longer suitable, but there is no set frequency for making such a change.

How often should you talk to your financial advisor? ›

You should meet with your advisor at least once a year to reassess basics like budget, taxes and investment performance. This is the time to discuss whether you feel you are on the right track, and if there is something you could be doing better to increase your net worth in the coming 12 months.

What percentage of millionaires use a financial advisor? ›

The study reveals that 70% of millionaires work with a financial advisor, compared to just 37% of the general population. Moreover, over half (53%) of wealthy individuals consider their financial advisors their most trusted source of financial advice.

How do you know when to fire your financial advisor? ›

Here are some red flags that it's time to move on: Bad advice leads to poor performance: One of the most glaring signs that it's time to let go of your financial advisor is poor performance in managing your investments. If you find your portfolio consistently underperforms compared to the market, it's a red flag.

How do you say goodbye to a financial advisor? ›

Keep It Professional. When you break the news to your financial adviser, keep it brief and professional. Thank your adviser for his or her help in the past, and explain that things have changed and you're moving on. If you want to share the specific reasons that explain your move, go ahead and do it.

What to avoid in a financial advisor? ›

Here are seven mistakes to avoid when hiring a financial advisor.
  • Consulting with a “captive” advisor instead of an independent advisor. ...
  • Hiring an individual instead of a team. ...
  • Choosing an advisor who focuses on just one area of planning. ...
  • Not understanding how an advisor is paid. ...
  • Failing to get referrals.

Should I dump my financial advisor? ›

Sometimes, financial advisory relationships do not work well and leave clients feeling dissatisfied. If you are in that situation, it may be best to move on and find a different advisor and advisory firm that is a better fit for you.

Do financial advisors have a bad reputation? ›

Financial advisors and insurance agents may have a certain reputation in many circles. While I believe the majority are honest, some advisors may give the rest a bad name by focusing on the commission instead of the client. And, even if you meet an honest advisor, how can you know they will do the job suited for you?

Are financial advisors worth paying for? ›

A report by mutual-fund company Vanguard found that advisors can potentially add 3% or more to a client's net investment returns by picking cost-effective investments, behavioral coaching and more. But individual financial advice from a trained expert isn't something to purchase lightly.

What to do if you are not happy with your financial advisor? ›

In most cases, you simply have to send a signed letter to your advisor to terminate the contract. In some instances, you may have to pay a termination fee.

What happens when a financial advisor leaves a firm? ›

No matter why your advisor changed firms, they will ask you to transfer all your assets from the old firm to the new firm. This transfer process is called an ACAT – automated customer account transfer. It's a method by which we transfer financial assets between banks and brokerage houses.

How do you tell your financial advisor you are leaving? ›

When you break the news to your financial adviser, keep it brief and professional. Thank your adviser for his or her help in the past, and explain that things have changed and you're moving on. If you want to share the specific reasons that explain your move, go ahead and do it. But don't feel obligated to explain.

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