As the first male boomers begin to die, their widows will be in control of the family assets long before the kids inherit them. In fact, on average, a widow will spend 16 years without her husband. Yet most advisors with older clients have done little to build a relationship with the wives of the couple clients they serve.
To be fair, in all likelihood the husband was the primary contact and the wife frequently showed little interest in getting involved. Nevertheless, the reality is that 80% of widows leave the family’s financial advisor when their husbands die saying, “I never really knew him and I wanted to find someone I could work with.”
The writing is on the wall.
Advisors who don’t want to lose accounts when the husband dies must engage their wives – even if these women resist. But don’t wait until there is a crisis, it is never too early to start getting the wives of your couple clients engaged. You can’t assume that just because “Harry” has been a great client and friend for years, you will keep the account when he dies.
Of course, engaging the female partner is not always easy. You may be faced with excuses like, “My husband handles all this,” “I find it boring” and even, “I don’t understand all the jargon.”
So what’s an advisor to do?
Take away
To make sure you retain the account of a couple when the husband dies, you must engage the female partner: enlist her partner to bring her into the conversation, uncover what’s important to her and build her confidence in the investment process. Start early and don’t wait until the husband becomes ill or worse.
Learn how to Retain Female Clients through this online course and earn CE credits. Or visit us at here and learn everything there is to know about what women want and how to serve them well.