One of the tenets of effective selling is never make it hard for your prospect to buy from you.
Many advisors whom I speak with say they get this idea.
But when we look at their average monthly conversion rate of prospects to paid clients, the numbers say otherwise.
The truth is that most prospects who go through an advisor’s intake process do not commit to a paid client relationship.
They show a high level of interest initially, and it seems easy to build rapport with them.
But somewhere along the way, they lose interest and disengage with the process, and you never hear back from them again.
You’d think that providing upfront value for free (discovery meeting, detailed analysis of their financial documents, a financial plan, and another meeting to explain it all) would give them the reassurance they need to want to move forward.
But that assumes the free value somehow removes the barriers to the sale.
It doesn’t.
What you’re actually doing by providing free value is removing the ability for your prospect to buy into your process -- and they need to buy into your process before they can buy into you.
Think of how a private school operates a reservation system for new enrollments.
You pay a non-refundable reservation fee and go on their waiting list before you’re given a spot.
As a result, everyone who enrolls is serious about their intention and ability to attend that school.
Or consider how attorneys require upfront payment before they’ll go on record and give you legal advice.
Why do they do this?
Because their time is valuable, their advice has consequences, and they need to ensure their clients can compensate them for it.
In their world, every prospect who ends up “wanting to think about it” costs them a potential paid client they could’ve had.
The same is true for advisors.
Here are the three reasons why many advisors can’t seem to get a commitment early on in their sales process:
-
Too many meetings and steps
There are too many points where the competing priorities of everyday life can kill momentum and break the process completely. -
Dispensing free advice
Because it’s free, your prospect knows they can exit at any time. They never buy into the process and so have little motivation to follow through. -
Lack of commitment by offering education
Potential clients only value advice and information that they pay for. If it’s not valuable to you to give it away for free, then it’s not valuable to them.
My suggestion is to shift your mindset away from value-based selling, everyone’s doing it.
It’s the wrong approach for the type of selling that advisors need to master, which is called the “expert consultant sale.”
Your prospects need to buy into your process (pay you for it), by the end of your very first meeting.
Learn how to start building stronger, more trust-based relationships with your prospects, order your complimentary books and consultation below.
Related: Focus On Fixing, Not Fostering: A New Sales Approach
Get Ari’s 6 best-selling books for FREE here and you’ll also receive a Complimentary Sales and Lead Generation Consultation (value $995.00). Ari Galper is the world’s number one authority on trust-based selling and is the most sought-after high-net-worth new client acquisition expert for financial advisors. His latest books "Are You Chasing Ghosts", "Trusted Authority" and "Trust In A Split Second" have become instant best-sellers among financial advisors worldwide, get your free books here.