Financial advisors who are successful at attracting ideal clients are faced with one challenge. The challenge is segmenting your clients. If you are growing, then segmenting your ideal and non-ideal clients is an annual process if you are growing at 15% or more per year. Why do you segment? Segmenting is a tremendous opportunity to grow your practice. Segmenting will help you focus your time and energy on your ideal clients
Get rid of guilt
Have you ever felt guilty about not servicing or communicating to some of your best clients who pay you the most fees? Be honest! I ask advisors in workshops across the country and they always say what I felt as an advisor, guilt towards servicing your ideal clients more. How can you get rid of that guilt? Obviously by servicing your top clients more. But if you are past capacity and lack the time, then you probably do not even have the time to segment your clients, once, let alone on an annual basis. Your non-ideal clients sometimes take up all your time and energy, leaving you scrambling to service your best clients in the way you would like to.
Why segment?
Think of segmenting from a simple exercise of ideal clients and non-ideal clients. Not potential ideal clients but defining your clients as they are today.
There are several advantages to segmenting including:
You earn more by segmenting your clients annually. According to Business Health Pty Ltd of Australia, 62% of advisors segment their practices. Those advisors that segment their ideal clients from their non-deal clients earn on average 33% more than those advisors who do not segment. This is a from their research warehouse of USA advisor database (Source Business Health Pty Ltd. 2014 US Advisors Key Value Drivers USA* The Value of Practice Management)
How do you segment?
While there are several different methods to segment clients, the key metric to use is revenue. Top financial advisors know that everything must be measurable: segmenting by revenue per client on an annual basis is the number one measurement to use. Besides revenue, the most common ways advisors segment their clients is part subjective and part numerical. For example, some advisors put the word” influence” on a client’s benchmark. Does this client refer ideal clients to your firm and is he or she influential with others?
Other measures you can use to segment include:
The next step?
So how can you start segmenting your clients? It can be quite simple, start by creating an excel spreadsheet and add in the following categories above and or create your own. Create a scoring method and determine if they are ideal clients, or non-ideal. Now the hard part comes in which I will discuss in future blogs. Creating two plans, one plan for ideal clients, processes and systems, and one plan for non- ideal clients processes and systems. You have to have a plan for each. Once you create those plans, it will become clear how you are going to grow your business at 15% or more on an annual basis and tackle capacity. Good luck in growing your practice!