How strong is the sales aspect of an IFA or financial advisers role? What percentage of the IFA or financial advisers role is taken up by actually selling financial products rather than financial planning? These are both important questions that should be asked by new entrants into the financial services industry, particularly those looking to become financial advisers or IFA's.
For those professionals or graduates out there that are considering a career in financial services, the most likely route into the financial services industry is through a banking organisation. Recruitment througout the financial services industry and certainly more so within bancassurance, is heavily focused on face to face sales skills and targeting of the financial advisory staff. Unfortunately, the financial services industry as a whole doesn't have an exceptional graduate intake like those of the merchant banking industry or the public sector, nor does it seem particularly interested in creating one. This means that the preeminent route into the financial services industry and regulated sales is that of the banks.
Now, with the onset of RDR and the increasing transparency of the industry, the heavily sales focused financial advisory service provided by the banks retail arms doesn't sit particularly well with the cry for truely independent and unbiased financial advice. Banks, when offering financial advice, by their very nature are biased towards offering their own products, they have to be. Therefore, it stands to reason that the advice offered is perhaps tainted by a need for the financial adviser to acheive targets. Of course, most if not all of the UK banking industry offer independent or IFA arms although they tend to be aimed at catering for the affluent. It is also however, very difficult for a newly qualified financial adviser or graduate/trainee to be offered a position within one of these segments.
What has to be realised for those seeking a career in financial services/regulated sales as a financial adviser or IFA is that there is a sales aspect to the role and most if not all positions will be targeted to a lesser or greater degree. How much of a sales aspect the newly qualified financial adviser can accept is down to personal feelings. Some will revel in the targeted environment and thrive on the peer recogntion it engenders, others will prefer the independent route, where perhaps the focus, although still sales orientated, leans more towards the financial advisory aspect and the nature of the financial planning advice proferred. Each have their own benefits and pitfalls and its really horses for courses. In my humble opionion the financial advisory industry as a whole is a sales industry first and foremost, the advice, whilst learning your trade as an IFA or financial adviser, comes second.
Salesman, IFA or Financial Adviser?
Wednesday, 30 September 2009Posted by XL Recruitment at 14:00
Labels: banking, financial adviser, financial services industry, IFA
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