In my role as a financial services recruitment consultant I recently held a conversation with a highly skilled and fully qualified financial adviser who had been working abroad for a number of years in a non UK regulated, financial services market. Now, as a financial adviser he was clearly very skilled and had the relevant FPC qualifications from this country but he was experiencing difficulty getting back into the financial services industry as he didn't hold CAS status.
Certainly as a financial services recruiter I am seeing this more and more. As the economy contracts in other countries, financial advisers who left the UK to go and work in lucrative markets abroad are now looking to make a return to what they know - or so they thought.
With the onset of the Retail Distribution review and the surge in TCF the financial advisory landscape is perhaps even more rugged now for these people than it was a few years ago.
With the UK economy still in turmoil, financial services employers have difficulty justifying the expenditure of taking someone on who isn't going to hit the ground running so if they have to be signed off as competent, with the hours of observed meetings, compliance, etc that it takes, is it any surprise that many are reticent to do it.
There must be a better way of bringing people who are well qualified, highly professional and in most cases, very good at their job, back into a financial services industry that at the moment could do with all the fresh blood it can get.
For a financial adviser coming back to the UK from other markets abroad there are basically two options - 1) You go directly authorised under the protective umbrella of a network. In a lot of cases you won't get client support, you're self employed with no guaranteed income and of course there's no guarantee that your business will be successful, which will leave an unpleasant paragraph on your CV or - 2) You go back in on the ground floor as a trainee with a large organisation - many of which won't sign you off as CAS until they've had their moneys worth, as a trainee your salary won't be anything to write home about and for a financial adviser who has been relatively successful it can be demeaning to have to take not one but a few backwards steps!
I think there's a vastly underused commodity out there for the financial services industry and there must be a way they can be fast tracked back into a role that most are very good at and are clearly qualified for. Answers on a postcard!
Old hand, New Rules?
Thursday, 7 May 2009Posted by XL Recruitment at 17:15
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