The Essential Skill for Advising Women: Building Trust

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Creating trust with a client is not a one-time event. It is a journey that starts at the first meeting and continues throughout the life of the advisor-client relationship. And, while trust is an integral part of any client relationship, it’s especially important for your female clients.

With women currently controlling the majority of wealth in the United States and estimated to receive 70% of the $41 trillion in intergenerational wealth transfers over the next several decades, building relationships in a way that attracts and retains female clients is an increasingly important skill.[i]

The best way to establish trust with a female client is to be Thoughtful, Reliable, Understandable, Sensitive, and Transparent. Let’s take a closer look at each of these traits and how they can help your practice better serve your typical female client.

Be thoughtful

There are many ways to show thoughtfulness, among them demonstrating curiosity, showing empathy, remembering small details, noting and celebrating accomplishments, or even just expressing sympathy during a hard time. Your thoughtfulness comes across when you treat your clients as people, not just prospects or assets under management.

Demonstrate that you care, and make sure you’re being authentic. Women know when you are being attentive as part of a sales strategy, and they have radar for disingenuous displays of interest. Find out what types of client recognition and appreciation tools work best for you and stick with them. If sending handwritten notes is not who you are, then pick up the phone and call your clients instead.

What’s important is that you find some way to regularly demonstrate that you care about your clients as people, not that you do so in any particular, prescribed way.

Be reliable

Another necessary ingredient for building trust is reliability. Be interested and eager to assist your clients and their families every time you connect. Communicate constantly that you and your firm are dependable financial allies, online through your website and in e-mail, as well as during person-to-person meetings or meetings on the phone.

I often hear complaints from my female colleagues that a financial advisor said he or she was going to check on something, but then failed to follow up. Some clients will shrug this off as a simple oversight, but for many women such unreliability is unacceptable. Following up shows that you care, that your client is important to you, and that you are working on her behalf, even when she is not in your office.

If you are a person who has trouble with follow-through, or one who finds that follow-up calls, for instance, often fall through the cracks, then develop a support system for getting this part of your job done. Schedule a follow-up reminder in your calendar the moment you tell a client you will take action. Assign follow-up communication to a junior advisor. Follow-through is the key to reliability, so make sure you have a method for proving to your female clients that you can be counted on.

[i] Wojnar, K. and Meek, C. Women’s Views of Wealth and the Planning Process: It’s Their Values the Matter, not Just Their Value, Advisor Perspectives, March 1, 2011.