What Not to Say at the Holiday Party

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Everyone says the holidays as the dead zone for client acquisition, but I take the opposite view. What better opportunity to meet new clients than when socializing with people who already know and trust you? The problem is that most advisors mess it up by saying the wrong things.

Forget about the elevator pitch

Here’s how the typical advisor responds to the question, “So what do you do?”

“I’m a financial advisor with Merrill Lynch.”

Here’s what the person on the other side of the red velvet cake stand really hears.

They’ll nod their heads and smile, but the only form of recognition you’ll get is on the drive home when the husband will say to the wife, “It was great to meet that woman from UBS (or Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, insert brokerage firm name here). I wonder if she knows my buddy Mark from college.” Plus if you’re talking to a millennial or Gen X, they’re going to affiliate you with the commission brokerage business and that is a strike against you right away.

“I’m a wealth advisor who works with affluent families and individuals to help them plan for retirement and manage life events. Our firm was founded in 1990 and we have a bunch of really smart PhDs working for us one of whom came up with an award-winning financial theory. We have been on the Barron’s list the last four years and focus on delivering objective financial advice on a flat-fee basis.”

By the way, allow me to excuse myself, I have to get some more egg nog to wake myself up from the food coma I’ve slipped into while listening to your soliloquy.