Deciding Between 2 “Right” Choices

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Beverly Flaxington is a practice management consultant. She answers questions from advisors facing human resource issues. To submit yours, email us here.

Dear Bev,

We recently lost a key member of our team. He was diagnosed with a rare illness, and three or four weeks later, he was gone. We’ve all been devastated, of course. He was a nice guy, along with being one of our top producers and firm leaders. We’ve been reaching out to his clients proactively. They are all similarly devastated but appear to want to keep working with the firm.

The dilemma is this: Our owner would like to establish a foundation in our colleague’s name for underprivileged kids in our community. Our office is in a very wealthy area, but a few towns over you can find some of the worst poverty imaginable. It is tough to say, but our client base is very right-leaning, and they have the attitude that people should just fend for themselves. Ergo our problem. Do we move forward with something we know our colleague would have cared about or do we capitulate, knowing if we do this, some of his clients might leave because they see us as too “woke”?

J.V.

Dear J.V.,

First of all, my condolences on your loss. This is the third firm I have heard of in the last month that lost someone really special without much warning. I send my sympathies to your entire team. It is very difficult on so many fronts to be able to move on in a caring and professional manner.

To your question, I’d like to poll our leadership on this one, because I think the answer lies in the value lens one puts on the world. For me, I am about doing what you believe is right, even if it isn’t profitable in that moment to do it. However, others would likely say you should go out of your way not to offend your clients — after all, what they think and believe should be paramount. They are paying the bills.