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How Do I Use These Resources In A Client Meeting?

April 8, 2021
Best Practices, How Advisors Use The Checklists and Flowcharts, Getting Started

There are lots of great ways to use the resources from fpPathfinder with your clients in meetings. Oftentimes, it depends on your own preferences. It may take a little experimenting before you find an approach that is right for you. What follows are several examples of how advisors are using these with their clients.

Above all else, If you’re meeting with a client and are planning to use a checklist or flowchart, the first step is to familiarize yourself with the resource before you meet with the client.

Think of these checklists and flowcharts as conversation aids. Through a conversation, you can begin to identify lots of different planning opportunities and confirm details that you may have otherwise missed.

Some advisors will go through the checklist one question at a time. Others will use it as an outline. It may depend on the client situation and how well you know the client. A new client, in which you know very little about them, may require you to go through each question. In this case, you are able to learn a lot about their situation.

Some members will go through the checklist and cover key questions. Perhaps they highlight the questions they want to focus on, but leave 10-15 minutes at the end of the meeting to quickly go through the other questions to ensure that everyone is on the same page.

In another example, you could break “Issues To Consider In Client Annual Review Meeting” for multiple meetings with the same client in one year. Instead of covering the whole checklist in one meeting, you could address 1-2 sections of the checklist for each meeting. Perhaps in the first meeting of the year, you could discuss the probing questions in the Cashflow section of the checklist. And in the second meeting, you could focus on questions in the Asset and Debt section of the checklist.

As you are going through the resource with the client, if you feel fairly confident about an answer that a client will give… or feel uncomfortable asking a question that you pretty much know the answer to, try turning it around into a statement. Say it out loud so the client knows that you are skipping over certain parts “You don’t have minor children, so these tax breaks don’t apply.”

Some advisors want the client to see that they are working off a checklist or flowchart. It shows to the client that you are detail focused and diligent. If that sounds like you, you can send this to the client in advance of the meeting, or, if you’re meeting virtually, you can share your screen (just be mindful that you are adhering to rules set by your compliance department).

In other cases, some advisors want to keep checklists and flowcharts as their secret sauce. That’s ok too. The point is that these checklists can help uncover planning opportunities to help your client.

It’s important to document the conversation and the answers. Check the boxes as Yes or No for what you have discussed. If you did not discuss a question, leave it blank (perhaps more research is needed, or the client can’t answer the question). That will get categorized later after the meeting.

You just finished going through a checklist with a client, now what do you do with it?

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What Customers Are Saying About Us

Hundreds of other advisors are actively using fpPathfinder. Read what those lovely people have to say about us.
“I just met with a client who had a question regarding her eligibility for Social Security benefits. We went through the flowcharts answering each question and following the lines. She looked at me and said 'This is great, it was so much easier to use this than trying to go through all the literature that Social Security offers. Thank you so much.'”
— Ben G, an advisor in Wisconsin
“fpPathfinder is fantastic. I really can't find any flaws.”
— Joshua, an advisor in Pennsylvania
“fpPathfinder is the only planning tool that tries to address all of the obstacles facing our clients”
— Cathy Curtis, Curtis Financial Planning
“I really love the concept of fpPathfinder because I spend so much time reinventing the wheel when communicating planning concepts to clients. Moreover, the flowchart format can be used time and time again to produce consistent results.”
— Kevin P, an advisor in Illinois
“One client just said 'Wow, thank you for this. I would have screwed up my retirement if not for this.'”
— David, an advisor in NY
“I love the flowcharts and have found them very helpful in guiding clients on complicated planning issues. The charts are easy to follow and help navigate through difficult decisions based on clients' unique circumstances.”
— Jason, an advisor in Illinois
“It's hands-down the best collection of client-facing resources I've found anywhere. The checklists are amazing too, to make sure I'm not forgetting anything in a review.”
— An advisor in Kentucky
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