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How To Find Good Qualified Financial Advisors

February 15, 2010 Financial Advisors No Comments

Financial advisors are trained professionals in a highly-regulated industry. Like doctors and lawyers, financial advisors must be licensed and undergo continuing education. Unfortunately, financial advisors are salespeople, and many put their role as salesmen ahead of their roles as fiduciary professionals.

Here are some tips to make sure that you find a person who is a credit to the investment industry, not a cheap salesman in a fancy suit.

Experience or Youth – Which is Better For You?

How experienced is your financial advisor? If he or she appears to be older, this does not necessarily answer your question. Many people become financial advisors after being displaced from another career.

Experience is important, but don’t necessarily disqualify a would-be financial advisor for being new to the industry. Many more experienced financial advisors develop bad habits over the course of a career, and may not be up on the newest trends.

Older financial advisors may be more conservative in their recommendations, which may or may not be appropriate for you.

If your financial advisor is experienced, ask for some references. A good financial advisor with happy clients will be eager to provide them. A shady one will skirt the issue. It will be easy to tell.

If your financial advisor is new to the industry, ask him or her what score they received on the Series 7 exam. More experienced brokers will undoubtedly find such a question offensive, and it is less relevant for them.

But newer financial advisors are there for one of two reasons – 1) They have strong sales skills, which is good for the company but probably not for you. 2) They have strong investment knowledge, in which case, they may be a better financial advisor for you than their other, more experienced counterparts.

The Series 7 exam is a comprehensive test of a new financial advisor’s investments knowledge, which a full 33 percent of would-be brokers fail and has a median score of just 73 percent. Look for a new financial advisor with a score of at least 85 percent – they are not easy to find, but they know their stuff.

Interview Your Prospective Financial Advisor

Set up a face-to-face interview with at least four financial advisors from different firms. First, take note of their phone demeanor. Does the person sound like a professional?

Does she seem eager to meet with you or expect you to qualify? A true investment professional is interested in helping people, whether they are worth $500 million or $5,000. Only cheap salespeople from disreputable firms refuse to work with people of modest means.

When you meet the financial advisor, take note of his company’s office. Does it seem professional and well managed? Professionals take pride in their work and conform to industry standards. In the investment world, this means everyone is in professional business dress and things are orderly.

During the interview, determine whether the broker is truly trying to assess your needs or simply trying to sell you products for which he earns a high commission.

Never buy mutual funds from a broker – you can pick mutual funds for yourself. Funds sold by brokers include sales charges, whereas funds you can buy on your own typically do not. Also, be highly skeptical of annuity products.

Finally, when you have narrowed your search down to your favorites, Google their employers. If there have been any securities law violations by the firms, take this into account when making your decision.

A perfectly good advisor can work for a firm with a bad apple or two, but if there are multiple violations, particularly from the executive level of the firm, then the company probably does not practice the best business ethics and it is most likely advisable that you take your business elsewhere.

William Smith the author provides additional financial information on many subjects as well as the secret to his success in the market along with 5 Free power stock picks emailed daily so grab your Free subscription on his website at Financial Advisors (All is Free)

How much do financial advisors charge and are they worth it?

February 14, 2010 Financial Advisors 9 Comments

I believe we will go up a tax bracket soon – are expecting as well – need to do some financial planning – wondering if advisors are worth it? Any opnions appreciated!

New Succession Planning and Market Valuing System Introduced at Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network

February 12, 2010 Financial Advisors No Comments

New Succession Planning and Market Valuing System Introduced at Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network
ST. LOUIS—-Today, Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network, LLC , through a relationship with FP Transitions, the nation’s leading provider of equity management valuation and succession planning services, announced the introduction of a new program that helps enable Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network business owners to more precisely determine, build and monitor the value of their practice.

Read more on Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance

5 Key Features of Financial Advisor

February 11, 2010 Financial Advisors No Comments

The dictionary meaning of advisor means “an expert who gives advice”. It means the people who are expert in their field should gives advice or says guidelines to give best possible ways to make the task easy.

The advisor is also called consultants in the present time. There are many types of advisor or consultants in the service as well as in the industrial sector. They are usually called as professionals.

1.With the upcoming financial market the importance of the advisor gets increases. The Financial Advisor is necessary because normally the customer are busy with another tasks and they have no time to see where to invest or how to save taxes on their income.

2. The Financial Advisor take consulting fees for giving advises to the customers. There are different types of financial advisors some are specializes in stock market and mutual funds while some are specialize in other derivatives like banks and government investment tools. You must be clear about where to divert your funds to get the benefits at a lesser risk. Accordingly you need to select the financial advisor.

3. You must take the financial advisor in good faith because on the bases of the expertise of finance advisor you are able to make an investment. However some time the financial advisor self-righteously suggest something odd that your mind can’t accept it. It is better to select the honest and frank advisor. As a customer you must have to smart enough to take the decision.

4. It is financial advisors duty to make their customer satisfied by giving them proper advise. You can see that honest and frank advisors can make their business grow easily than the financial advisor who misguide and lead the customer into debt.

5. At present some financial advisor become a instruments of the various financial companies They will get remuneration in terms of points from the selling the funds and other financial tools. It is now best of the interest to the financial advisor rather than thinking for the customer profits. So such types of wrong of self-interest practice can give bad reputation in the market.

The honesty with the client or customer is the keys in the financial advise business.

Christy Myers is a writer for Fee Only Financial Advisors , the premier website to find financial advisors, fee only financial advisors, advisor career financial, advisor certified financial, advisor as career financial and many more.

Financial advisors??

February 10, 2010 Financial Advisors 5 Comments

I have a question.. I am into some pretty deep debt.. I was wondering if anyone knew how a financial advisor or financial planner works.. How would I pay them? I am needing their help to help me pay off debt so how do I possibly afford to pay them?

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