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Blue Chip Journal, Issue 77

Blue Chip is a quarterly journal for the financial planning industry and is the official publication of the Financial Planning Institute of Southern Africa NPC (FPI), effective from the January 2020 edition. Blue Chip publishes contributions from FPI and other leading industry figures, covering all aspects of the financial planning industry.

Blue Chip is a quarterly journal for the financial planning industry and is the official publication of the Financial Planning Institute of Southern Africa NPC (FPI), effective from the January 2020 edition. Blue Chip publishes contributions from FPI and other leading industry figures, covering all aspects of the financial planning industry.

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FINANCIAL PLANNING<br />

4. Greater focus on real-life goals<br />

The study revealed that women placed greater importance on life goals such as saving for<br />

retirement and not outliving their assets in retirement, providing sufficiently for healthcare and<br />

lifestyle maintenance. They are also more concerned about poor market performance compared<br />

to their male counterparts. This makes women ideal candidates for bespoke financial life planning<br />

with a like-minded financial planner.<br />

5. Desire for personal fit with an investment advisor<br />

The women surveyed placed high value on the connection they establish with an advisor. It is<br />

important to them that they trust the advisor and have a good personality fit. Where they do not<br />

feel these, they are more likely than men to switch the relationship as a result.<br />

6. Pivotal life moments as a driver<br />

Consumers are more likely to seek a wealth relationship after a major life experience, such as a<br />

marriage, promotion, divorce, or the loss of a loved one. For women, divorce is a particular<br />

differentiator. Women often experience greater financial impacts from divorce or separation than<br />

men and are twice as likely as men to cite divorce as the reason for opening a new investment<br />

account. The dissolution of a marriage is an even more powerful driver of switching financial advisors<br />

than the loss of a loved one.<br />

Palesa Dube CFP®, Wealth Manager,<br />

Wealth Creed<br />

NEXT STEPS FOR YOUR COMPANY AND TEAM<br />

A clear take-away from this research is that it is critical for wealth management firms to revisit their<br />

offering, if it is to make a meaningful effort in attracting and retaining female clients. The suggested<br />

set of questions (Exhibit 1) is one such way for firms to delve deeper into the area. The advent of this<br />

new market is not only lucrative but presents the wealth management industry with an opportunity<br />

to make a meaningful contribution to society, in rewriting a past that side lined and excluded women<br />

as an inferior class. The real opportunity is for the industry to respond appropriately to women’s<br />

financial planning needs with a deep desire to uplift and do good. If we respond in this way, we will<br />

be demonstrating stewardship and the least our noble profession demands. <br />

EXHIBIT 1: QUESTIONS FOR MANAGEMENT TEAMS<br />

• Where are we in the journey<br />

to win with women? If we are<br />

honest with ourselves, have we<br />

had the impact we aspired to?<br />

• Do we have a go-forward<br />

playbook we are methodically<br />

executing, module by module?<br />

• Are we tracking our results in<br />

a systematic way across the<br />

measures that matter?<br />

• Have we piloted new compensation<br />

and incentive structures<br />

to attract and retain more<br />

diverse field talent?<br />

• How are we seeking to build<br />

capabilities among advisors<br />

and the rest of the firm?<br />

• Have we piloted new<br />

service and product<br />

offerings and corresponding<br />

pricing models for<br />

segment-specific client<br />

acquisition (eg “white<br />

glove” subscription models<br />

for high net-worth women)?<br />

• Do we have a segmented view<br />

of our client base by gender and<br />

household composition, with a<br />

dedicated strategy to win with<br />

each segment (eg joint babyboomer<br />

households, millennial<br />

women)?<br />

• When we lose an account or<br />

see a large transfer of assets<br />

following a key life event (eg<br />

loss of a loved one, divorce),<br />

do we systematically capture<br />

the feedback to inform our<br />

go-forward strategy?<br />

Source: McKinsey<br />

https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/financial-services/our-insights/women-as-the-next-wave-of-growth-in-us-wealth-management<br />

Sources:<br />

[1] Article: Women as the next wave of growth in US wealth management by Pooneh Baghai, Olivia Howard, Lakshmi Prakash and Jill Zucker,<br />

July 29, 2020<br />

[2] https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2020-07-22-time-for-black-women-to-lead-in-higher-education/<br />

[3] SA women embrace who they are: https://www.McKinsey1life.co.za/blog/honey-listen

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