Is a brokerage no longer a "lifestyle business?"

Expert says advisers have had to commercialise their offering

Is a brokerage no longer a "lifestyle business?"

Many Kiwi brokers are in the middle of reassessing the way they do business, and according to one expert, this may mean a “commercialisation” of firms which had been set up as lifestyle businesses.

Many financial services professionals enter solo broking to free up time and flexibility in their schedule, to be their own boss and sustain a good work-life balance. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has meant a huge reassessment of priorities for all businesses, and advisers have not been exempt.

Business expert and former adviser Tony Vidler says that over the past month, advisers have had to “commercialise” their offering, and have been forced to reassess how they position themselves in the market. He says specialist advice businesses have had a particularly rough time of it, and as we move forward, a “jack of all trades” approach will serve many brokerages better than niche specialism.

“One of the biggest themes that I’ve seen is the commercialisation of adviser businesses,” Vidler explained to FSC members.

“In the past they’ve been run as a lifestyle business, and they’re now having to learn how to manage their staff better, how to use technology, how to redefine their value proposition, engage with clients in different ways, etc.”

“There is also quite a significant strategic reassessment happening,” he continued.

“It’s been an odd time, but the other big thing that comes out is a lean towards a real broadening of their service offering. The specialist advice firms have suffered the most over the last month - those who only do mortgage broking, or only do investment advice, etc. The more holistic businesses have had an easier time of it, and most of the specialists I see are now considering how to broaden their service offering.”

When it comes to planning ahead, Vidler says advisers now have a “golden opportunity” to take the regulatory changes they’ve been working on over the past months and give them a test run before the new, delayed regime kicks into gear. He says this will be a vital part of positioning their offering in the “new normal”, especially once legislative change is picked back up.

“That’s a really critical part of getting your positioning right in the new regulated world,” he explained.

“It’s not just a matter of having a great process with stands up to audit scrutiny, you have to have the right people doing the right things inside your business.”

“We’ve got a timeframe now where you’re not going to have regulators bashing you up along the way,” he added. “If you’re ready to run as a FAP by July, you have a solid 6-8 months to ensure you have the right behaviours and systems actually working before the regime goes live.”

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