What Advisors Don’t Get About Millennials

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I recently gave a keynote talk to advisors at a seminar run by the Investments and Wealth Institute about how to best communicate with millennials to facilitate the intergenerational wealth transfer. In response to my talk, I was asked some very perceptive questions that brought to light answers I feel many in the industry will benefit from hearing.

How do you address the financial education gap?

Millennials are getting their financial information from the internet and in many cases it is not from a person who is a trained financial advisor. I’ll give you an example.

Check out the Physician on Fire (PoF) blog, run by a physician who is a DIY investor who says he has achieved great financial success on his own, which has enabled him to retire early. He advises other physicians about how to do the same through his blogs and podcasts.

DIY bloggers like him tend to be against using anyone who makes commissions. Their opinion is usually that commission-based brokers are a rip off, but if you really need to use an advisor, go for a fee-only RIA firm.

This is a perfect example of what the internet generation loves: highly engaging information with no apparent agenda other than to benefit the reader. While this may or may not be the reality (see next question), it’s a believable enough image of independence, objectivity and all the ideals that people love.

So here’s the answer to the question about education: What’s lacking from PoF’s content is the voice of practical experience. Having never managed money for anyone other than himself in an official capacity, he has the luxury of not having to worry about the true ramifications of his opinions. For example, a blogger can vehemently rail against whole-life insurance and discourage everyone from buying it (as many of these bloggers do, and the millennials gobble it up). Yet the blogger will never have to deal with the angry phone call from the client whose term policy lapsed just in time for him/her to find out they were just diagnosed with a terminal illness.