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I spent years inside RIAs before moving into product work, and one lesson stuck with me: The firms that treat estate planning as a core element of a client’s financial profile win on both relationship depth and business outcomes. If your cost to acquire a client is high, the simplest way to improve the math is to keep that client longer and manage more of what they own. Retention and share of wallet drive durable growth. Estate planning is one of the most efficient ways to earn both.
Leading With Estate Planning Opens More Prudent Discovery
When advisors lead with planning, the discovery conversations change. It’s no secret that a new client relationship takes time to develop. You need to be able to ask pointed questions that lead you to tangible solutions. When you keep estate planning at the forefront, you’re no longer asking, “Where are the assets we don’t see?” in a way that feels like asset gathering. Instead, you’re saying, “If we understand the full picture, we can spot probate exposure, tax risk, and better options for protecting the people you care about.”
Reframing this question opens the door to accounts held away, old 401(k)s, self-directed trading accounts, LLCs, and rental properties that made sense years ago but don’t at today’s cap rates. The byproduct is better advice and, often, new assets that belong in a coordinated estate plan.
With a better view of your client’s full financial picture, you can also employ more creative and strategic planning levers. Many estate plans still default to outright distributions. That may be simple, but it’s not great for long-term asset stewardship or protection. Modern structures, specifically trusts with access provisions and thoughtful distribution mechanics, can reduce tax and creditor exposure while keeping money professionally managed. If your average client is in their 60s, you’re already thinking about required minimum distributions (RMDs) and beneficiary planning. Tying the estate design to those realities doesn’t lock down anything; it just raises the odds that the family’s plan remains intact and investable across generations.
Better Equipping Advisors to Plan Beyond the Estate Tax
For a long time, the industry treated estate planning as shorthand for estate tax planning. Recent legislation has given advisors more certainty on federal estate tax rules. The bigger opening now is income tax, which provides recurring, tangible benefits each year when clients file their tax returns and see reduced liabilities or improved cash flow.
Saving clients real dollars this year and setting up choices that reduce lifetime tax creates clear value moments. Think of basis management, qualified plan strategies, charitable timing, and when a Roth move advances both the estate outcome and the retirement plan. People only face estate tax once; they file an income tax return every year.
Education plays a major role in making this shift possible. Large firms may have in-house specialists who can join meetings, but those teams go farther when frontline advisors have a strong foundation and know which levers exist. Smaller firms without specialists need confidence to start the conversation and a path to escalate complexity.
The best training involves layers. Give advisors quick, in-context prompts that sit next to the client conversation. For example, rather than dedicating entire meetings to estate planning, incorporate trust versus outright distribution discussions into routine conversations. When scenarios like retirement accounts over $1 million, a second marriage, or children in high-risk professions surface, use these moments to weave in planning. This way, every advisor spots the same opportunities and consistency becomes automatic. Also, offer deeper modules and CE-level paths for advanced topics. And make the math transparent. If an advisor can click into how a distribution waterfall or tax estimate was derived, they’re far more likely to put that page in front of a client. When people don’t feel ready for a follow-up question, they avoid the topic altogether.
These changes need to be applied across the board, too. While it’s important for advisors to be able to talk through the planning process, the materials presented to clients must also be digestible. Traditional estate planning materials are often walls of text, making it all-too-easy for clients to glaze over. Diagrams that clearly show who gets what, when, and under what conditions move the discussion forward faster than a 60-page binder. When people can see the flow, they lean in and ask better questions. That’s where real planning — and growth in client relationships — happens.
Keeping the Conversation Human
All clients can benefit from estate planning; it’s not just for the top of the market anymore. Ten years ago, a $5 million client with a thorny tax problem needed an army of lawyers and accountants to work through options. Technology and tighter workflows now let advisors deliver meaningful planning to households that didn’t have access before. Expanding who gets high-quality estate planning without turning every case into a customized, months-long project is one of the most promising developments in wealth management today.
Will estate planning become table stakes for advisory relationships? I think so. We watched the same pattern with financial planning. Early adopters used it to differentiate; over time, clients began to expect it. When that moment arrives, the question shifts from “Do you offer estate planning?” to “How proficient is your process, how broad is your toolkit, and how consistently can you deliver across the firm?”
Many clients hear “estate planning” and think morbidity. You can reset the room in simple ways. I often start with married couples by asking them how they met, how they built their lives, and other questions that help me really get to know them and soften the energy in the room. When all else fails, a touch of humor can help: “We’re going to ‘kill’ John a few times on paper and see what happens to the plan, then we’ll do the same to Jane.”
Another framing that resonates is agency: Every dollar you’ve built will end up with family, charity, or the government. Planning is about deciding those shares, then using the rules to carry out your priorities. That’s a much easier conversation than, “Let’s talk about death.”
This integrated approach doesn’t just stand to benefit smaller shops. Investment-led shops use planning to deepen data gathering for family structure, titling, private entities, and outside retirement plans. Firms already doing planning gain efficiency by standardizing outputs, while smart outsourcing and process design help manage peaks in demand without pulling advisors away from client work.
Estate planning earns wallet share without asking for it, strengthens retention by design, and, when done well, meets families where they actually feel value: In the outcomes they see each year and the clarity they feel about the future. That next phase is here, and it belongs to more than just the ultra-wealthy.
Patrick Carlson is associate general counsel, estate & tax product at Vanilla.
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