The Hidden Growth Crisis Facing Newly Independent RIAs

The champagne has gone flat. After months of planning the great breakaway, signing independence paperwork, and celebrating freedom from wirehouse constraints, newly minted registered investment advisors (RIA) owners face a sobering reality. They've traded a boss for a back-office burden that's quietly strangling their growth.

Recent research from Cerulli Associates reveals that 83% of RIAs cite limited resources and advisor time constraints as a major or moderate challenge to growth, according to the firm's U.S. RIA Marketplace 2025 report released in November. The average independent advisor spends just 7% of their week, or roughly three hours, on business development. Operational tasks consume the rest of their time.

This creates a "day 2" problem. The industry narrative celebrates the breakaway moment, but Cerulli's data shows what comes next is harder. Once advisors finish transferring their book of business, the inorganic growth stops. 57% of RIAs consider new client acquisition a leading challenge. Many advisors have discovered they've created operational constraints that make organic growth difficult.

"In an ever-consolidating market, the need for positive net asset flows cannot be overstated, given their impact on the future of the RIA channels," said Stephen Caruso, associate director at Cerulli. The firm's research shows that without dedicated marketing, business development, and client service capabilities, RIAs struggle to tap into new markets despite gaining the independence they sought.

The Team Advantage

The solution isn't working harder — it's working smarter, through team-based structures, according to Cerulli's U.S. Advisor Metrics 2025 report released in December.