Keeping Clients for Life
×
Success!
×
Error!
×
Information !
Rights Contact Login For More Details
- Wiley
More About This Title Keeping Clients for Life
- English
English
A successful financial planner is someone who does more than just crunch numbers and present an annual investment plan to clients. There is a psychological component to effective client care as well as to issues involving clients' overall financial well-being. People skills, as well as financial planning skills, are necessary to build a successful financial planning business. This comprehensive guide teaches both new and veteran financial professionals how to relate to their clients in meaningful ways, thus growing their business by increasing the long-term retention of those clients. Offered here are insights into such issues as how to determine which clients to accept, how to propose a plan clients can use, how to tread carefully in family situations, how to develop sensitivity and communications skills, and how to work with the media and recognize the importance of building your business one lasting relationship at a time.
Karen Caplan Altfest, PhD, CFP (New York, NY), is Vice President of L. J. Altfest & Co., a financial planning and investment management firm. She is also the Director of the Financial Planning and Investments Program at the New School.
Karen Caplan Altfest, PhD, CFP (New York, NY), is Vice President of L. J. Altfest & Co., a financial planning and investment management firm. She is also the Director of the Financial Planning and Investments Program at the New School.
- English
English
Karen Caplan Altfest, Ph.D., CFP (New York, NY) is Vice President of L.J. Altfest & Co., a financial planning and investment management firm. She is also the Director of the Financial Planning and Investments Program at New School University. Altfest is actively involved in financial planners associations and has written many articles for professional journals. She is also frequently quoted in periodicals including Working Women, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and Family Money, and is a regular guest on CNN and CNBC.
- English
English
Preface.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
First Meeting: On the Telephone.
Sitting Down with Your Prospects: The Initial Consultation.
Beginning the Process.
Working with Clients.
Frequently Recurring Client Fears and Glitches.
Being Available.
Presenting the Plan.
Follow Up.
The Media is the Message.
Service is Key.
Three Ways to Rate Yourself.
Appendix: Financial Questionnaire.
Index.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
First Meeting: On the Telephone.
Sitting Down with Your Prospects: The Initial Consultation.
Beginning the Process.
Working with Clients.
Frequently Recurring Client Fears and Glitches.
Being Available.
Presenting the Plan.
Follow Up.
The Media is the Message.
Service is Key.
Three Ways to Rate Yourself.
Appendix: Financial Questionnaire.
Index.
- English
English
Altfest does an admirable job of detailing the important and often overlooked part of being a successful financial advisor: the human component.--Research Magazine