As a 401(k) financial advisor, Networking takes time

Ary Rosenbaum - The Rosenbaum Law Firm P.C.
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Being a retirement plan financial advisor is a never-ending battle to maintain your book of business while trying to grow it.

When it comes to networking and social media, I think the way you meet potential clients and potential sources of referrals is to try it as if you were dating, It takes time to develop relationships because relationships require trust and that requires time.

Did you ever succeed in dating by trying to take things quickly, trying to roll up a month’s worth of dates into one?  I don’t know about you, it never worked for me.  When you watch it on film and television, you’re kind of amused about the fellow at the bar with the really cheesy pick up lines and wonder how he ever achieved anything with someone of the opposite sex? But is it that different than the insurance agent I never heard from before who states on a business-networking site: “Lets meet to discuss what we can do together with your clients.”?  Do I know you? Do you think the advisors who referred me my clients will mind?

The greatest relationships that I ever made in this business whether it’s been clients or financial advisors or third party administrators that became great sources of referrals is that it has taken time. It has taken time because both sides need to develop trust and that takes time. In addition, I have never taken a meeting or had a phone call with any advisor or TPA with the idea that I had to sell them on being a client. The reason I have done that is because I’m more interested in developing a long-term relationship instead of a quick score for a legal bill.  If you have a good enough message about your practice, you don’t need a hard sell, the way you handle your practice will sell itself.

I have talked with hundreds of advisors over the years. A few have become clients; more have been sources of referrals. Most have not, but that’s fine because the funny thing about developing relationships is that you may not reap any benefit until several years later when that person you met may recommend you to someone who then recommended you to someone else, who then asked you to help them on a matter that makes them a client. Quite honestly, I have never received a client from someone who stated before I met that they can get me clients. Possibly because they don’t have any clients or more likely that they think that can easily get business from me and my spheres of influence by promising me that.

The point is that you shouldn’t try too hard. That means when it comes to networking with people either in meeting in-person or online, you should take things slow and not try to make a hard sell because are likely going to scare away someone that can be a valued partner to help build your practice or someone that can act as a referral of business.

You don’t need to cut fast to the hoop to score; you just need to get it in the basket.

 

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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