Personal Finance Essentials
12 Questions to Ask Prospective Advisors
- Back to Choosing a Financial Advisor
- Why You May Need a Financial Advisor
- Four Kinds of Practitioners You Can Hire
- 12 Questions to Ask Prospective Advisors
- The Ideal Financial Advisor
- Nine Taboos Between You and Your Advisor
- Warning Signs of Fraud
- How to Work with Your Advisor
- Evaluating Your Advisor’s Performance
Don’t Be Charmed by Credentials or Titles
Ask These Questions First, and Let the Answers Do the Work
Before you start interviewing candidates, a few things are worth keeping in mind. You don’t necessarily need to limit your search to local advisors. Many successful advisor-client relationships operate entirely by phone and email, and most clients meet with their advisor no more than once a year. Restricting yourself to your local area could mean passing over excellent advisors who simply don’t have an office near you.
Pay close attention to how clearly candidates communicate. If you can’t explain what an advisor said to someone else after the meeting, that’s a signal to look elsewhere. Jargon is not sophistication. As for references – don’t ask for them, and be cautious of advisors who volunteer them. Every advisor has at least one unhappy client; you’ll never receive that person’s name. All you’ll get is the advisor’s fan club. Beyond the privacy implications, testimonials are generally restricted by the SEC. The questions below will give you far more useful information than any reference could.
Interview at least two or three candidates. The following questions will help you make a confident, informed choice.
Question #1: What Are Your Services?
Typical advisory services include financial planning (covering college and retirement planning), insurance analysis, tax guidance, investment management and estate planning. But many advisors handle only one or two of these areas. If you need services beyond what your advisor provides, ask whether they will help coordinate those services or whether you’ll need to manage that yourself.
You should also ask about documentation and record-keeping. Will the advisor handle the paperwork you need for tax preparation? How often will you receive account statements? Can you access your accounts online at any time? If the advisor issues performance reports, ask whether they conform to the Global Investment Performance Standards – the industry benchmark for calculating and reporting results accurately.
Question #2: Are You a Fiduciary?
Stockbrokers and insurance agents legally represent their firms. They may recommend products that are suitable for you without those products being the best option available. An Investment Advisor Representative, by contrast, is legally required to serve your best interests – full stop. Asking whether your candidate is a fiduciary, and in what capacity, cuts through all the titles and designations and gets to the most important legal question: who does this person actually work for?
Ask to see Form ADV. If they can’t produce it, they are not a Registered Investment Advisor. You can verify registration at adviserinfo.sec.gov.
Question #3: How Are You Compensated?
Many practitioners hold multiple licenses and earn income in multiple ways. In addition to direct fees and commissions, fund companies, insurance carriers, wrap account sponsors and others sometimes pay advisors extra compensation for recommending their products – in the form of cash, software, event tickets or other benefits. A complete picture of how your advisor is compensated is essential to understanding where their incentives lie.
Question #4: What Costs Will I Incur in Addition to Your Compensation?
Ask specifically about account setup fees, annual maintenance fees, transfer fees and any termination charges. If you open an IRA, for example, will there be a setup cost? A fee when you close the account or move money to a different custodian? Many brokerage firms and insurance companies charge fees that clients never think to ask about – until they appear on a statement. Written disclosure of all costs, obtained before you commit, protects you from surprises later.
Question #5: What Is Your Investment Methodology?
If the advisor has a formal approach, find out whether they developed it alone or whether the firm has an Investment Committee operating under established policies and protocols. How long has the current methodology been in place? An approach adopted in the last year or two carries less weight than one that has been tested across different market conditions.
You can also learn a great deal by asking how the advisor’s practice looked before, during and after a significant market downturn. What were they recommending in the years leading up to the disruption? How did they handle the volatility? How many of their clients from that period are still with them today? Turnover in the client base tells you more than any reference call ever could.
Question 6: If Something Happens to You, What Happens to Me?
This question isn’t only about emergencies. It covers the everyday reality of vacations, illness and unanticipated absences. A solo practitioner with no staff or backup may leave you with no one to call if you need help quickly – including accessing funds in an urgent situation. Ask whether other advisors in the firm know your account and are authorized to execute transactions on your behalf. Knowing that someone will answer the phone is one thing. Knowing that someone can actually help you is another.
Succession planning matters too. Ask how long the advisor plans to remain in this field and what happens to your account if they retire, sell their practice or are no longer able to work. A thoughtful advisor will have a written succession plan in place. Ask to understand it – including who specifically would take over and how the transition would work. You shouldn’t have to start over with a stranger because your advisor didn’t plan ahead.
Question #7: What Kind of People Do You Usually Work With?
You want an advisor who has extensive experience working with people just like you. Ask specifically about the investment amounts their typical clients bring. A mismatch in either direction – you having significantly more or significantly less than their usual client – can mean you won’t get the level of attention or expertise your situation calls for.
Question #8: How Long Have You Been in This Business?
Ask specifically how long they have been practicing in financial services – not in their previous career. Don’t be hesitant to press for clarity if the answer is vague. Length of experience in this specific field matters, and a candidate who has been in the industry for only a few years carries a different risk profile than one who has navigated multiple market cycles with clients.
Question #9: What Is Your Ratio of Support Staff to Professional Staff?
You should also ask whether the firm conducts background checks on all staff members before hiring them. Your advisor will have access to your Social Security Number, bank account information, investment records and insurance policies – and so will their support staff. Checking criminal records and credit histories isn’t an optional courtesy; it’s a basic standard for protecting your financial information and identity.
Question #10: Do You Have a Clean Regulatory Record?
Don’t hesitate to ask this question directly, and don’t stop there. Every legitimate practitioner holds at least one FINRA or state insurance license, which makes it straightforward to verify their background with regulators. Look for complaints, disciplinary actions and fines. Make a habit of checking every few years, not just at the time of hiring. People’s circumstances change, and a clean record at the start of the relationship doesn’t guarantee a clean record today.
Question #11: Why Did You Choose This Work?
Decide if you prefer to work with an advisor who is more interested in the markets or in how you will interact with the markets. Neither orientation is wrong – but the two produce very different working relationships. Consider which fits better with how you think about money and what kind of guidance you’re looking for.
Question #12: Why Should I Hire You?
When the interview is finished, ask yourself one more question – this one privately: do you like this person? Personal rapport matters more than it might seem. You may be working with this advisor for decades, and a relationship built on trust and genuine communication is worth more than credentials alone.
