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INTRODUCTION

The end of the generalist era

3 min read

For most of the last thirty years, the smart move for a financial advisor was to be useful to as many people as possible. Books of business were built by accepting anyone who cleared a minimum asset threshold, then figuring out what they needed once the paperwork was signed. That was rational when demand was strong, competition was fragmented, and people found an advisor by calling whomever their neighbor or accountant recommended.

That world is disappearing.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects roughly 10% growth in personal financial advisor employment through 2034, well above the average for all jobs. More advisors are chasing the same high-value households, and the households themselves have changed how they choose.

25%

Higher revenue among focused firms

96%

Affluent clients research advisors online

97%

Use a specific problem or situation to search