‘Frankenstein’s monster’: Lightning Round with Edelman CEO Ryan Parker

Swirling sexual misconduct allegations in financial services, clients’ fears of a stock market drop and bitcoin frenzy: These are just a few of the pressing issues Ryan Parker faces in his second year as CEO of Edelman Financial Services, which marks its 30th anniversary this year.

Parker’s insights are particularly influential: Edelman Financial has grown to 43 offices in 21 markets nationwide, and has more than $21 billion in assets under management.

But there’s no time to relax. “The competitive landscape is getting tougher,” Parker told Financial Planning.

His frank answers to a series of unexpected, rapid-fire questions have been edited.

FINANCIAL PLANNING: Is sexual harassment a problem in the financial advisory sector? If yes, what do we do about it?

How do we protect everyone and create a very safe and secure workplace?

RYAN PARKER: Sexual harassment is an issue in the world, so it means that it is also part of our industry. What we have to understand — like any other industry — is what’s happening. Let’s make sure people are trained to know how to identify it. Let’s make sure that we’re setting expectations high and giving people the right tools and mindset. How do we protect everyone and create a very safe and secure workplace?

You have to have a really top-notch human resources group. But if you don’t, don’t do it yourself. Spend the money to bring someone in to do the training, to do the assessment. There are great techniques, tools and people out there who can help you. Take advantage of that, because sometimes you don’t know what you don’t know.

FINANCIAL PLANNING: What’s the best way for financial planners to incorporate robos into a practice?

PARKER: Every custodian has built out a platform that an advisor could integrate to change the client onboarding workflow, whether it’s Orion, TD Ameritrade, Schwab. The first thing I would say is go to whomever your key custodian is and ask them how they can readily come in and enhance the workflow. Because to me it’s not about those being the tools — it’s really about the platform they use.

Edelman Financial growth

Don’t try to create Frankenstein’s monster by going out and trying to figure out 15 different APIs you can plug into within your own world, whatever its scale. Instead, look at a thoughtful process, and assess what tools are available, mainly through your custodian, and figure out how to incorporate your unique value into their standardized toolset?

FINANCIAL PLANNING: How should advisors get ready to advise clients on bitcoin or any other cybercurrency?

PARKER: Go and find the most technical explanation that you can stomach, and use that as an opportunity to go and talk to someone who’s a commercial provider. The more educated you are about the basics, and the more you to have your own personal questions, the better it is when you go to Vanguard or Schwab or whatever. You’re going to be able to understand what they say.

If you just go in and get the generic tutorial, it’s not going to be relevant to you and to your practice. So study first, figure out what questions trigger you, and then go seek out someone in the industry who’s studied it, but do it through your own lens.

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FINANCIAL PLANNING: Agree or disagree: Advisors must offer Social Security planning?

PARKER: Regardless of your client’s situation, Social Security should be part of the conversation. Embed it in your financial planning. Too many people have this run the scenario as optional.

You absolutely have to have the conversation because if it goes away it’s an unfunded liability in your plan. If it gets better, it’s an upside to your plan. If it remains the same, it’s real and should be part of your plan. So, there’s no scenario where you shouldn’t be talking about the role Social Security will play.

It’s also a great opportunity to add value, because the actual Social Security rules and how you optimize it is really complicated. Most people don’t have the skill or the will to understand it. You, as an advisor, can help people avoid bad choices or under-informed decisions. Or, you can use it as a place to add value, not as a place to check a box.

FINANCIAL PLANNING: As M&A accelerates for RIAs, what could go wrong?

PARKER: Consolidation will continue. Acquirers need to be very, very smart and savvy to ensure that they’re assessing for culture and fit and ability to stay in service to clients, as much as they’re allowing the financial engineers to look at valuations and multiples and EBITDA.

You end up in a bad place where, instead of creating bigger and better companies, you create Frankenstein’s monsters.

Otherwise, you end up in a bad place where, instead of creating bigger and better companies, you create Frankenstein’s monsters.

Done right, it’s a healthy, necessary part of how independent financial planning continues to take share in the industry. Done wrong — and it will be done wrong in some places — it will create some blow-off risk.

So if you’re an advisor looking to be acquired, look in the mirror and make sure you really know who the right suitor is. It’s much more than price.

If you’re the acquirer, really make sure that you have a very disciplined and very thoughtful process. That you’re not just jumping into the fray, because it’s the cool thing to do.

FINANCIAL PLANNING: How should advisors talk to clients about recent dramatic stock market gains?

PARKER: Don’t use the word “dramatic” with your clients for the first instance. And the second thing is, talk to clients now about what you’re going to do together when the market correction comes.

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Independent BDs Fiduciary Rule Fee-based compensation Bitcoin Gender issues Gender discrimination Robo advisors Technology Social Security M&A RIAs TD Ameritrade Lightning Round Cryptocurrency
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