http://registeredrep.com/images/subscribe_thumbnail.jpg

Time Really is Money

Jun 1, 2007 12:00 PM, Halah Touryalai


Article tools
sponsored by:

Sign Up for Registered Rep. Newsletters

Everybody knows that time management is key to running a business. But managing your time may be even more important to an RIA's profitability than you may have appreciated before, according to a recent report from Moss Adams and Schwab Institutional called Best-Managed Firms: It's About Time.

Effective time management allowed the top 15 percent of independent fee-based advisory firms surveyed to generate 50 percent to 80 percent more revenue per principal and professional, the study found. The principals and staff at these “best managed” firms put in as many hours as their peers, but achieved far more during those hours than their less-profitable counterparts. That's partly because staff compensation is the most significant cost for an advisory firm, averaging about 70 percent of all expenses, according to the survey. Here's one for your Type-A colleagues, who like to be the last to leave the office: The study shows that longer hours don't add up. The owners who worked longer hours simply generated less income on an hourly basis: a median of $83 per hour, compared to $93 per hour for the others.

The first step to better time management may be as simple as hiring professional help to take on some client responsibilities or support functions. Dave Welling, vice president of strategic marketing programs at Schwab Institutional, says the “best managed” firms that participated in the study had a support staff to professional ratio of 2 to 1, while their peers' ratio stood at just 1.2 to 1.

The survey also recommends that advisors be smart about what they can and can't delegate to new hires. (Use their time wisely, too.) Delegating can be a stumbling block for some advisors. John Krambeer, president of Camden Capital Management, an RIA in El Segundo, Calif., says he has a hard time giving up control. “I know things like customer service are the key to the firm's success. I want to free up my time to give higher touch service to my clients. Instead, I'm paying the bills and making sure the [administrative] stuff is done properly,” he says.

Welling says that's a bad move. “If you're unwilling to delegate what [your staff] can do, you are limiting the firm's growth to your own personal capacity.” Moreover, not using staff to its capacity represents poor management of the firm's expenses.


Acceptable Use Policy
blog comments powered by Disqus

Market Data

Market quotes are real time except where noted

Financial Services Company Watch List

Market index values delayed 15 min

Most Popular Stories

Client Prospecting Snapshot  

Zip Code
Net Worth Low
Net Worth High
*enter values without commas or "$" sign
(ex 1000)

Search results are a snapshot and is a limited use version of Prospect Generator© powered by WealthEngine.

Registered Rep. E-newsletters


About Us

Registered Rep. is the most trusted digital and print source for the retail investment professional, serving brokers, financial advisors, RIA’s, IBD’s, insurance, financial planners, and financial product companies with award-winning insight coverage of the brokerage, wealth management, fund and financial product industry as well as breaking news, data, rankings, and profiles.

Most Recent Blog Posts

Follow Us

Back to Top

In This Issue: May 2012

Cover Story

Advisors With HEART

Registered Rep.'s 32nd annual Altruism Awards.


View the full issue

Back Issues

Registered Rep. eNewsletters