How important is a clear vision in helping financial advisors get really focused towards their pursuit of success?
My experience in working with hundreds of financial advisors is that many of them feel that articulating a clear vision is not warranted because it does not drive direct results. It’s unfortunate that many advisors may have experienced some form of a vision initiated business plan early in their careers that did not serve them well. A vision’s role is to provide greater focus and helps advisors align only those activities that move them towards their vision. And we all know focused activity drives results! At Freedomarketing, we’ve found the formula to help advisors truly leverage their potential and uniqueness, it’s called SuQu Mapping. In simpler terms it’s a highly relevant and concise business plan. And it all starts with a clear vision. You can learn more at www.freedomarketing.com.
BELOW ARE SOME THOUGHTS FROM VARIOUS PROFESSIONALS.
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Jim Cecil
Nurture Marketing
How do you say….PARAMOUNT? Perhaps even with multiple, clear visions .
Some questions, for example:
1. What is my vision for my personal career in financial advice services?
2. What is my vision for my identifying my ideal niche market?
3. What is my vision for discovering and dealing with my niche member’s chief pains, passions and preferences with regards to their financial issues?
4. What is my vision for actually ‘helping my clients succeed’, rather than just helping them deal with transactions?
5. What is my vision for nurturing relationships with my current clients, prospective ones and especially, my ‘centers of influence’?
6. What is my vision for automating the ‘stay in touch’ process?
7. What is my vision for seeking and cultivating niche mentors?
As does Dr. Tom Stanley, I believe that the affluent, when given a choice, invariably select a specialist over a general practitioner, virtually every time.
Why would it be different when it comes to their money?
Will you care enough for yourself, your practice, your family, your clients and your career, to spend the time to become and become known as an expert in your niche.
I can’t be more clear on this vision.
Good Nurturing
Jim
www.nurtureinstitute.com
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Bill Eck
Certified Wealth Consultant
These thoughts on a shared vision from the Book: Fifth Discipline, enlightens what they are missing:
“A shared vision…is …a force in people’s hearts, a force of impressive power. Few, if any, forces in human affairs are as powerful as a shared vision.”
High performance teams have shared vision and purpose.
Maslow observed that in exceptional teams… “the task was no longer separate from self…but rather he identified with this task so strongly that you couldn’t define his real self without including that task.”
Shared vision comes from personal vision and personal mastery.
Visions that are truly shared take time to emerge. They grow as a by-product of interactions of individual visions.
Shared vision requires ongoing conversation where individuals not only express their dreams, but learn how to listen to each others’ dreams. Out of this listening, new insights into what is possible gradually emerge.
It is not what the vision says, it is what the vision does.
Vision becomes a living force only when people truly believe they can shape their future.
Senge, Peter M. The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of the Learning Organization. New York, NY: Doubleday, 1990, 2006. Chapter 10
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So true Kirk. The problem is threefold:
Wishing you great success!!! in 2010