<IMG SRC="/images/headerbanners/pam.gif" WIDTH=423 HEIGHT=90 BORDER=0">



Surveys
Quality of Work-Life Survey Results


For more details try:

Introduction
As part of its ongoing efforts to add more value to the services it provides to the financial planning community, Financial Planners Standards Council (FPSC) commissioned this study to examine job satisfaction and the quality of work-life for professionals offering financial planning services. Hart & Associates Management Consultants Ltd. received and analyzed the responses to a questionnaire that was distributed to all CFP professionals (approx. 11,000) during the first three weeks of November 2000. The profile of the survey participants closely matches the profile of the existing CFP professional base, which represents the largest identifiable body of financial planners in Canada. The response to this survey was tremendous. Hart & Associates received 1,200 completed questionnaires (representing just over 10 per cent of all CFP professionals in Canada). Therefore, the findings of this study are a very accurate reflection of the opinions of professional financial planners in Canada today.

How was the survey conducted?
Surveys were distributed at the end of October by Financial Planners Standards Council as part of its regular newsletter to financial professionals in all segments of the advisory industry holding the designation, Certified Financial Planner (CFP). Study participants forwarded their returns directly to Hart & Associates Management Consultants and were given the choice to do so by fax or online.

How was the survey analyzed?
The 1,200 returned surveys were tabulated and the results were analyzed according to the following categories: marital status, industry sector, years offering professional financial planning advice, level of education, age of the financial professional, average client net worth, gender, advisor earnings, size of the community served and region of the country.

 

Highlights:

How do planners rate their profession?
Overall, financial planners are satisfied with their career choice. The vast majority of them would choose the profession all over again and the longer they've been in the industry, the happier they are with their work.

What do planners like about their jobs?
Compensation:

  • Planners feel well compensated for the work that they do.
  • Ratings are higher among men, those who are married, those living in large urban areas and the Maritimes, advisors with more than 10 years offering financial planning services, and advisors with wealthier clients and higher incomes.

Job security:

  • There is a very strong sense of job security for those working as financial professionals.
  • This is highest for men, those living in the suburbs and the Maritimes, advisors with higher average client net worth and incomes, the self-employed and those with accounting firms

Financial Security:

  • Most of those surveyed feel that they have chosen a profession that will provide sufficient financial security for the future. Men feel this more strongly than women, as do those with higher incomes and wealthier clients.
  • The self-employed and those with planning, securities and insurance groups are the most confident on this issue. Those in the suburbs feel the least confident.

Feeling on track:

  • Planners collectively feel on track to achieving their career goals giving their progress a 7.7 rating on a 10-point scale with 60 % rating their achievements in this area 8 or higher.
  • Those feeling most on track are men, those offering advice for more than 10 years, planners in Ontario and the Maritimes, and those working in the securities and insurance sectors.
  • Those feeling least on track are planners in for mutual fund companies and credit unions with less than 50 % of themselves a rating of 8 or higher.

What would planners like to see changed?

  • When asked to offer suggestions as to how the industry could be changed for the better, the most common responses are:

    1. Enforce one standard, mandatory designation for all people using the term financial planner.
    2. Minimize unnecessary "red tape" and compliance issues that respondents feel get in the way of providing service to their clients.
    3. Raise the standards for individuals entering the profession.

  • Planners believe they could be better served by certain segments of the industry. Member and professional organizations are viewed as offering good value to planners, receiving an overall satisfaction rating of 7.4 on a ten-point scale (with 10 representing high satisfaction). However, self-regulatory organizations were rated at 6.5; financial services companies, a 5.8; and provincial/federal regulators only 5.5.
  • Satisfaction ratings varied somewhat by industry sector. Those who are self employed, working in the mutual fund, securities, insurance industries and for financial planning firms are the most satisfied. Those working in accounting firms, banks, trusts and credit unions give lower overall job satisfaction ratings.

The appeal of the industry:
The most frequently sited motivating or driving factors that lead individuals to financial planning careers are:

1. a desire for job independence and the flexibility (22%)
2. a desire to assist people and make a positive difference (20 %)
3. an interest in investing and finance (16%)
4. a desire for a substantial income (12%)

Trends in the Profession:

  • Offering Financial Planning as a distinct and separate service is a young profession. More than 61% of the respondents have less than 10 years experience offering professional financial planning services.
  • A larger number of those just entering the profession (63%) have a university degree than their senior colleagues (55%),
  • Most new planners (5 years or less experience) begin as employees of financial planning firms, and secondly as employees of banks/trust or mutual fund companies. Most earn their income through a combination of commission and some other form of blended payment -- most likely in the form of fees, salaries and/or bonuses.
  • Most seasoned planners (over 15 years experience) are currently working in Insurance and financial planning firms and most (60%) earn their pay exclusively through commissions.
  • Newer planners serve a smaller clients-base than their more experienced colleagues. More than half of those with 5 yrs or less experience serve fewer than 200 clients. They also have fewer wealthy clients (only 14% reporting average client net-wroth of over $500,000). Over half earned less than $75,000 last year.
  • Earnings, average net-worth of clients and number of clients increase with the number of years of experience. Almost three quarters of senior planners earned more than 100,000 last year, one-third serve clients with average net-worth of $500,000 or more, and 65% of them serve more than 200 clients.

Work-life of a Planner:
The following offers additional insight into the nature of financial planners' work-lives not currently documented in the CFP Professional Stats

How hard do planners work?

  • Planners regularly work more than 40 hours per week. Those working in the suburbs and rural areas work somewhat longer hours, as do those with higher incomes and wealthier clients.
  • 56% of planners take between 3 to 6 weeks vacation a year; 19% take over 6 weeks and 25% take less than three weeks.
  • Advisors at securities firms, banks/trusts and credit unions work the longest hours whereas those who are self-employed or in the banking sector work the least.
  • Younger planners tend to work shorter hours than their older counterparts, but take less vacation time.

Where do planners work?

  • Most (36%) of the survey respondents have chosen to work for planning groups more than any other type of employer. In a distant second place, men prefer to work for insurance companies, whereas women have chosen banks/trusts.
  • Most (63%) work in offices with 10 or fewer co-workers.
  • Most work in large urban centres, primarily in Ontario.

What do planners earn?

  • Over half of planners surveyed earned in excess of $100,000 last year and 31% earned over $150.000.
  • Generally, the youngest planners (those under the age of 35) made the least amount of money, whereas those 65 years of age and older made the most.
  • The incidence of higher incomes is consistent across all age categories with the exception of the youngest and oldest respondents: 30% of planners younger than 35 years of age and 73% of planners 65 and over earned over $100,000 last year.
  • Those at insurance, securities and planning groups reported the highest incomes and those at banks/trusts and credit unions reported the least.

How are planners paid?

  • 70% of survey respondents are paid by commission, either exclusively or combined with fees.
  • 86% of all planners are licensed to sell Mutual funds and 71% sell insurance products. Only 10% offer advice on a fee-only basis.
  • More experienced planners are more likely to be paid by commission only.
  • Men are more often paid strictly by commission than women.
  • Insurance representatives are paid by commission more often than any other type of advisor while the vast majority of accountants operate on a fee-only basis.

Financial Planners and their clients:

  • Over half of respondents serve more than 200 clients. On average, those with planning firms serve more clients than any other industry type. (Insert "Number of Clients Per Practice" chart)
  • Three-quarters of the respondents serve clients with a net worth of less than $500,000. Most of these fall in the $100,000 to $499,999 range.
  • At the top end of the scale, those serving the wealthiest clients (net worth of more than $500,000) tend to be the most experienced (i.e. offering advice for 15 years or more) and working in the accounting or securities segments of the industry.
  • Accountants, those at securities firms and banks/trusts tend to have wealthier clients.

 


 

Make a name for someone special in our professional.

Read about the evolution of CFP certification worldwide.