Home

Case Study: How One Advisory Firm Increased Production By 30% With Structured Coaching

At Susan Danzig, we’ve seen firsthand how a well-designed coaching framework can transform an advisory firm’s performance. This case study explores how one firm increased production by 30% through structured coaching, using the same principles and strategies we teach to our clients.

The firm employed periodic goal setting, skill checks, and candid conversations with employees to identify weak points and amplify what worked. Managers partnered with staff weekly, providing transparent feedback and actionable paths for incremental growth. Rather than generalized training, the firm selected bite-sized daily activities that aligned with actual client requirements. Results followed within months as teams collaborated more effectively and reached new sales records. To share what worked, the remainder of this post will unpack the steps and tools the firm deployed and why these shifts resulted in such powerful growth.

Key Takeaways

  • Identifying production plateaus and their root causes is essential for firms seeking to increase efficiency. A structured assessment can highlight workflow inefficiencies and leadership gaps that hinder growth.
  • Working with Susan Danzig, they built a coaching framework specifically tailored to their organizational goals and best practices. This allowed the firm to approach specific performance challenges with precision and clarity.
  • Coaching sessions at regular, rhythmic intervals that promote collaboration and accountability drive learning and keep both advisors and leaders engaged in the process.
  • Leadership commitment and involvement are essential to establishing a culture of accountability and validating coaching across the firm.
  • By quantifying both the concrete aspects, including increases in production and advisor stickiness, and the less measurable aspects, such as morale and client loyalty, you can provide a more holistic perspective on coaching’s ROI.
  • Firms should expect implementation hurdles and proactively combat resistance with continued support, success stories, and adaptive approaches in order to fashion lasting productivity and growth improvements.
Corporate Training for Financial Advisory Firms

The Firm’s Production Plateau

A firm’s production plateau can stop its growth and diminish its competitive edge in a saturated market. When production output ceases to grow even as demand remains steady, firms typically encounter both increasing costs and diminishing profit margins. In other words, the advisory firm encountered a plateau. Its executives observed expenses rise and margins decline, but production remained stuck. Here is a breakdown of what caused the stagnation and its impact.

Factor

Impact

Outdated systems

Caused slow workflows and missed chances for higher output

Inefficient automated systems

Made errors more likely, led to more work, and wasted time

No standard procedures

Raised costs by 20%, cut output, and caused more mistakes

Supply chain problems

Pushed operating costs up by 20%, delayed work, and hurt reliability

Rising raw material costs

Shrunk profit margins by 15%, making it hard to keep up with competitors

Higher labor costs

Squeezed margins further, limited how much the firm could reinvest

The firm’s production plateau was still underpinned by manual checks and legacy software that simply could not keep up with the demands of its sales process. Every process step had its own thing, no communal workflow or checklist. Consequently, teams worked harder patching errors, validating work, and waiting on approvals. These measures bogged down production and obscured opportunities for identifying inefficiencies. Automated tools like jidoka were supposed to smooth things out, but without constant updating or training, these systems became a source of errors and confusion, stalling their consulting success.

A structured approach was necessary, as the firm experienced too many lost hours and too many missed opportunities to grow their client engagement strategies. Without fixed methods, it was almost impossible to measure progress or implement real change. Teams got used to plugging holes as they came up, rather than searching for root causes and permanently shutting them. This reactive mindset made it difficult to increase production or reduce expenses. To escape this rut, the firm required new processes, defined action steps for every activity, and continuous training through a robust mentorship program.

Leadership brought both the plateau and the push for change. When leaders stuck to quick fixes, problems piled up. After the leadership team began owning and seeking permanent solutions, that’s when things started changing. They realized that a little goal setting, providing your team with the appropriate tools, and making training a regular occurrence could help increase production and reduce expenses.

How Structured Coaching Worked

For the advisory firm, structured sales coaching with Susan Danzig meant a methodical process with precise milestones. It allowed space for evolution as the team learned through effective mentorship. Goals were set and checked, ensuring everyone was aware of their progress, while accountability served as the secret sauce. Group support maintained momentum and high motivation levels.

  • Conduct an initial assessment of firm capabilities and practices
  • Build a coaching framework tailored to the firm’s goals
  • Schedule regular coaching sessions for steady progress
  • Secure leadership support and model desired behaviors
  • Develop skill modules focused on real needs
  • Gather feedback and refine the coaching process continuously

1. Initial Assessment

The company began by examining advisors’ sales process and existing knowledge through business research insights. They engaged in client interactions and reviewed feedback to identify vulnerabilities, which highlighted the need for effective sales coaching. The team established concrete goals, such as the number of new client opportunities each advisor acquired and their deal-closing speed, providing a baseline for progress checks.

2. Tailored Framework

A tailored sales coaching plan was crafted around the organization’s objective, with steps aligned to daily habits. By integrating established best practices from the coaching industry, it was customized to fit the firm’s size and ideal clients. For instance, one advisor rapidly refined their website and LinkedIn profile, leading to significant improvements. This roadmap made structured coaching a success, helping another advisor secure his first paying client within just two weeks.

3. Rhythmic Sessions

Coaching was weekly, and this regular cadence ensured that lessons adhered and actions came to fruition. With each meeting building on the last, skills grew, particularly in areas like sales coaching and client engagement strategies. These sessions allowed individuals to discuss practical issues, such as pricing services or improving proposals, ultimately leading to significant improvements in business performance. Attendance was monitored, but the true evidence was in outcomes, as one consultant secured his sixth client through effective mentoring within mere group meetings.

4. Leadership Alignment

Leaders supported the coaching process from day one, participating in sessions to share victories and insights, which made sales coaching feel significant rather than a side hustle. This engagement fostered a culture of accountability and encouraged team members to keep each other honest, ultimately enhancing client engagement strategies.

5. Skill Modules

Skill modules focused on critical areas such as making proposals and setting fees, essential for effective sales coaching. Advisors practiced with real assignments, like writing a pitch or refining a marketing plan, which significantly improved their consulting success. Feedback was candid, leading one advisor to quintuple his fees after a pricing module, demonstrating the impact of structured mentorship in the consulting industry.

Measuring the 30% Increase

As Susan Danzig teaches in our coaching programs, measuring production growth begins with clear, consistent tracking of key metrics. For advisory firms, you need to know what to measure before and after coaching. Common metrics tracked include:

  • Total number of client meetings per month
  • Number of new clients onboarded
  • Revenue per advisor (in EUR or USD)
  • Client retention rates (percentage)
  • Follow-up actions completed within set timeframes
  • Volume of cross-sell or upsell activities
  • Average client satisfaction score (measured on a standardized scale)

Measuring these metrics provides companies with a baseline to evaluate shifts over time. To measure a 30% increase, the simple formula is: New Value minus Old Value divided by Old Value equals 0.30. This implies that if an advisor were at 100 client meetings per month and, after coaching, reached 130, that is a 30% increase. This estimate is easy to calculate with nice round numbers. When big data or moving targets are involved, it can get tricky. Data can flow from various sources or have a non-standard definition, which complicates obtaining accurate numbers. Some firms address this by constructing dashboards that aggregate data from all avenues and display trends in a single location. For instance, a dashboard might display total revenue per advisor rising from €10,000 to €13,000, showing without question that a 30% increase occurred.

That’s where the coach analyzes the data to determine if the coaching was effective. Companies have bar charts and line graphs to measure production increases. These graphics enable leaders and stakeholders to visualize the results quickly, simplifying the coaching’s storytelling. For instance, a paper might note that after six months of coaching, retention increased from 70% to 91% and revenue per advisor increased by 30%. These images establish confidence and demonstrate impact, particularly to teams and clients who crave evidence of expansion.

Establishing benchmarks is equally crucial for the future. Once a 30% increase is measured, firms have new numbers to base future planning on. They monitor trends and have reasonable targets, like another 10% growth next year. That cycle of measuring, reporting, and goal-setting keeps the firm focused and moving forward.

The Invisible ROI Of Coaching

Coaching often delivers more than just higher numbers. Its primary benefits are invisible on spreadsheets, yet their impact is profound. Coaching transforms the way people work and think, enabling teams to build trust, develop skills, and retain clients for the long term. Research finds that 77% of companies report a significant transformation in a key business area as a result of coaching. This transformation is more than goal attainment; it is about incremental improvements in how people collaborate and serve clients, enhancing the overall sales process.

Intangible Benefit

Effect On Business

Employee morale

More drive, less turnover

Job satisfaction

People stay, want to improve

Client retention

Clients come back, trust builds

Loyalty

Staff and clients commit longer

Coaching can get people to connect with clients differently in the long run. When employees learn to listen, establish actionable steps, and problem-solve, customers notice. Improved skills make discussions flow more easily and solutions arrive sooner, enhancing client engagement strategies. It makes clients happier and stickier. Over time, this creates trust and loyalty. Employees who experience being listened to and supported through mentoring communicate that support to customers. Companies that maintain coaching achieve greater client loyalty, which is essential for sustainable expansion.

As skills mature, employees make wiser decisions every day. Even a 10% enhancement in decision-making can lead to big wins over a two or three-year period. About 60% of executives connect coaching to actual economic value. It not only influences profits but also impacts people. When employees feel good and are equipped with the appropriate tools, their work improves, leading to better service, fewer errors, and more business from happy clients.

Fueling long-term growth by investing in people is crucial. The top performance return on investment occurs when firms view coaching as a habit, not a salve. The real test is what happens in between sessions, self-checks, experimentation, and new habit-building. Without this, coaching fades and gains vanish. Statistics illustrate the effect of coaching in 90 to 120 days, such a brilliant and fast way to grow, especially for organizations focused on consulting success.

Corporate Training for Financial Advisory Firms

Implementation Breakthroughs

Adding regimented sales coaching to an advisory firm’s work stream can significantly increase productivity. The road is strewn with potholes, and other firms encounter similar challenges when attempting to embed coaching into their everyday work processes. These obstacles are not confined to a single location; they arise in teams across various organizations.

  • Lack of buy-in from staff or managers
  • Unclear goals and weak planning
  • Fear of change or loss of control
  • Not enough support or resources
  • Poor communication between teams
  • Slow feedback and missed progress checks
  • Skills gaps and uneven training

Getting past resistance is essential, particularly when employees or leaders resist due to uncertainty about what to expect or a lack of perceived value. To address this, it is vital to be transparent about objectives and strategies. Communicate the ‘why’ and ‘how’ of coaching, and utilize business research insights to demonstrate how an implementation plan and defined objectives can accelerate outcomes. For instance, well-planned firms reach their improvement goals sixty percent more quickly. Engage people in determining these objectives so they can drive the process, and meet regularly to review progress, discuss pain points, and make necessary adjustments. This approach ensures that everyone feels heard and empowered to help mold the change.

Providing continued support and the appropriate tools is crucial for success. Teams need clear directions, checklists, and steps to implement effective client engagement strategies. Cross-training addresses skill gaps and fosters inclusion. Leadership training equips managers with tools to set a positive example and become agents of change. Maintaining open channels between staff, coaches, and leaders allows for convenient discussions about what works or does not. When things derail, viewing it as an opportunity to learn rather than a cause for blame fosters resilience and momentum.

Sharing actual successes is very helpful. For instance, a team that transitioned from ad-hoc conversations to scheduled coaching sessions experienced a 30% increase in output in under a year. Disseminating these types of stories provides hopeful and concrete evidence that the work is worthwhile. It demonstrates that the start is difficult, but the benefits can be huge for all participants.

Your Firm’s Actionable Blueprint

A smart plan is crucial for any firm seeking actionable gains in its sales coaching efforts. Seventy-one percent of leaders report their organization is flourishing when they employ a blueprint like this. The case study demonstrated, in detail, how a simple stepwise actionable plan produced a thirty percent output increase through disciplined mentoring. This blueprint for your firm’s actionable strategy helps establish the right habits, tools, and checks so that firms can achieve consulting success, even in brutal or fast-moving markets. Here’s a practical, numbered outline that any firm can follow to achieve similar success.

  1. Establish a coaching skeleton. Begin by sketching the muscle groups your squad actually requires assistance with, such as messaging, pricing, or fresh business models. Give every coach a clear focus and pair them with employees based on skill gaps and growth goals. Schedule regular sessions, weekly for the first three months, then every other week. This keeps the process moving and allows you to identify successes or problems quickly.
  2. Define milestones and timelines. Mark out micro victories that demonstrate momentum, such as completing a client pitch, sealing a deal, or conducting a pilot project. Try a 6-12 month horizon. Every two months or so, use a checkpoint to take stock and adjust the plan. This provides teams with specific objectives to build toward and enables leaders to detect patterns earlier.
  3. Use simple, universal tools. Select tools situationally: shared digital dashboards, project trackers, and feedback forms. Rely on video platforms for your coaching calls and cloud-based docs for sharing notes and goals. To accelerate AI adoption, integrate foundational AI capabilities for data verification and reporting. Twenty-four percent of firms have AI implemented firm-wide, and several executives anticipate further expansion.
  4. Prioritize upskilling and digital labor. Upskill workers so they can assume more complex work. Forty-seven percent of leaders say this is a primary objective. Give them actionable projects and authentic feedback, developing their capabilities from the start. Augment your workforce with digital labor. Forty-five percent of executives plan to augment their team with digital labor within the next 12 to 18 months.
  5. Adapt, review often. Review results every couple of months. Seek input, review impact metrics, and adjust the strategy as necessary. Executives are already hiring AI trainers to train teams on new tools and anticipate agent management becoming part of their role, freeing up precious hours each day.

Final Remarks

Structured coaching with Susan Danzig didn’t just help this firm break out of a rut. It provided the team with tangible methods to improve, work smarter, and achieve loftier targets. A 30% lift in production is eye-catching, but the real story lies with the individuals. Each individual acquired new skills, established confidence, and tracked his or her own growth daily. Coaching made the change stick because it fit the team, not just the metrics.

At Susan Danzig, we believe that structured coaching provides a specific roadmap and new momentum that any advisory firm can apply. Firms everywhere hit slowdowns or old habits that just won’t die, but with the right structure, consistency, and accountability, transformation is always within reach.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What Is Structured Coaching In An Advisory Firm?

Structured coaching is an intentional, organized method to cultivate skills and habits, enhancing employee engagement. It leverages regular sessions, clear objectives, and quantifiable results to guide team members in the sales process.

2. How Did Coaching Lead To A 30% Production Increase?

The firm leveraged structured sales coaching to help advisors set goals, keep track of progress, and provide feedback. This approach inspired workers and improved employee engagement, generating a 30% boost.

3. What Metrics Were Used To Measure The Production Increase?

The firm monitored metrics like client acquisition, project completion, and revenues, showcasing how effective sales coaching can lead to significant improvements, as one advisory firm increased production by 30%.

4. Is Coaching Cost-Effective For Advisory Firms?

Yes. Though business coaching is an investment, the returns of higher productivity and better staff retention often justify the expenditure, leading to consulting success for numerous organizations.

5. What Are Common Challenges When Implementing Coaching?

Usual suspects include resistance to change, lack of time, and fuzzy goals. Overcoming these challenges requires effective sales coaching, leadership buy-in, clear communication, and continued training.

Schedule Your Own Assessment

Are you ready to see what structured coaching can do for your firm? At Susan Danzig, we help financial advisory teams uncover hidden growth opportunities, boost production, and build a stronger foundation for long-term success. Just like the firm in this case study, you can identify performance plateaus, strengthen your leadership alignment, and achieve measurable gains with a personalized coaching framework. Our process starts with a simple, powerful step, an individualized assessment that reveals where your firm stands today and what changes will deliver the greatest impact.

Take the first step toward transforming your firm’s performance. Schedule your own assessment with Susan Danzig today.

Why Financial Advisory Firms Need A 90-Day Marketing Plan At The Team Level

At Susan Danzig, we help financial advisory firms create practical 90-day marketing plans that keep teams focused, accountable, and agile. A short plan allows teams to understand what works and what doesn’t, so they can better utilize their time and money. Teams can experiment with concepts, connect with more individuals, and collaborate with less ambiguity. In an industry where regulations and client needs change frequently, a 90-day plan provides a method to remain agile and identify emerging trends. Powerhouse firms with solid team planning can move much faster than those on the old slow track. In the sections below, we discuss how a 90-day plan works and why it’s a good fit for the reality of financial advisory teams.

Key Takeaways

  • A 90-day marketing plan at the team level makes financial advisory firms agile, able to react quickly to changes in the industry and their clients’ needs with informed, data-driven decisions.
  • Well-defined, just enough, short-term planning fosters clear accountability. Everyone knows what they’re responsible for and is held accountable to specific performance metrics.
  • The key to success is having focused, achievable milestones along the way.
  • By focusing on big-impact marketing activities and strategically allocating resources, you can maximize your results. Regular review processes allow you to refine your approach for optimum effectiveness.
  • By standardizing compliance protocols and documenting marketing processes, firms minimize regulatory risks. This helps them consistently deliver client communications that are compliant and trustworthy across channels.
  • By tracking metrics like lead velocity, client acquisition, and engagement rates, the firm can continuously optimize its efforts and tie marketing activities to tangible value.
Corporate Training for Financial Advisory Firms

Why A 90-Day Marketing Plan

A 90-day marketing plan serves as an effective marketing strategy for financial advisory teams, providing actionable milestones to achieve business objectives. At Susan Danzig, we’ve seen that this type of comprehensive plan brings focus, priorities, and real progress to marketing teams. When everyone understands their roles and timelines, teams can move quickly, learn efficiently, and create a substantial impact in client reach and sustainable growth. With a fixed deadline, new managers can swiftly assess the firm’s needs and implement intelligent changes immediately.

1. Unmatched Agility

A 90-day plan helps teams adapt fast in a market that never stands still. With real-time data, teams can identify trends sooner and adjust their financial advisor marketing strategies with less lag. This velocity is crucial when client demands realignment or fresh regulations emerge in financial markets. Teams can trial new concepts, discover what works, and eliminate what doesn’t, all within weeks. Rapid feedback loops allow teams to tweak their effective marketing plans before they fizzle, helping them to stay one step ahead of the competition. If a digital ad-driven campaign isn’t generating leads after two weeks, the team can pivot to webinars or direct outreach without waiting until a quarterly review.

2. Clearer Accountability

Once everyone has assigned tasks and deadlines, things get done on time and with less confusion. With shared dashboards, everyone can easily visualize progress and identify where assistance is required. Metrics such as the number of new leads, event sign-ups, or revenue growth indicate whether each person is accomplishing goals, which is crucial for an effective marketing plan. Monitoring in this fashion creates confidence, allowing financial advisors to own their parts while team leaders can identify gaps swiftly. This makes it easier to level workloads and acknowledge quality work.

3. Sustained Momentum

Short milestones, whether weekly or monthly, help maintain enthusiasm. Little victories accumulate, motivating teams even when larger objectives are more time-consuming. At Susan Danzig, we often remind firms that marketing isn’t a sprint; consistency builds visibility and trust. A 90-day plan helps make social posts, newsletters, or webinars habits, not afterthoughts.

4. Intense Focus

A brief plan compels teams to choose what is important. Rather than pursuing every trend, they focus their efforts on two or three significant initiatives aligned with the firm’s objectives, such as developing a referral marketing program or introducing a new service to attract prospective clients. Teams ideate, pilot, and iterate in a hurry, ensuring every initiative, including the financial advisor marketing plan, receives the focus and support it demands. Obvious criteria for selecting projects, like anticipated impact or fit with customer demand, aid groups in knowing how to decide what to do and what to abandon.

5. Team Alignment

Alignment begins when everyone understands the big picture and where their work fits in. Team meetings, either weekly or bi-weekly, provide opportunities to discuss obstacles, share outcomes, and adjust the effective marketing plan. This open discussion enables teams to help each other and leverage each person’s skill set. When your financial advisor marketing plan aligns with your firm’s strategic goals, every activity has the potential to generate larger victories, such as reducing expenses or increasing revenue by specific percentages. Stakeholders get updates as well, so everyone is aware and can back the plan.

Building Your Team’s Plan

A well-crafted 90-day marketing plan is essential for financial advisory firms seeking to act quickly and stay focused on their goals. At Susan Danzig, we structure these plans to include content calendars, KPIs, and clear timelines with regular check-ins. Teams with these plans often reduce expenses and improve revenue by channeling resources into what truly works.

Define Objectives

Begin by establishing reasonable, easy-to-measure goals within your financial advisor marketing plan. Use the SMART approach, which is specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. Tie these objectives to the company’s broader financial ambitions, such as expanding assets under management or entering new markets. Ensure each team member is aware of these goals, so you’re all working toward the same targets. Check your progress frequently, using actual figures and responses from the market and your team, so you can adjust your marketing strategies if necessary.

Segment Clients

Segment clients by age and their investment needs, focusing on what’s most important to them. Develop customer personas that illustrate a vivid picture of each segment’s goals and pain points, which is crucial for an effective marketing plan. This approach enables teams to prioritize high-value customers with personalized marketing messages that resonate. Refresh these sections as the market evolves or as insights from colleagues in sales and customer success provide new information about prospective clients.

Allocate Resources

Look at what you’ve got: money, people, tools. Allocate more to channels or tactics that deliver, such as webinars or targeted emails. Here’s a simple table that shows how you might split a €10,000 monthly budget:

Initiative

Budget (€)

% Of Budget

Content Marketing

3,500

35%

Social Media Ads

2,000

20%

Email Campaigns

2,500

25%

Events/Webinars

1,500

15%

Analytics Tools

500

5%

Watch your expenses and tweak as you go so that every euro counts!

Select Channels

Choose the channels most relevant to your audience, email for announcements, social media for branding, and content marketing for thought leadership in your financial advisor marketing plan. Experiment with platforms like LinkedIn or WeChat to determine which generates the highest engagement for your financial guidance. Blend channels for greater reach while focusing on effective marketing strategies that work best, cutting out what doesn’t.

The Psychology Of Sprints

The psychology of sprints is crucial for financial advisors, as these short 90-day plans work well by mirroring how teams lose drive and clarity when goals extend too long. By deconstructing large, impersonal objectives into small steps, financial planners can maintain energy and aid teams or individuals in pursuing their financial goals more effectively.

Fostering Urgency

A 90-day deadline provides teams with a definite finish line, much like an effective marketing plan guides financial advisors in achieving their goals. Marketers operate in a sense of now, aware that each day adds to a proximate objective. Deadlines are established and tasks strung together such that there’s no time to drift. Weekly, teams check in to see what’s done and what’s left, ensuring that their financial plan proposals are on track. This makes progress visible and helps keep everyone aligned with their financial aspirations.

They are motivated when members of the team observe their work to be significant. Basic motivators such as praise or minor prizes drive individuals to reach objectives. Teams don’t lose focus because they know each sprint is short. They tackle three top initiatives at a time, which means less distraction and more results, similar to how financial planners prioritize their marketing strategies.

Accountability is baked in. With defined objectives and frequent check-ins, participants have an understanding of what’s due and when. If someone slides, the group can assist or modify swiftly. This results in quick moves and reduced procrastination, much like the need for a robust marketing plan in the financial services industry.

Celebrating Wins

Acknowledgment is a trivial but powerful motivator to sustain teams. When one of the group achieves a milestone, the victory is communal. This can be something as simple as a shout-out in a meeting or a small reward. It keeps morale high and makes people feel seen.

Tales of previous victories are recounted. Teams get tangible evidence that effort pays, and they discover what works. This exchange of best practices allows us all to grow.

A gratitude culture builds trust. They know their insights and endeavors will be appreciated, not overlooked. Teams reflect after each sprint, reviewing what went well and what can be improved next time.

Encouraging Innovation

For teams to grow, they have to try stuff. Leaders create a safe place to share weird or brave things without judgment. Frequent brainstorms give everyone a voice, so fresh strategies surface.

Teams are encouraged to follow trends and acquire new skills. They bring an external perspective or participate in training, which keeps them on their toes. Experimenting with new things isn’t merely permitted, it’s anticipated.

Sprints are a time to test, fail fast, and try again. After each sprint, we pull out lessons and use them to shape the next run, so the process and results keep improving.

Navigating Financial Compliance

Financial advisory groups must develop an effective marketing plan that adheres to compliance standards. Navigating financial compliance requires a 90-day marketing strategy that not only focuses on growth but also on reducing risks and building trust with prospective clients. By implementing thoughtful compliance processes, financial advisors can avoid costly mistakes while ensuring their brand remains credible and resilient.

Proactive Reviews

We recommend teams conduct periodic audits of all marketing collateral. Audits catch errors before they become public and assist advisors in identifying patterns that could lead to risks. Legal and compliance experts should be included in this review cycle, offering oversight and guaranteeing that every campaign complies with the most recent industry standards. Wilmink says that creating a dedicated feedback channel for the team members encourages the real-time reporting of issues, which in turn reduces blind spots.

Recording review results assists with education and workflow enhancement. The results of each review should be recorded and published, aiding teams in avoiding previous mistakes and refining campaigns. This feedback loop helps reinforce compliance and keeps marketing efforts aligned with the firm’s strategy.

Documenting Processes

Explicit, granular records of marketing processes are essential for reliability. All the way from content through distribution, every step should be charted. This includes:

  • Required legal disclaimers for each campaign type
  • Approved templates and branding elements
  • Step-by-step review and approval processes
  • Required sign-offs and responsible parties
  • Change logs for version control
  • Storage location for final materials

A centralized repository makes it easy to track down and update essential documents. Periodic reviews keep these records up to date with the latest regulations and internal shifts. This simplifies navigation and welcomes new members as they come aboard.

Standardizing Messaging

A common messaging architecture guarantees that each message exhibits the firm’s values and satisfies compliance requirements. Language, tone, and visual style guidelines mitigate against potential compliance missteps and enhance brand recognition. Training sessions help team members internalize those rules and put them into practice.

Monthly messaging reviews ensure teams keep messages fresh and client-focused. It’s particularly crucial as financial advisors handle expanding digital presences and intensified oversight.

Corporate Training for Financial Advisory Firms

Measuring What Matters

Financial advisory teams must measure the right metrics to ensure their effective marketing efforts are yielding results. This approach encourages teams to take actionable steps and evaluate what truly matters for sustainable growth. By leveraging digital tools like CRM platforms and analytics dashboards, financial advisors can observe real-time outcomes and pivot quickly. Weekly data analysis, focusing on specific campaigns while establishing benchmarks, keeps teams aligned and accountable. By monitoring successful marketing strategies, companies can invest smarter and connect with more prospective clients. Here is what really counts.

Lead Velocity

Metric

Last 90 Days

Previous 90 Days

Change (%)

Lead Velocity

15/month

9/month

+66.7%

Conversion Rate (%)

17/month

13/month

30.8%

Teams need to understand where leads originate. Digital campaigns, events, and referrals all generate different outcomes. Looking at these sources reveals what fuels the highest-quality leads, not just the greatest number. If leads from one channel convert better, that’s where to concentrate. Teams establish lead velocity targets for every 90-day cycle and then examine weekly metrics to observe advancement. Applying lead velocity like this results in less guesswork and more predictable growth.

Client Acquisition

Tracking new clients per quarter indicates if campaigns are targeting the appropriate customers. Teams monitor acquisition costs per campaign, ensuring monies go where they perform best. If an approach brings in new clients for half the cost, then it makes sense to move the budget there next cycle.

Getting customer feedback helps focus marketing copy. Indirect feedback from surveys or calls can indicate why certain initiatives succeed. Focused campaigns constructed on these insights convert more prospects into customers. Structured-plan advisers get significantly more leads, 168% more than those without, demonstrating the power of deliberate, continuous measurement.

Engagement Rates

Teams track engagement rates, including email opens, event sign-ups, and social clicks, on all channels. Comparing these numbers with earlier benchmarks shows whether content connects. Testing, whether it’s a simple A/B test, like trying two subject lines, or something more complicated, makes it easy to see what works.

Weekly reviews keep the team agile. If a post gets twice the clicks, your next plan can use that style. Clear benchmarks for engagement force the team to keep stretching, not just regurgitate last quarter’s work.

Team Contribution

No individual input can make a plan powerful. Teams measure who generates leads, who closes deals, and who keeps customers delighted. Performance reviews conducted every quarter reveal where everyone excels. Acknowledging these victories keeps individuals engaged.

Sharing insights in meetings creates camaraderie. Open conversations about what’s working make us all improve. Team goals for the quarter keep everyone on the same page and ensure the entire group moves in the same direction.

Avoiding Common Pitfalls

Financial advisory firms’ marketing is plagued by common pitfalls, including weak planning, unclear team roles, and poor tracking of goals. These obstacles can impede expansion, incite disputes, and muddy the company’s direction. A 90-day team-level financial advisor marketing plan helps break these big issues into smaller, easier-to-manage tasks. Looking over team organization and conducting a SWOT analysis once a year allows companies to reflect on their strengths, identify vulnerabilities, and strategize for expansion. Without it, teams can maintain bad habits, overlook emerging trends, or not respond to market changes.

A typical mistake is a lack of vision. This misaligns teams working on different pieces, creates confusion, and can jam momentum. When the team fails to align on goals and values, projects can become scatterbrained resource wasters. Companies need to ensure that every member understands what the collective is trying to accomplish and where their efforts fit in. Establish responsibilities for everyone, particularly after team shifts, to prevent tasks from being duplicated and to ensure that nothing falls through the cracks.

Historical marketing campaigns are the key. They demonstrate what succeeded and what did not, preventing teams from repeating the same errors. If a social media push didn’t bring customers through the door, go over the steps, the messages, and the timing. Use these lessons to adjust to the next campaign. Metrics are crucial in this; they measure if team objectives are achieved and highlight where improvements can be made. An effective marketing strategy is essential for tracking these metrics.

Teamwork and open talk are equally important. Utilizing tech solutions such as CRM software allows teams to document important information, monitor activities, and engage in lead follow-up. It eliminates wasted opportunities and keeps everyone on the same page. When troubles arise, discuss them early. That way, minor issues do not blossom into expensive ones. A robust marketing plan can also support this collaboration.

Plans change quickly, so it’s smart to have contingency plans for your bold marketing maneuvers. If an outreach plan doesn’t land, there better be a fallback prepared to keep things moving. Check pay plans frequently to ensure they remain equitable and connected to individual contributions.

Final Remarks

At Susan Danzig, we know why financial advisory firms need a 90-day marketing plan at the team level. These short, focused blocks give teams the clarity to identify successes and gaps quickly. They collaborate, share insights, and use feedback to refine their next moves. Testing what works keeps the plan practical and on track.

With a 90-day plan, teams stay sharp, remain compliant, and track metrics that show real results, no guesswork, just measurable growth. If you want to make an impact, begin with focus and decide what you want to accomplish over the next 90 days. Experiment, build on what succeeds, and communicate often.

It’s time to see what a 90-day plan can do for your team, partner with Susan Danzig, and start achieving real, focused growth today.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why Is A 90-Day Marketing Plan Important For Financial Advisory Teams?

A 90-day plan helps financial advisors focus on clear, short-term goals. It builds accountability, enables rapid course correction, and facilitates progress monitoring. This effective marketing strategy keeps teams aligned and responsive in a fast-changing financial services landscape.

2. How Does A Team-Level Marketing Plan Improve Results?

A team-level plan guarantees that you’re all working toward common goals, which is essential for a successful marketing strategy. It brings clarity to roles and priorities, driving more effective collaboration and results for financial advisors.

3. What Is The Benefit Of Using A 90-Day Sprint In Marketing?

These 90-day sprints decompose big goals into small, actionable tasks, allowing financial advisors to enhance their marketing strategies effectively. This makes success easier to measure and keeps motivation high as teams adjust their marketing efforts regularly.

4. How Can Financial Advisory Firms Stay Compliant While Marketing?

Firms must adhere to local and global financial regulations, and an effective marketing plan can enhance client trust. A 90-day plan aids in scheduling compliance checks, minimizing errors while instilling confidence in prospective clients.

5. What Should Financial Teams Measure In A 90-Day Marketing Plan?

Lead generation, client engagement, and ROI are key metrics for financial advisors. Teams should monitor progress weekly and adapt their marketing strategies according to results, ensuring time and resources are spent wisely.

Take The First Step Toward Smarter, Faster Growth

Your team doesn’t need another long, stagnant marketing plan that collects dust; it needs direction, accountability, and momentum. At Susan Danzig, we specialize in helping financial advisory firms like yours clarify their message, strengthen team performance, and design 90-day marketing strategies that actually move the needle. Whether you’re looking to align your advisors under one cohesive brand or sharpen your client acquisition process, we’ll help you identify your next right step for measurable success.

Ready to see what a focused strategy can do for your firm? Book your Strategy Session today, or take our quick quiz to find out how aligned your team’s marketing efforts are right now. Your next 90 days of growth start here.

Categories

FAST Track Your Business

Discover the 7 steps to attract your ideal clients and grow your book of business.