Ray Sclafani (00:00.142)
Welcome to Building the Billion Dollar Business, the podcast where we dive deep into the strategies, insights, and stories behind the world's most successful financial advisors and introduce content and actionable ideas to fuel your growth. Together, we'll unlock the methods, tactics, and mindset shifts that set the top 1% apart from the rest. I'm Ray Sclafani, and I'll be your host.
The firms that win over the next decade will not be the ones with the best org charts. They're gonna be the firms that can attract and develop, retain, and redeploy talent faster than the market around them changes. That is the shift. For years, many advisory firms treated talent as an administrative matter. Recruiting sat in one corner, compensation sat another. Leadership development was discussed only at an annual retreat. Succession planning surfaced when a founder approached retirement and training became an event.
Not a discipline. Well, that model is no longer good enough. Talent strategy has shifted from HR to enterprise value. It now sits at the center of organic growth, succession readiness, advisor retention, client continuity, leadership depth, firm culture, AI readiness, and ultimately firm value. Talent development is not an annual event.
At clientwise, we coach teams to develop their own talent strategy operating system. And we see 10 connected areas from talent investment and hiring to career pathing and bench strength, team structure, compensation, culture, values, and AI capability. The research makes the point plainly. McKinsey projects that the wealth management industry is going to face a shortage potentially of 100,000 advisors by 2034, driven by retirements.
Ray Sclafani (01:53.324)
Weak advisor headcount growth and rising demand for advice. Suruli reports that 105,000 advisors plan to retire over the next decade, representing 37.4% of advisor headcount and 41% of total industry assets. That's not a staffing issue. That's a strategic constraint. At the same time, client expectations are evolving. Clients are not just asking for portfolio management, they're asking for
Advice, coordination, confidence, technology, family engagement, continuity, tax planning. Firms are growing larger. Private capital has accelerated growth and raised expectations. And the next generation of talent seeks development, purpose, flexibility, and a visible future. AI is already reshaping work and roles and productivity and the skills people must know how to do. But put all these forces together, and the conclusion is super obvious. A firm with a weak
Talent strategy will have a weak growth strategy. The actionable idea is simple. Run a talent strategy audit through the lens of enterprise value. It's not complicated. Sit with your leadership team and ask five questions. First, where does talent directly affect growth? Consider advisor capacity, business development capability, client service roles, marketing support, planning depth, and next generation advisor development. Second,
Where does talent affect client continuity? Identify the client relationships that still depend too heavily on one person. Identify the roles that lack clear backup, a successor, or a second chair. Think double deep. Third, where does talent affect leadership depth? Look at every person in a management role and ask whether they've been trained to lead, coach, delegate, provide feedback, and hold people accountable. The data is clear.
overwhelming majority have not been formally trained in management roles. Fourth, where does talent affect retention? Look at your high performers and ask whether they can see a future within the firm that is clear, compelling, and financially rewarding enough to keep them from taking another call. Fifth, where does talent affect AI readiness? Ask which jobs will change, which skills will matter more, which people need training now rather than later.
Ray Sclafani (04:16.738)
The mistake many firms make is separating these conversations. They talk about growth in one meeting, succession in another, hiring in another, compensation in another, and AI in another. And then they wonder why the firm feels fragmented. A real talent strategy connects those decisions. This is where leaders need to reframe the issue. Talent is not a cost center. It's not a line item. It's not just something to fix after growth occurs. Talent is the capacity to grow.
A firm cannot outgrow its leadership. It cannot outgrow its bench. It cannot outgrow its service model. It cannot outgrow its ability to develop people who can carry client trust. Growth exposes every weakness in the talent system. I get asked a lot about organic growth. Ray, what are the best organic growth strategies you can think of? Is it cold calling, cold walking, seminars, events, referrals? And I gotta stop and ask.
Tell me about your talent strategy. That is why the leadership team has to stop asking only, who do we need to hire? What are the best growth strategies? Those questions matter, but they're too narrow. The better question is: what kind of firm are you building and what talent system will it require? The answer is going to shape your hiring and it will shape how you develop advisors and the people that you hire. If organic growth matters, well
Who are you hiring to drive organic growth? It will shape how you define expectations for managers. It's going to shape your compensation strategies. It's going to shape succession. And it will shape how you use AI and it will shape your culture. Here's the practical step for the week. May sound silly, but set aside one hour with your leadership team and get a piece of paper out. On the left side of the page, list your growth goals. And on the right side of the page, outline your current talent system.
Then ask, does the right side support the left side? If the answer is no, well, don't ignore it. Name the gaps. Prioritize your top three. Assign an owner. Put dates next to them. The future is not going to wait for firms to get around to talent development when the calendar opens. The best firms continue to treat talent as a strategy, as a strategic infrastructure. They're going to build it with the same seriousness they apply to investment management.
Ray Sclafani (06:39.448)
Client segmentation, technology, acquisitions, valuation, and client care. The firms that do this well will not just have better people, they're also going to have a more transferable business, stronger cultures, deeper leadership, and more consistent client experience, and ultimately greater enterprise value. With each episode, we'd like to provide a few coaching questions for you and your team to reflect on today's episode. So I've got a few here for you. Number one, which part of your talent strategy
most directly affects enterprise value over the next three years? Number two, where is your firm still treating talent as an administrative function rather than a strategic one? And what talent weakness, if left unaddressed, could slow growth or damage client continuity? And lastly, what would need to change for your leadership team to treat talent development as a strategic infrastructure, a strategic imperative?
Hey, thanks for listening. Please like and share this episode with someone you know needs to hear it. Well, thanks for tuning in, and that's a wrap. Until next time, this is Ray Sclafani. Keep building, growing, and striving for greatness. Together, we'll redefine what's possible in the world of wealth management. Be sure to check back for our latest episode and article.