Wirehouse Woes
The latest advisor satisfaction study finds that wirehouse advisors generally feel they have "significantly lower levels of support from their firm, greater disruption of business services and more difficulty transitioning to remote work than do those advisors working for non-wirehouse and independent advisory firms," according to J.D. Power. "Advisor satisfaction is directly linked to retention and brand advocacy, so firms that want to get the most out of their advisors need to invest in providing them with the best tools and support to do their jobs effectively under all circumstances," said Mike Foy, senior director of wealth and lending intelligence at J.D. Power, in a statement. "This year has been especially challenging, and this study identifies some firms that clearly did a better job than others in meeting those challenges," Foy added. Other key findings of the 2021 poll are:
- 34% of wirehouse advisors say they have reduced levels of support from the home office, and 29% report disruption of business services;
- 18% of advisors working for firms with the lowest overall advisor satisfaction scores switching firms vs. 5% among the firms with the highest overall scores;
- The average annual level of fees and commissions of departing advisors is close to $800,000 per year; and
- 63% of investors indicate they would likely leave their advisory firm to follow their advisor if he or she left.
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