Advisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.
The wealth management industry is approaching a perfect storm. Explosive client growth is about to collide with a severe advisor shortage, creating the greatest opportunity and risk we've ever seen.
The advisors who thrive won't be the ones scrambling to adapt in 2035. Rather, they'll be the ones who are building future-ready practices today.
The numbers that should keep you up at night
According to McKinsey research, the financial advice industry has grown from $150 billion in 2015 to $260 billion in 2024. The study projects another 34% increase as America reaches 71 million affluent households by 2034.
The industry is currently serving 53 million affluent clients with an aging advisor workforce. By every measurable standard, we're looking at 18 million additional clients needing comprehensive advice. At the same time, we’re poised to lose 100,000 experienced advisors to retirement.
Here’s the situation: More clients, fewer advisors, and rising expectations for sophisticated advice that goes far beyond asset allocation to include philanthropy, tax strategy, trust and estate planning, and governance.
This represents a tsunami that's already building, demanding immediate attention.
The succession planning imperative
Most advisors I talk to think succession planning is something you do when you're ready to retire. That's like waiting until you're thirsty to dig a well.
In reality, succession planning encompasses business development, competitive advantage maintenance, client retention strategy, and talent acquisition processes, all wrapped into one critical initiative.
The same McKinsey research found that 32% of clients leave their advisor when that advisor retires. These aren't clients leaving because they're unhappy with the firm's investment performance or service quality; they're leaving because the firm never built relationships beyond the founding advisor.
When you're the only voice in the room for years or decades, clients form an attachment to you personally, not to your firm institutionally.
The advisors building succession-ready businesses today are creating practices that can command premium valuations, attract top talent, and provide uninterrupted service regardless of what disruptions come their way.
What future-ready really looks like
Building a practice for 2035 requires a fundamental change in how we structure our businesses, focusing on building smarter rather than working harder.
-
Leadership development tracks: The firms that will dominate the next decade are already identifying and developing next-generation leaders. They're creating ownership pathways for talented associates, not hoping to find successors when they're 68 years old. They understand that attracting top talent requires offering equity participation and leadership opportunities.
-
Operational redundancy: Future-ready firms have eliminated single points of failure. No one person, including the founder, oversees all the critical relationships, processes, or institutional knowledge. They've documented their investment philosophy, client service protocols, and operational procedures in ways that ensure continuity.
-
Modern client servicing: These firms have evolved beyond the solo practitioner model. They use team-based client service that deepens relationships rather than diluting them. Clients know multiple team members, understand the firm's capabilities beyond any individual, and receive more comprehensive service as a result.
-
Technology integration: Rather than maintaining multiple "sources of truth" across spreadsheets, notebooks, and disconnected systems, future-ready firms have consolidated their client data, operational processes, and communications into integrated platforms that multiple team members can access and maintain.
The talent acquisition advantage
Succession planning is your best talent acquisition strategy.
Exceptional professionals don't want to join lifestyle businesses with no growth trajectory or ownership opportunities. They want to build something meaningful, and they want a path to equity. Firms that offer clear succession planning and leadership development will attract the industry's best talent while their competitors struggle to hire anyone capable.
The impending advisor shortage means talented professionals will have their pick of opportunities. The firms that can demonstrate a commitment to growth, development, and long-term thinking will win the talent war.
Prepare for the future with these questions
If you're serious about building a practice for 2035, start with these fundamental questions:
- Could your practice operate successfully for six months without you? If the answer is no, you're running a lifestyle business, not a scalable enterprise. There's nothing wrong with lifestyle businesses, but they won't command premium valuations or survive major disruptions.
- Do your clients have meaningful relationships with other team members? If you're the only voice they hear, you're creating unnecessary transition risk and limiting your growth potential.
- What would a potential successor need to know about your clients beyond their asset allocation? Their decision-making patterns, family dynamics, goals, concerns, trusted advisors, and relationship history are all critical elements that determine whether a succession will be successful.
- How are you developing the next generation of leaders within your organization? Building internal capabilities creates multiple viable succession options for your firm.
Silver Oak is actively preparing our advisors to meet the wealth management storm head on. We're developing comprehensive resources, templates, and support systems to help every advisor build a succession-ready practice.
The advisors who will thrive in 2035 understand that succession planning serves as a business development strategy for capitalizing on the greatest growth opportunity our industry has ever seen. The time to start is now.
Billy Hopkins is the CEO and founder of Silver Oak Securities.
A message from Advisor Perspectives and VettaFi: To learn more about this and other topics, check out some of our webcasts.
Read more articles by Billy Hopkins