The Emotional and Time Value of Advice

Paulo Costa, Marsella Martino, Malena de la FuenteAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Managing personal finances can be stressful and time-consuming given the complexity and critical nature of financial decisions. In this paper, we study the emotional benefits and time-saving value that paid professional financial advice provides to clients. Using a survey of 12,443 investors (including 7,746 advised clients), we found that:

  • Advised clients are less financially stressed than self-directed investors. Advised investors are roughly half as likely (14%) as self-directed ones (27%) to experience high levels of financial stress.
  • Advice delivers emotional value to clients through more peace of mind. 86% of advised clients report having greater peace of mind when thinking about their finances, compared with managing them on their own. Advice improves investors’ positive emotions and seems particularly effective at lessening negative emotions regarding personal finances, such as feeling overwhelmed and worried.
  • Advice saves clients time. 76% of advised clients say advice saves them time — namely, a median of two hours per week (or over 100 hours per year) — from thinking about and dealing with their finances.
  • Advice saves employers time through employees’ reduced financial stress. Workers in employer plans report spending an average of 3.8 hours per week distracted at work by financial stress, leading to a yearly productivity loss for employers of $5,950 to $6,775 per employee. Half of the advised clients in employer plans say advice reduces financial stress at work. Overall, advice saves clients almost two hours per week at work (over 100 hours per year), improving worker productivity by $2,200 to $5,850 per year.