Planner and a salesperson!
It is today easy for a person to get a visiting card with a qualification that sounds very good. Let us see if you can pick which one is a degree got with some effort and what is got gratis:
Certified Financial Analyst, Certified Public Accountant, Chartered financial analyst, Certified Financial analyst, Certified Financial Consultant, Certified Financial Adviser, ….surely you do not know to tell a good one from a ‘time-pass’ handed down free ‘qualification’.
All of them can mouth some ‘Hand me down’ mantras like ‘equity is good for long term’, Hdfc Top 200 is a good fund’, take a pension plan…and many of them charge a fee too for giving this generic advice. As long as clients are willing to pay I do not think there is anything wrong in this business model.
How do you differentiate between a planner and a salesman?
Well the planner charges you a fee and says ‘I do not implement’ please buy these products from some one else.
However, the salesman quickly starts selling the product. He makes much more money selling products than by consulting. Even if he/she charged you a bomb!
What are the products that a Salesman (masquerading as a planner) will NEVER recommend to you:
A term plan available on the net
National Pension Scheme (I have other issues with NPS)
Index mutual funds
ETF (if the ‘planner’ is a broker he will still sell other products not an etf),
Self insurance (an IT company with an average age of 27 may not need a group term insurance or a group medical insurance). Even if self insured, partial (not covering child birth) coverage may make more sense than full coverage. As the commissions are a %age of the premium paid….you know what I mean do you not?
A financial services product salesman earns anywhere between Rs. 1 million to about Rs. 3.5 million as commissions in big metros. Very few ‘REAL‘ planners can hope to net this kind of amount especially at the start of their career. Commission income is far easier to earn than consulting income.
So they normally do a combination of pharma business (selling medicines) and doctor’s profession (doing a ‘consulting’ business). When you are dealing with such people it is necessary for you to know whether you are talking to a doc or talking to a chemist. That will bring clarity to the whole conversation.
Brijesh
Bulls eye once more. lucid and simple.
Biju
That was the most lucid definition of planner versus salesman I could ever come across.Subra Iam great fan of your writing style..
Gowri
Subra,
I came across a planner who is willing to just be a planner (fixed cost for creating a full plan) or a planner+salesman (plan+implementation of plan). Would paying him the fixed fee (about 12000) for the plan be the right way to go?
Abhishek Gupta
You missed the “Registered Financial Planner” Tag.. I read that on a flyer with my newspaper..
Dinesh R Sodhani
E-MAIL ME LIST OF GENUINE QUALIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERS