The CFP Board’s Center for Financial Planning announced on Thursday that it is creating a new Diversity Advisor Group to provide guidance as it attempts to diversify an industry often criticized as being too white, male and old.

The group will review findings of a study sponsored to help identify barriers to racial and ethnic diversity in the financial planner workforce, then provide input for a paper recommending solutions for increasing diversity among financial planners.

“With the growing consumer demand for financial advice, it is imperative that we work toward increasing the ranks of financial planning professionals who can meet the needs of an increasingly diverse American public,” said Marilyn Mohrman-Gillis, executive director of the Center for Financial Planning, in released comments. “The Diversity Advisory Group is comprised of some of the brightest and most knowledgeable minds in the areas of diversity and inclusion, academic research and financial planning, and will guide the center in forming actionable, research-based solutions.”

The CFP Board estimates there are roughly 1,200 African-American and 1,500 Latino or Hispanic CFP professionals, representing less than 3.5 percent of all CFP certificate holders.

The Center for Financial Planning was launched in 2015 with an academic bent, in part as a venue for research on planning and advice, but also with a mandate to improve diversity among CFP professionals. Since that time, the center has also become a focal point for the CFP Board’s diversity initiatives, including “I Am a CFP Pro,” an advertising campaign targeted toward aspiring young, diverse advisors; WIN-to-WIN, a mentoring program for woman advisors; and the Eleanor Blayney Gender Diversity fund, which helps support the CFP Board’s Women’s Initiative.

Members of the Diversity Advisory Group include: