Fast Lane

August 3, 2007

HSG: You place an emphasis on collaboration. Do most NFP firms maintain their existing network of professionals? Do you require your firms to work together?

JMB: Our advisors will always maintain their relationships with lawyers and accountants. They're usually long-standing and are a valuable referral source for our firms. We don't force internal collaboration. It doesn't make sense from a compliance standpoint and most professionals don't respond well to that type of directive. But, assuming the capabilities are there, most of our firms will try to keep business inside NFP. I'm more interested in helping our advisors think about expanding their business instead of fine-tuning what they already do well. Moving beyond life insurance into long term care, is an example. Being additive to their business is NFP's ultimate goal.


HSG: How do you help firms with professional development? Does NFP sponsor any forums that allow firms to interact?

JMB: Our advisors interact on the NFP intranet, through e-mail, online training, etc. It really is an engaged community. But at the end of day, this is a people business and we host quite a few big educational meetings for our advisors each year. Each of our business lines-life, benefits, investment advisory-have their own dedicated forums, as well as regional meetings focused on local trends and issues.

The best ideas surface when our advisors get together. They are so clear, so smart, ahead of the curve. They understand their businesses so well that when they start to bounce ideas off each other, it's pretty amazing how quickly new opportunities are uncovered. That's why I use words like collaboration and describe NFP as 'one dynamic company'-when getting the best for the client is the focus of everyone's efforts, it's ideal.

HSG: Can a firm work with NFP even if they aren't ready for an acquisition scenario?

JMB: Yes, those advisors can join NFP through our membership organizations-PartnersFinancial, NFP Benefits Partners and The HighCap Group. For a membership fee, these advisors have access to some of the benefits of NFP, like competitive pricing, and access to products and support. These organizations help us achieve our national scale and allow us to "greenhouse" firms that are potential acquisitions.

HSG: What does the membership entail?

JMB: One of the real attractions is the number of carriers and products we make available, which is usually much larger and more extensive than what an advisor can access on their own. An advisor can join our meetings and use our educational resources. They pay for an operational infrastructure that includes the broker-dealer and RIA platform, and technology support. For one reason or another, these firms are too small, too young, simply not interested in the NFP transaction, or not ready to do the full acquisition. In any case, it's a great introduction to what NFP offers its owned firms.

HSG: Is NFP transparent to the end client or positioned as the "solutions platform?"

JMB: Clients are associated with firms, so the firm and its advisors are always front and center. Their names are on the door, on the business cards, on client proposals and presentations. They have the option to sub-brand as an NFP Company-some do, some don't. We are seeing more firms choosing to use the NFP sub-brand, but whatever an advisor chooses to do, the relationship with NFP appears cohesive to the client and suggests a broad platform of capabilities that can be harnessed just for them.

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