What’s it all mean? According to Cerulli, these early-career motivations manifest themselves in the business models advisors gravitate toward as their careers progress. Specifically, women are more likely to run financial planning practices and less likely to focus exclusively on the asset management side.
In a survey done by Cerulli and its partners that looked at advisor practice types by gender, 31.3% of women identified themselves as a financial planner versus 21.6% of men. And 6.4% of women labeled themselves as a money manager versus 13.2% of men. In that vein, 2.9% of women considered themselves to be wealth managers compared with 6.2% of men. The fourth category of practice type identified in the survey—investment planner—was almost a dead heat, with 59.4% of women and 59.1% of men slotting themselves into that designation.
“For advisors who enjoy working with clients toward goals, the goals-based planning process allows them to navigate a client through the emotional trade-offs of investing and setting meaningful milestones,” Cerulli said in its report. “A comprehensive wealth management process is also more likely to emphasize the softer aspects of a client’s financial well-being, such as family dynamics. On average, women advisors tend to be more interested in engaging with clients holistically than measuring a product’s performance or constructing a portfolio in isolation.”