How these financial advisors are using social media to grow their business

Personal finance

Petri Oeschger | Moment | Getty Images

One of the best ways financial advisors can bolster their credibility and reach potential clients is available for free.

It’s called social media.

However, merely joining Twitter and Facebook won’t cut it, according to Dasarte Yarnway, founder of Berknell Financial Group in San Francisco.

He shared his views about building a brand on social media at the Wealth/Stack conference in Scottsdale, Arizona. Yarnway also hosts “The Young Money Podcast.”

“Outside of opening the account, you need to join the conversation,” he said. “Engagement is key; finding your voice is the second thing.”

Used correctly, social media can provide financial advisors with an outlet to showcase their expertise, network with their peers and meet potential clients.

“We really look at social media as more of the credibility factor and an awareness of who we are and what we do,” said Nina O’Neal, a panelist and partner at Archer Investment Management in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Here’s where to get started.

Find your specialty

Identifying your specialty is a good starting point for generating content.

“It could be that you’re working with millennials, and you’re going to create content on this thing,” said Yarnway.

“Or it could be talent: You’re good at cryptocurrency, so you write about this particular thing,” he said. “That’s the simplest way to do it.”

Weekly advice on managing your money

Get this delivered to your inbox, and more info about about our products and services.
By signing up for newsletters, you are agreeing to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Identify your medium

Hero Images | Getty Images

When panelist Justin Castelli, a certified financial planner and founder of RLS Wealth Management in Fishers, Indiana, struggled with writing about the fiduciary rule back in 2016, he decided that video might be a better way  to explain the regulation.

“I thought, ‘I can communicate quicker doing video,'” he said. “And I realized that people consume content in different ways.

Video turned out to be the best medium for Castelli, as he can generate many pieces of content from one shoot.

More from FA Playbook:
Long-term care insurance costs are way up. How to deal
The best ways to secure financial documents
Money stress traps many women in unhappy marriages

“I can take a video clip and chop it for Instagram Stories,” he said, referring to the brief videos users can post to the site.

Similarly, the audio can be repurposed for Castelli’s podcast “All About Your Benjamins,” and he could use the video to accompany a blog.

Grow your network

Aside from keeping active on Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook, O’Neal has established contacts with the financial news media.

She has also recently been featured in a video series on being a working mom called “The Juggle is Real,” and she’s written guest columns for several trade publications covering the advice industry.

O’Neal has also grown her own network of fellow advisors, establishing a study group from the peers she’s met on Twitter, also known as the #FinTwit community.

“I think sharing other people’s content, reading it, getting value out of it and leveraging them as resources has been very valuable for me,” O’Neal said. “It’s a professional benefit I didn’t expect from social media.”

Articles You May Like

Fewer students are graduating from college, but certificate programs are way up
‘Buffett really was not a great stock picker’: Financial researcher Larry Swedroe on how investors can emulate the billionaire investor
Beyoncé bounce: Western boot sales jump more than 20% week over week since ‘Cowboy Carter’ launch
Here’s how Biden’s new student loan forgiveness plan differs from his first
TSMC beats first-quarter revenue and profit expectations on strong AI chip demand

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *