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The Value of a Robust Client Portal in Financial Planning Relationships

Celeste Revelli January 21, 2020

Updated on: June 15, 2022

Don’t you just love it when a plan comes together?

After you’ve synthesized all of your client’s financial information, goals, and constraints into a realistic financial plan? When they’ve signed off on it, and you can tell they’re invested on a deeply personal level in making it happen? And everyone’s pulling in the same direction?

There’s a great deal of orchestration required in getting a plan established to this degree and then keeping it on track. Obviously, part of the long-term success of a plan hinges on your client’s ability to fulfill their financial obligations—whether that’s budgeting, saving, limiting withdrawals, or other commitments. It stands to reason, then, that these markers of planning success should be shared between your client and you in a dynamic way. This is where a client portal for financial advisors—any online interface that enables clients and advisors to share information—can serve as a bridge in the advisor-client relationship.

The features and capabilities of different client portals vary widely—some are basic tools, while others are highly customizable. A client portal’s features will help determine how effective it can be as an interface for collaboration, communication, and efficiency enhancement.

The Client Portal Is a Window into Your Financial Planning Software

Advisors clearly already understand the utility of client portals. Financial Planning Magazine’s 2019 Tech Survey found that 89 percent of surveyed advisors use a client portal, making it the third most widely adopted advisor technology tool after financial planning software (96 percent) and CRM programs (95 percent), and ahead of portfolio management technology (83 percent).

It’s worth focusing for a moment on the fact that financial planning software is the most ubiquitous advisor technology tool. For planning-led relationships, a client portal needs to deliver on the purpose identified at the outset: as a shared interface for tracking plan progress­. In this sense, a client portal—if integrated effectively—serves as a window into the work you conduct with your financial planning software.

With 89 percent of advisors already employing a client portal, the real question is whether your particular tool offers a utility-maximizing combination of features and flexibility. Let’s look at a few important features:

Account Aggregation—No one gets any joy from logging into multiple bank and brokerage account providers, and then manually calculating net balances, just to get a picture of their current financial state of affairs. Account aggregation lets clients connect and consolidate their account information for a comprehensive up-to-date look at their finances through the client portal.

Goal Tracking­—If account aggregation gives clients a look at their current financial picture, then goal tracking puts that picture into a longer-term context. Goal tracking is a configurable feature that advisors and clients can use to set and track progress toward multiple financial goals, and may have a budgeting aspect as well.

Document Storage—A single, secure storage and point of access to all of a client’s important financial, legal, and planning documents is a self-evidently useful feature. And while no one spends much time thinking about data security until a new major hack ends up in the headlines, it is an important point of concern for clients and prospects. Apparently, only 7 percent of high-net-worth investors strongly believe that their financial information is safe online, and affluent older investors are half as likely as their millennial counterparts to feel very confident in data security. Periodic testing, multi-factor authentication, and encryption can all increase the robustness of data security measures.

Registration and Onboarding­—The client portal can help automate the client onboarding process if it supports self-registration. This feature enables advisors to collect important introductory information and gives clients an opportunity to familiarize themselves with the interface in a time-efficient way.

Activate the Client Experience

There’s a genuine sense of accomplishment that comes from seeing all of the effort you put into the client relationship come alive as the gears of their financial plan begin spinning. A truly useful client portal will provide the right interface to make sure clients can be fully engaged and active participants in the planning process.

But as powerful as a client portal can be—offering a real-time, comprehensive, personal financial picture—clients need guidance about how to maximize the utility it can provide. That may need to unfold over time through multiple modes of education and training.

Once you’ve nailed down the basics, a client portal will help facilitate more productive dialogue with your clients and have a positive bearing on where you steer the planning process with your clients.

To see how a powerful portal can transform your client relationships and keep you at the forefront of digital trends, check out the cutting-edge eMoney client portal.

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About the Author

Celeste Revelli is currently Director of Digital Planning at Fidelity Investments, where she works on digital financial planning experiences for Fidelity advisors and clients. Starting her career as a registered advisor for a few years, Celeste has been in the financial services industry since 2009. She worked at eMoney Advisor for almost 11 years, where she led advanced planning support escalation, product research support, and eMoney’s financial wellness and financial education strategy as Director of Financial Planning. Celeste received her bachelor’s degree in communications and marketing from Loyola University Maryland and her certificate in financial planning from Boston University. She is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional and is currently pursuing her MBA specializing in financial psychology and behavioral finance from Creighton University. Celeste dedicates time to serving her community in the areas of pro bono financial planning and financial literacy, and she also serves the industry through her support of next generation planners, diversity and inclusion efforts, and exam and technology committees for the CFP Board. She lives in Philadelphia with her husband and son.

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