Define Your Business Model

Registered Investment Advisors can be compensated in a variety of ways including preparing financial plans, managing assets, or providing planning or advice. Some advisors may specialize in one area while others may work in many areas and charge fees accordingly. Advisors who work with custodians typically charge for managing client assets by applying a percentage (fee schedule) against the client's assets.

Define Your Fee Structure

Now that you're in control of your own investment firm you are free to develop your own customized pricing. A fee charged for assets under management is either directly billed to the client or deducted from the client account by the custodian and paid to the advisor on a monthly or quarterly basis. Most advisors feel this compensation arrangement is an advantage over the traditional commission business because it places the advisor's and clients' interest together. As the clients' assets grow, the advisor's fees grow. It also eliminates the broker-dealers' products and commission rates from influencing an advisor's recommendations.

Many broker-dealers have begun to offer fee opportunities for representatives as a result of the RIA movement but typically they still share in the fee income derived from the representative. However, when an RIA starts his own firm he retains all of the fee income and can build a business that can later be sold or transferred to an heir or colleague.

Choose the Right Partner

Current representatives who are considering starting an RIA firm but need to retain some of their commission income might consider our Hybrid Advisor Program that allows them to operate their own RIA firm and retain 100% of that revenue while utilizing our partnering broker-dealer for commission business.