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Advisor says: Fortunately, my team and I have adapted our practice quite well to the conditions created by the pandemic. Forced to work from home, we enhanced our technology, created new processes and maintained communications with our clients and among ourselves.

Considering our success with these modifications, I believe the “new normal” for our practice will incorporate many of the changes we made, even when the world reopens. For example, some team members will want to continue to work — part-time, at least — from home; many clients have told us they prefer the convenience of video over in-person meetings.

Now I am faced with several decisions, including previous no-brainers such as “Should I renew the lease on my office space?” I normally wouldn’t hesitate to say yes, but I am not convinced I will need as much physical room if some of us work remotely, even part-time. What are your thoughts?

Coach says: Without question, the Covid-19 pandemic summarily changed how financial advisors do business in ways that even the most diligently crafted business continuity plans did not contemplate. I agree with you that adaptive approaches to getting the job done will endure long past the availability of a virus-defeating vaccine. That said, I believe we have only scratched the surface of further evolution in how financial advice is delivered.

Let’s use your office lease renewal as a case in point. You haven’t given me much information regarding the size of your team compared with your current office space, so let me use some of our clients’ situations as examples.

At one end of the spectrum, we work with advisors who have built great practices with one or two support staff. They may operate from the same location in which they began and, in many such instances, the physical space is already crowded, as the practice has grown from a solo advisor, to one advisor plus one assistant to one advisor and two assistants, and so on.

Many practices of this size co-exist with others similar to their own within a branch office of a regional or national dealer firm, meaning they may have access to shared amenities. Even so, I have never heard anyone who operates from a branch complain they had too much space.

At the other extreme, we work with advisors associated with national brokerage firms who employ teams of six to eight support staff. Their spaces often include a nice office for the advisor (with size and location dependent on their status in the firm) and nearby cubicles for their staff in a large open area of an entire floor in a downtown skyscraper. The firm provides a reception area, several meeting rooms, kitchen, technology centre and more.

Between these extremes are all kinds of configurations. Regardless, how should you evaluate your requirements, assuming that remote work and technology will reduce the need for physical space?

If you have a compact practice, you may see little need to alter your working environment, despite some team members continuing to work remotely part-time. In fact, you may welcome a little extra breathing room, even if you maintain space for remote workers who occasionally need to be in the office. In smaller practices, support staff tend to perform many duties, so working entirely from home may not be practical.

At the other extreme — a practice with a large support team — staff members’ work tends to be more specialized and routine. Should these people have to endure the daily commute, the office tower elevator dance and a frenzied working environment when they can do the same job just as effectively (if not more so) from an environment they create for themselves to better balance their personal and professional lives?

A survey published in June from New York-based McKinsey & Co. found that 80% of people working from home said they enjoy it, 41% reported they were more productive and 28% reported they were as productive as they would have been in the office.

I am not forecasting the cataclysmic “end of the office.” While many people enjoy working from home, others do not — or cannot due to the nature of their jobs. “Zoom fatigue” is real, as is “fear of missing out” on spontaneous team conversations, professional development and social interactions. Some people may welcome working from home as a temporary change, but do not want it to be their only option for the rest of their career.

Regardless of your practice’s size, no formula can take into account all factors to determine your space requirements. However, we have been encouraging our clients to use this opportunity to reimagine their entire business in the “next normal,” taking into account what they have learned over recent months along with what they want their business to look like in the coming years. In simple terms, we’re telling people to ask themselves: “If we didn’t exist today, how would we invent ourselves?”

To some extent, this is a vision exercise; however, since vision drives strategy and strategy determines the tactics you will employ, you can use this process to answer not only the question of real estate, but others of equal or greater importance.

1. Decide which tasks must be done to effectively run your business

Begin by identifying five or six major tasks that underpin your operation. These might include:

  • Client service
  • Marketing and new business development
  • New client onboarding and account opening
  • Financial, investment and insurance planning
  • Portfolio management
  • Client review process
  • Customer relationship management software and database management

Prioritize these tasks according to your estimation of their importance and impact on the success of your business.

2. Outline the required workflow for each major task

Create workflow descriptions and diagrams that track the required steps, people and resources required for the smooth functioning of your business. Questions to ask for each task are:

  • How often does this task have to be performed?
  • What is the desired outcome?
  • What specific activities, and in what order, have to be completed to achieve the desired outcome?
  • What resources are required (e.g., time, number of people, systems, technology)?

Detailing the workflow often reveals inefficiencies such as people who don’t need to be involved and superfluous steps.

3. Determine where, and by whom, the task must be performed

Some tasks can be performed by only qualified people (e.g., because they require licensing) or in direct collaboration with others. Ask what:

  • Must be done on-site
  • Can be done better on-site
  • Can be done equally well either on- or off-site
  • Can be better done off-site (e.g., cheaper, faster, with fewer errors)

Note that with competition for qualified staff intensifying, some advisors we know have been able to access broader geographical pools of talent by offering a work-from-home option.

4. Identify resources, both required and available

Now that you know what needs to be done — where and by whom — you can evaluate existing resources to determine their sufficiency for the job. Among things to think about are:

  • Staffing level, qualifications and capacity
  • Systems, technology and security
  • Physical space and amenities

The perfect set of factors is unlikely to be present for every major task, so a hybrid model may work. For example, you could require remote workers to be physically present in the office every second Monday. Staff may work together physically during brainstorming sessions while leaving practical implementation to a remote worker. Periodic opportunities for social interaction among all staff can help team members to bond.

5 Reimagine your business for the new normal

Although we have used your lease renewal decision as an example, this approach of self-assessment and refinement can work for any major task in your practice. Use this unanticipated opportunity to review, refine, reinvent and reinvigorate your business. As you do so, you will create a better experience for your clients, yourself and your team while improving productivity and potentially reducing costs.

George Hartman is CEO of Market Logics Inc. in Toronto. Send questions and comments regarding this column to george@marketlogics.ca. George’s practice-management videos can be viewed on investmentexecutive.com.