planning for a post-Covid business (December 2021)<\/a>.<\/p>\nWhat struck me as I went through the planning exercise is how little I actually know about our business. Sure, I can tell you what our assets under management (AUM), revenue and expenses are, how many clients we have, and so on, and I can make assumptions in my planning about increasing or decreasing those numbers. But how do I know if my growth projections are too high or too low? That my business is truly profitable? That my practice is just as good as (or better than) others like mine?<\/p>\n
COACH SAYS:<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\nFirst, congratulations on questioning the value of your annual planning. In a presentation I\u2019ve given about things that top-performing advisors do, guess what No. 3 is? Understanding the metrics of their business \u2014 the relationship between resource allocation and results. Top performers everywhere recognize that knowing their \u201cnumbers\u201d enables them to control the momentum of their business.<\/p>\n
So, which numbers should you know? You already have most of the data: for example, AUM, revenue and expenses. You just need to rearrange it to calculate some telling statistics. There also is other information that you may want to begin tracking to aid in the review of your business\u2019s progress.<\/p>\n
Let me run through the revenue, profitability and productivity measures we use for practice valuations.<\/p>\n
Assets under management<\/strong><\/h3>\nAUM is an important measure because it tells us how big a practice is and where it fits in the marketplace. Three things we like to know about AUM are:<\/p>\n
\n- What\u2019s the growth trend<\/strong> \u2014 that is, percentage change year-over-year for the past three to five years<\/li>\n
- Where did gains come from<\/strong> \u2014 new clients, existing clients, market gains, etc.<\/li>\n
- What\u2019s going out the door<\/strong> \u2014 client withdrawals, transfers, lost clients, etc.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
Our timing is perfect for your question because some new benchmarking research on advisory practice performance, the 2021 Pricing & Profitability Update<\/em>, was just released by New York-based IN Research. The study has been running for 30 years, and while it is based on data collected from independent advisors in the U.S., the findings are useful to Canadian practices. Here are some selected insights. I have rounded the numbers to help us see the big picture:Total average AUM growth in 2020 was 11%, driven by 5% from new clients and 7% from portfolio gains. (One per cent is lost as a result of declining assets among existing clients through withdrawals or the termination of relationships.)<\/p>\nWhat lessons can we take from this? I know the data is relatively short-term, but what jumps out at me is that the traditional ways of building a practice \u2014 through referrals and new client acquisition \u2014 are at risk of being offset by a simultaneous decline in assets. Assets decline when existing clients draw down portfolios for retirement, transfer wealth to children or die. In a mature practice with older clients, we can only expect this trend to accelerate.<\/p>\n
Of course, the other caution is that while market gains can certainly accelerate your business over time, you are better to focus efforts and resources on things you can control.<\/p>\n
Revenue<\/strong><\/h3>\nTotal revenue is important because there should be some correlation between AUM and revenue. What is more important, though, is the ratio of recurring to non-recurring revenue. With the wide-scale trend toward asset-based or fee-based compensation models, we are seeing increasingly large percentages of recurring revenue, which is a good thing if you want to maximize the value of your business.<\/p>\n
While I despise rules of thumb for practice valuation, here\u2019s one that generally holds true: a dollar of recurring revenue is worth three times as much as a dollar of non-
\nrecurring revenue.<\/p>\n