Blogs

Bob Bevan's picture

Time For The Investment Industry To Wake Up!

At a recent workshop I ran for asset managers, one of the delegates, in a rather superior tone, stated “We don’t have client’s, we have investor’s”. His contention was that people with money to invest behave differently to everyone else.

Surely the time has now come to put this myth to rest?

Bob Bevan's picture

LinkedIn, Social Networking For IFAs!

LinkedIn is a free social network for business professionals that in just 7 years has grown to over 75 million members in over 200 countries. It is an excellent tool to help you expand your business network, stay abreast of industry issues, and exchange mutually beneficial ideas with your peers.

So given the importance of networking for financial advisers, here’s all you need to know about LinkedIn to get started.

Bob Bevan's picture

Why Don't More IFA’s Use Email Marketing?

Last Friday a Tokyo based designer tweeted and in so doing brought the number of Tweets in the 4 years since Twitter launched to 20 billion. That’s impressive growth so no wonder the web is awash with articles on how businesses can use Twitter.

However, what is less well known is that the total number of tweets ever sent is less than the 24 billion emails that are sent worldwide EVERY DAY!!! So why do IFAs & Financial Planners continue to overlook email, the ideal tool for keeping in touch with their clients?

Bob Bevan's picture

5 Reasons IFAs Should Blog, 5 Excuses Why They Don’t!

Blogs are a great way to regularly communicate with existing and potential customers, demonstrate your knowledge and the value you provide, build client relationships and generate new business. Despite these benefits, financial intermediaries will use every excuse under the sun not to get involved. So why is this?

Bob Bevan's picture

Is The Web Really Just For Kids & Geeks?

I was recently running an executive briefing on how digital technology and social media are changing our lives as consumers. Such changes are manifested in a number of subtle ways, not least of which being how we access products and services. One of the misconceptions around the table related to the demographic profile of the consumers involved, with the attendees labouring under the impression that online participation is the preserve of kids & geeks.

The initial reaction of the delegates made me wonder, is a wider confusion within the UK life, pension and investments industry about just who the new digital consumers are?

Bob Bevan's picture

Why Pay For Advice When Information Is Free?

Online consumers are used to getting everything for free, be it music from Spotify, video from YouTube or web tools from Google. Business users can also access a wealth of useful, free content, such as creative common licence Flickr images for use in blogs or the intellectual property represented by presentations in Slideshare. So in this world of free information, just how do IFAs justify the cost of advice?

 

Bob Bevan's picture

The Industry That Time Forgot

Most well designed, modern websites use a wide range of tools & techniques such as news aggregation, video streams and reader feedback, to ensure that users enjoy an engaging, interactive experience. So why is it that the websites of so many financial services providers are as outdated as the average dinosaur?

Pete Callaghan's picture

Do you really know what you want?

 

Lots of IT projects fail, for lots of different reasons, but one of the most common reasons is that projects start wrong.

Do you know how to start a project on the right foot?

Pete Callaghan's picture

Do You Need Water Wings?

Is your organisation contemplating social and digital media?

Have you seen the horror stories about big brands getting it disastrously wrong? Have you seen the long lists of do's and don'ts?

How do you chart a safe course through dangerous waters of social media?

It's really not that difficult. Here, have a set of water wings.

Pete Callaghan's picture

Who will win the election? Old Media or New?

In recent days something remarkable has emerged on the UK political scene. No, it's not Nick Clegg and the Liberal Democrats.

It is the power of Social and Digital Media to influence UK political opinion, and it threatens to eclipse the power of the bastions of 'old media'.