The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards announced Wednesday that it has launched an initiative to boost the number of women advisors in the field, including CFPs, as the number of female CFPs hasn't budged for a decade.
Nancy Kistner, chairwoman of the board of directors for the CFP Board, noted in a release announcing the initiative that as it stands now, only about 23% of the 68,000 CFP professionals are female. With fields like education, medicine and law, among others, seeing more gender parity, Kistner said in her remarks, "it is well past time that we welcome more women in financial services, particularly financial planning."
Growing the ranks of female CFP professionals, she said, "not only makes good business sense, but it builds the heart and soul of this profession, which is all about helping Americans achieve financial security. When more women advisors are helping more women clients, they are also helping spouses, children, families and communities."
Kistner, who is also managing director and wealth planning solutions market director at U.S. Trust, Bank of America Private Wealth Management, made the announcement during a keynote address at the Women Advisors Forum in New York.
To help inform the initiative, CFP Board has appointed a Women's Initiative Advisory Panel made up of leading experts in the financial planning field, Kistner said. "The Advisory Panel will help to identify the challenges women face when becoming certified and beginning a career in financial planning, as well as recommend solutions to increase the ranks of female CFP professionals."