Trying to make strategic sense out of social media leaves financial advisors with a sense of unparalleled confusion and anxiety. I should know. I am one.
All I hear these days is how everyone in the world uses social media networks—Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn, in particular—to communicate in an exponentially more efficient manner. And everything seems to be fair game, from the latest photos of the grandkids to up-to-the-second "tweets" of life as it unfolds. The amount of personal, intimate data that people share today isn't something that we as financial advisors can ignore forever—we just have to figure out how we fit into all this.
I compare it to an awkward first dance in high school. You remember the one: deciding who steps where, hands up, hands down, swaying right or left, holding your breath for four minutes hoping that your date doesn't see you sweat. Nobody gave you a manual back then on how to dance, and today is hardly different. It was just last year that FINRA released Regulatory Notice 11-39, "Social Media Websites and the Use of Personal Devices for Business Communications," outlining how firms can use social media.
I've been in this business a long time, long enough to produce two college-bound kids and help merge and build a 26-person firm in the thick of a challenging economy. As president of Private Ocean, a wealth management firm in the Bay Area, I spend my days working directly with clients on financial planning and investment strategy. I also run Junxure, a software company based on the East Coast that offers the leading CRM in the industry. I'm passionate about what I do and I understand that technology is a tool that we use to help our clients. How we use that tool determines how successful we are in the long run.
Is anyone really an expert in social media? I set out to answer that question when approaching a social media strategy for Private Ocean. That sent me on a journey of talking to advisors, vendors and compliance attorneys as well as attending a handful of seminars on the subject, and everything came down to one word.
Compliance
Private Ocean is an independent RIA, so we're under the regulatory scheme that makes us pretty cautious about sharing information online with our customers using these networks. I've seen what other firms do—Raymond James, for example just announced its guidelines on letting advisors use social media, and Research reported in its August issue that technology firms are popping up everywhere to help advisors stay compliant as they begin using social media.