Penny Pennington is the managing partner of Edward Jones and the sixth person to have served at the helm of the firm during its 100-year history.
In the role, Pennington is responsible for stewarding Edward Jones' strategic direction, working together with 50,000 associates across North America to make a positive impact in the lives of clients, colleagues and communities.
She began her Edward Jones career in 2000 as a financial advisor in Livonia, Michigan, and in 2006, Pennington was named a principal and relocated to the firm's St. Louis headquarters, where she held various leadership roles prior to her appointment to managing partner at the start of 2019.
On Monday, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority announced that Pennington had been elected to its Board of Governors as a large firm governor.
In an extended interview with ThinkAdvisor, given while Pennington was in New York, the Edward Jones leader said she was proud and humbled to be at the helm of a firm with more branch offices throughout the United States than any other brokerage firm in the country. She noted the firm's annual revenue had grown from $16 million in 1977 to more than $12.3 billion today, thanks to the work of branch staffers and the firm's 19,000 financial advisors.
Pennington also emphasized how Edward Jones is investing billions in new technology infrastructure, digital initiatives and virtual business enablement tools — all designed to grow the firm's impact and deepen client and financial advisor relationships.
Clearly, Edward Jones faces tremendous opportunities, yet like any legacy enterprise with such an extensive history and footprint, there are challenges to surmount, as well. These include the typical competitive pressures facing all advisory and brokerage shops in a world in which consumer expectations are rapidly evolving, as well as more unique challenges facing Edward Jones.
Among these are allegations that the firm has underpaid and underemployed female advisors and otherwise engaged in biased hiring and promotional practices. Of course, Edward Jones is not alone in having a mostly white and male advisor force, and in fact the firm boasts better diversity figures than most of its industry peers.
In past interviews, Pennington has acknowledged the paramount importance of improving representation and inclusivity in the advisory industry, saying it is a clear and pressing priority for the firm.
Summarized below are some highlights from the new conversation with Pennington, in which she spelled out her understanding of why Edward Jones has found enduring prosperity, and how she and her partners can ensure the firm attains another century of client service success.
THINKADVISOR: With Edward Jones celebrating its centennial in 2022, how do you feel about this current moment for the firm, its clients and the broader brokerage and advisory industry?
PENNINGTON: It is such an exciting time for our industry and for our firm. Speaking to the industry at large, I believe we are, more than ever, coming to truly see and understand the needs of our clients. We are understanding where the longstanding gaps in our industry have been.
For example, you may have seen the recent J.D. Power research results that came out, showing only 14% of the clients of full-service advisors say they get comprehensive financial advice. That statistic represents a huge opportunity and a clarion call for our industry, across the board.
We have to serve our clients more responsively and deeply than ever before, because their lives are more complex than ever, and the world, financially and otherwise, is more complex than ever.
People's needs have moved away from trying to understand stocks and bonds and building a portfolio to instead focus on genuine planning — on creating a relationship with their advisor that is much more comprehensive and holistic.
We have to continue to evolve so that we can serve the client in the context of their broader lives, in the context of multigenerational families and their broader hopes and goals.
We have to speak to young people who are really confused right now about their own financial futures. We recently did an internal survey among millennial investors, and they told us unequivocally that the biggest financial concern they face is actually just confronting the scope of options they have when trying to invest and create a financial plan. They don't know what to do. It's a choice overload.
So, it is the responsibility of our industry to step up here, and the opportunity is incredible.
There are firms that continue to raise the bar, and we believe we are one of those, in terms of elevating the relationship with the client. We do well in J.D. Power's rankings because we listen to the voice of our clients, all the time. We know they are asking for more from us, and we know that we need to move with speed and urgency to address their emerging needs.
Can you describe these emerging client needs in greater detail and how the firm is responding to this moment?
We have the benefit of being able to listen to our clients and to our extensive network of financial advisors — the nearly 19,000 professionals who sit down across the desk from their clients every single day.
The main theme we hear from our people is that we need to deliver the most comprehensive support services possible — advice and guidance that relates to all things health, family, well-being, personal meaning and how the financial plan lines up with all of this.
As we celebrate our centennial, we are also celebrating a cultural renewal and a strategic transformation here at Edward Jones that is building on what is special about our history and culture. We are doing this because we hope and expect to grow to serve the needs of tens of millions of clients in the future.
Right now, we serve some 8 million clients, but in the emerging marketplace of holistic advice, we think our addressable market is actually closer to 40 million people. We believe the opportunity in front of us and our peer organizations is vast, but success will require delivering new advice and guidance that cuts across the full scope of the client's life.
We also know that it will require great technology in the front, middle and back of the organization. It will require great technology across the client experience and the branch experience.
If you look at our technology investments, we are looking for ways to make sure the clients always feel like they are informed about what impact the markets are having on their goals, and we are striving to make sure the financial advisors out in our branches are able to operate really efficiently and effectively, using the technology to understand their clients as deeply as possible.