Loyalty can be based on fear, obligation, or connection and identity, while belonging is about stories, worldview, transformation, gatherings, rituals, and shared values. Belonging is deeper and more meaningful than loyalty, as it fosters a sense of community and shared identity.
Starting small allows financial advisors to focus on a really big idea that appeals to a specific, niche audience. This approach builds a strong foundation and fosters a loyal, cult-like following, as seen with companies like Patagonia and Nike, which began by targeting small, passionate groups.
The transformation economy focuses on self-improvement and achieving personal aspirations. In financial planning, it involves guiding clients through a series of experiences and events to help them transform their lives, aligning with their goals and well-being.
Advisors should focus on designing time that is deeply personal, memorable, and meaningful. This includes creating unique events, fostering connections, and helping clients achieve their personal aspirations, rather than just focusing on transactional efficiency.
A 'really big idea' serves as the foundation for a business, attracting a loyal following and creating a sense of purpose. It should be larger than the product or service itself, focusing on values, well-being, or transformation, as seen with companies like Apple, Tesla, and Vanguard.
Making clients slightly uncomfortable encourages them to think differently and deeply about their financial and personal goals. This approach fosters growth, transformation, and a stronger connection between the advisor and the client.
Shared values create a sense of belonging and connection, which are essential for building a loyal following. People want to work with those who align with their values, making it a critical factor in fostering long-term relationships and community.
Advisors can differentiate themselves by focusing on creating meaningful experiences, fostering belonging, and guiding clients through personal transformations. This goes beyond transactional services and emphasizes the value of time well spent.
He uses the example of a birthday cake to illustrate the evolution from the agrarian economy (making a cake from scratch) to the industrial economy (cake mix), the service economy (buying a cake), the experience economy (hosting a party at Chuck E. Cheese), and finally the transformation economy (achieving personal milestones like getting a driver's license).
Anticipating future needs allows advisors to provide proactive, personalized support that goes beyond financial planning. This includes addressing clients' well-being, personal aspirations, and life challenges, fostering deeper trust and loyalty.
Thanks for watching.
Brought to you by NHTSA and the Ad Council. Hello, and welcome to Barron's The Way Forward. I'm Greg Bartalus, and my special guest today is Dennis Mosley-Williams, founder of DMW Strategic Consulting, a client experience marketing and strategic sales company focused on helping financial advisors, the financial services industry, and related professions. And today, Dennis will talk about cults.
Welcome to the podcast. It's wonderful to be back, Greg. Good to see you. Good to see you. Now, you're not intending to speak about Heaven's Gate or Reverend Jim Jones, the strawberry vat-flavored Kool-Aid from the People's Temple in Jonestown, Guyana, or anything like that, are you? No, not as such, no. Okay. So now let's unpack this, because I think we got the listener's attention. Absolutely. Now let's try to keep it. It's...
Cult is a word that makes people uncomfortable. It makes Susan in my office remarkably uncomfortable. She doesn't want me to use it. She says, please, say community. But what I like about cult is culture. And what I like about cults, if you will, even those that you mentioned, is what they all have in common and how that relates to a business, particularly a business like financial planning. But really any business, but in this case, financial planning. Okay, so let's...
Let's unpack this. Okay. Well, it begins with humans have a desire to belong. It is what makes us human. We want to belong. We want to associate with other people who see the world the way that we do. So for years and years, I've talked about experience as being your competitive differentiator, different from service. It's not about efficiency. It's about meaningful time, creating time that's meaningful, memorable, deeply personal, etc.,
And then one day, this just sort of occurred to me and I realized, no, no, the most successful advisors that I know and work with, they really have built cults where they're not the advisor, they're the charismatic leader and they're bringing people around a really, really big idea. And that big idea obviously is bigger than everybody needs a lot of money to pay their bills in the future.
It's a bigger idea than that. I think the idea is, you know, well-being as an example. Yeah, it's interesting because when I think about companies that have cult-like followings, you know, if you spring to mind, you have Apple with, you know, obviously what Steve Jobs did, you know, Tesla and Elon Musk got a big following. But what's really interesting to me is when you think about the
financial services. You know, if you look at Vanguard specifically, Jack Bogle, in a way, you have such a fierce and loyal following. You've got the Bogle ahead, so there is that sense of community. What's interesting, though, is that unlike Jobs and Musk, for example, you know, Bogle, he wasn't charismatic in the traditional sense of the word. His charisma or the adulation he engendered was more built on
on the foundation of his thinking and the value proposition and how he tangibly helped empower and build wealth for so many people, you know, not just Wall Street, but Main Street as well. And that was surrounded around a big idea, right? Correct. Like empowering you with really affordable funds. So I think that it's important to point out because a lot of people might say, you know, at first blush, oh, yeah, you know, Apple and Tesla, these glamorous consumer fashions,
I'm facing brands. I'm, you know, I'm an advisor. I'm supposed to be taken seriously. So how do you reconcile, right, the perception of that glitz, if you will, with the important business of financial planning and investing, et cetera? Yeah, I hear you. I think that they shouldn't think that way. You have to look at what these big companies do. For the first time ever, just a moment ago, as you mentioned earlier,
You mentioned Vanguard. I thought, oh, for that matter, Warren Buffett. Yeah. He's a charismatic leader. And we should get away from the idea necessarily of like sexy, exciting charisma. It's thinking, values, and principle. And something else, and this is right to your question about financial advisors. All of the firms that we've mentioned are huge, big, giant international firms. But they didn't necessarily start that way.
They started with a really big idea that was only appealing to a very small group of people. One of the people I like to mention as a hero of mine is Yvon Chouinard. He founded Patagonia. He started selling climbing tools to, and I use this term on purpose, to geeks like him. To freaky little weirdos that wanted to climb mountains and couldn't find an ice axe that worked, he sold them out of the trunk of his car. So...
If you take a financial advisor, turn that person into a charismatic leader, shift their thinking, don't go big, small. Try to stay as small as you possibly can so that you are as appealing as possible to the smallest viable audience. Phil Knight, Nike, selling shoes to track, you know, to runners out of the trunk of his car. Start small. You need one client.
who can rally around that big idea and see where it takes you. So don't limit yourself to thinking we should all... I've tried to be, in my own way, Apple computer for 20-some years. I'm a two-and-a-half-person company. But in my mind, I act and behave like Apple. Right. So I think...
Correct me if I'm wrong, but what you're kind of saying is that for a lot of these larger companies that become successful, the size is a byproduct of starting small and doing little things right, and then it builds on itself. It's a consequence. Correct. So you have a much more stable foundation as well. You're kind of earning your way into success as opposed to just throwing money at something and at least temporarily having heft. Correct. And if you think just to jump on throwing money at something. So it's like, yeah, for instance...
Isn't that what marketing is? And if you, in the context of a cult, do cults market? Nope, they don't. They attract, they entice. Each member brings someone new. And that's what I would suggest every advisor should do. Get this idea of, you know, growth or perish out of your mind. Try and stay as small as you possibly can. Small, small, small.
Now, let's talk about perception and conviction. And again, this is impossible to quantify. So that's acknowledged. Now, you might have people like, yeah, I like that brand. Oh, they're good. As opposed to the people who are like, you know, let's say you're an Apple aficionado and you're like, I know I'm going to, you know, replace my phone in the future. I know I'm going to, you know, get a new MacBook. And so the degrees of it, how do you...
I don't know. How do you kind of know it when you're at that point? I know you can't really, but are there any like telltale signs of like, oh yeah, you kind of are legit. You're not, you are there. You're trending towards cult. Yes. Here's the difference. There's two words, loyalty and belonging. Belonging is better. Loyalty is a slippery word, okay? Because you can have, there's two kinds of loyalty. Let's start there. There is the loyalty of loyalty.
Fear and obligation. That's the loyalty we have to service providers such as your mobile telephone company. You might not love your mobile telephone company, but you're not going to swap them out because of the perceived hassle in doing so. And at the end, you're just going to end up with the same services, same bill, different colored letterhead. Then there's the loyalty you have to Apple. That's the loyalty of connection and identity, which is...
I'm one of these Apple people, so I think I'm allowed to say this. That the Samsung Galaxy is a better product. Okay? But I don't care. But I don't care. Now that is the loyalty of connection identity. But the third word here is belonging. Belonging is bigger than loyalty. Because loyalty is about benefits and identity. Whereas belonging is about the benefits of knowing Greg. But it's also about...
Stories, worldview, transformation, gatherings, rituals, identity. So you are trending towards a cult-like following when you build belonging with your clients. And their loyalty has to do with connection, identity, and a shared sense of values. Values is huge. In global study, I've been looking in all my keynotes, this book I'm working on, the top three things...
Around the world that people want. They want their family to be healthy. They want their own personal health and they want financial independence. Number four, values. Around the world. We want to know and work with people with whom we share values. And in our business, we get into a lot of trouble talking about the features and benefits of
The service of financial planning, we don't do enough thinking about who we're turning the client into. Who are we helping the client become? What is wealth? What is well-being? And it's a stretch. I think we talked about this before, the difference between the assigned work of financial planning and then the required work that all clients need, but they don't necessarily ask for it. So-
Yeah, the belonging is definitely, it's a core human need. I mean, to just get out of the realm of money, you know, there are a lot of people who might lack structure, might turn to crime or whatever, like you need your group. That's just a human desire. And
More broadly for people who have most of those needs met, they still want it. And I think with belonging, part of this might involve like making your customers feel special, right? Amen. And I guess if you want to feel an element that you're part of an exclusive group, and I don't know if, you know, you can offer perks, early access to things or things that are not readily accessible, kind of riff on that, if you will. People want to belong. And what they want, what we get trapped in is we get trapped in
in business thinking, saving people time, getting them to the transaction as quickly as possible. But what they really want is time with you that is meaningful, memorable, and deeply, deeply personal for all of the advisors listening. I believe this and I've been saying so for 30 years. Your job is to make your clients slightly uncomfortable. And by that, I mean the more times you can have your clients say,
Wow, Greg, that's amazing. I've never thought about that before. You're doing your job. That's your job. Your job is to get them to think that way and to make them feel special. If you think about, you know, I say this often, service is what you do. It's what everybody else does. It competes on price. Experience is how you do it. And we know, using simple examples like Starbucks, that when the person feels seen, known, appreciated,
As an individual and not just another person in line, they'll pay more. The transaction matters more to them. But I'm pushing everybody towards consequence. What happens to people? Because they know you. And what all brands, the best brands in the world have in common, the local ones, the corner store in your neighborhood that only people in your neighborhood know about, the restaurant in your city, regional, national, international, in all different industries, what they all have in common.
is people talk about them. People don't talk about services. What they talk about is what happened to them because of you. That's what you want to zero in on. It's very deeply, deeply personal, but who are you helping these people become? What would they tell you? And if you could break it down, be a little more granular and more within the realm of actionable ideas and brass tacks, like...
What are some things for an advisor listening where they can kind of take this? I think you're being directionally very clear, but to just make it a little more palatable and implementable, if you will. Okay. I think that in every aspect of your client's life that they feel is related to their overall sense of well-being, I truly believe is your job now. Okay? So this can be...
Your sense of self, your sense of accomplishment, your personal aspirations. Okay? It can be, what were the best books that you read last year, Greg? Making you the advisor. Why were they great? Have you shared them with your clients? Have you hosted a book club around these ideas? What is the big idea? What kind of events do you have? My advisor invited me to an event years ago. I've told this story many times. There's a little cocktail reception ahead of time.
I don't know any of the people that are there. We're chatting. It never really comes up. It's a beautiful story. My advisor gets up at the front of the room. It was a cooking class. Okay, so just hear me out. Gets up at the front and he says, do y'all get to meet each other? Like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah. He says, did you figure out what you all have in common yet? Finally, because I was like, and I, no, because I work in the business. I knew, yeah, based on the other guy that's on the stage right now, we all own whatever mutual fund that guy sells. Anyway, he says, you're all Air Canada super elite members.
It means you fly all the time. We look at each other literally like, oh, club. Oh my, you know my secret pain. And my advisor said this, this is beautiful. He says, okay, so here's what tonight is about. The next time you're on the road and you call home and it's a little, he was very funny. He said, and your wife is down to her last mummy nerve. That's what he said. I've used the line myself a million times since. He said, and you, instead of saying that,
"Okay, I'll get dinner tomorrow." Which means at the time of this, there was no such thing as Uber Eats, by the way, I'm gonna land at the airport, order something on my phone, pick it up like a hero and bring it in the door. He just shook his head like no to that. And he put his fingers together like cat's cradle, you know? And he says, "No, tonight you're gonna learn how to make three things. And the next time you make that phone call, you're gonna land, you're gonna go to the grocery store, buy seven ingredients, you're gonna come home and you're gonna keep your family whole." Like that.
10, I don't like to think of myself this way, type A dudes standing, we all went, do it. This is amazing. His whole business, this advisor, is built around this big idea. Better people, better spouses, better parents. That's what his business is all about. I tell you the story and I get chills literally. It's amazing.
That's definitely interesting. I want to mention something that you often talk about in your work, and that's the experience economy that we're in. And you gave a talk that was quite interesting, and I'd like it if you could share the narrative arc. And it begins with you talking about the 1970s, which you correctly deem to be a really, really awesome decade for various reasons, in which, you know,
Par for the course then was, you know, mom would make a cake from scratch. It was a commodity and it was just important but de rigueur that, you know, she would make it with her hands from scratch. And I think I said it cost like 30 cents or whatever. Right.
And, you know, then mom got busy and like, I'll buy it from the box. And then you bought the icing in a container and that was more expensive, but there was the convenience that she saved time. And then, and I'm sorry, I don't want, you know, I'll stop there because I don't want to steal your story. I just want to put you in the right direction. Yeah, yeah. If you can take it from there. Oh, thank you.
I was worried for a minute. I was telling a funny story. Oh, dear, here it goes. I was using the example of the different ways that you can celebrate a birthday to illustrate the different economies that we have lived through, from the agrarian economy, commodities, your mom making the cake from scratch, the industrial economy, the cake mix, the service economy, buying the cake at the bakery, and then the experience economy, renting a facility,
such as a Chuck E. Cheese and having a birthday experience there. Now, you said the magic word, time. What we don't think about in business is time. We're always thinking about the product, but the value is time and what we do with it. So everybody listening, you have to ask yourself, am I busy saving my clients time? Because people don't pay for that. That's convenience. That's service. Experience. Time well spent.
I'm paying a premium. I don't want to rush. Think about a financial planning meeting that's a service. I do it for you. Let's have our meeting on Zoom. I'll save you the drive downtown. Becoming a commodity is a choice, and that is an example of how you become commoditized. Experience.
come to my office, and from before you even arrive on the enticing phase, the experience has begun. Experience is time well designed. Imagine a meeting that is so thoroughly enjoyable, deep time, time, time, time, designed for you, that's deeply personal, meaningful, and the hallmark of an experience is memorable. Now, and this is why I'm at Barron's, this is what I'm talking about tomorrow.
What comes after the experience economy? The transformation economy, where the predominant economic offering is the new you. Self-improvement, achieving your personal aspirations, which fits so perfectly well with what financial planning is. An advisor stages, a series of sequential events, beginning with an elaborate onboarding process and carrying through review meetings and check-in calls and client events,
to guide the client to a transformation, to achieving their personal aspirations, which would be in the context of a birthday, your 16th birthday when you got your driver's license. It's a transformation. All birthdays are great, but some of them, I turned 50 a few years ago. My next one coming up will be 60. Some of them are more meaningful experiences
than others for various reasons. - What I find really interesting is that this dynamic that you explained is manifesting itself in many different ways. So for example, with the birthday party, imagine if today a fourth grader was invited to a friend's birthday and they went to the house and we went back to the 1970s and it was like,
cake was made they let's say ate in the driveway surrounded by a table or whatever but it would almost be now the table stakes are the given correct much more elevated and what's interesting is the status quo now has also happened to be a lot more expensive too for most people absolutely right and uh
I can imagine, though, that this dynamic will manifest itself in many other parts of the economy where it's more still commoditized and or service the scheme, if you will, and that there's opportunities there to take things that we might think now are somewhat mundane and someone's going to make it hip and cool and modern and fresh, and suddenly it's like, oh, we got to do that, and they're all going to start moving with the herd. And then if you're doing something that today might –
be seen as like, oh, totally fine. In five years, that might look outdated, dowdy, and just totally not with it. Correct. And if you go forward, so, you know, I went to school for anthropology. I always love reminding people that because it's a good, you know, I've milked it for jokes on stage forever. By the way, I went to school for anthropology. Thanks for having me down. But anthropology is the study of culture. Cult. As people change, our people change. Americans. As Americans change, North Americans, Europeans, as they change,
They change as a people, their needs and wants as clients change. This idea that I'm sharing isn't exactly new. Since the very first transaction ever happened, I'll give you two chickens for a duck. Since the agrarian economy, commodities, the economy is constantly changing and business is constantly adapting to meet clients where they are. Becoming a commodity is a choice. So is becoming the story that everybody wants to share. And how we do that is
is pushing beyond that assigned work. I work with an advisor very loosely. He's not a client of mine, to be clear. He's in the UK. He said to me one day, I have a psychologist on retainer for my clients. I said, what? What? He says, oh yeah. And then he gave me, he said, you know, Dennis, I'm not going to imitate him, but man, I do a good impersonation of him. He said, Dennis, even when you get offered a new job with more money and better benefits and you can take that job, it's still stressful to leave your friends.
Sometimes you just got to talk about it. And I said, that's really cool. He said to me, if you left your advisor's office right now, and as he walked you to the door, if he said, Dennis, anything else? And you said to that, this is so powerful. And you said to him, half joking, although look at me, I'm clearly not completely joking. I could use a trainer. I need a trainer. I need to get somebody to help me out. Physical fitness. He says,
If that advisor knew a personal trainer, he'd say, wait a second, I got one. Fantastic. Worked with my wife. Now me, you'd love him. He's a hero. Then he loaded questions. He goes, what if he doesn't know one? I said, yeah. He says, you'd be on your own. I said, that's right. And this is how we, this is really how I arrived at any, it's very personal. Any aspect of my life that I feel is part of my wellbeing is
Well-being equals wealth. I need help with that. So I'm not saying to everybody listening, you better go find a trainer for it. No, but I am saying community, cult, network. Imagine if every year around the holidays, your clients received a beautiful leather-bound book from you. And in that directory is everyone you are associated with and by association they are.
That's value, right? Like you need a roofer? I got one. You need a personal? I got elder care? I've got one. Tutoring? Got one. Got all that stuff. Become that leader. So yeah, meeting and also anticipating future needs. Amen. Look ahead. Where is this going? What is Dennis dealing with next in his life? You know, I should talk to you every day. Oh my goodness. Really, really good advisors everywhere.
They worry about their clients more often than their clients probably realize. It's a fact. They just lose sleep worrying about their clients. But amazing advisors, they worry about the things their clients don't talk to them about. What's Dennis Nod sharing? And that's what time well spent. Take me on a walk in a park, man.
where I'm caught, not in your office, change the environment, bring me out, let me talk, and let me be in a headspace where I can say, I'm kind of worried about blank. If you really want to know, I'm kind of into that. And then go find me the resources to fix it. That's it. That's value. Excellent. Well, speaking of time well spent,
this interview. You're wonderful. And unfortunately, speaking of time, we're out of time. So we're going to wrap it up and I want to thank you again for joining. Thanks, man. You're the best. Thank you. My guest has been Dennis Mosley-Williams. For more podcasts and the latest wealth management news, visit barons.com slash advisor. For The Way Forward, I'm Greg Bartalus.