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Stepping It Up. …the future of financial planning, and other stories. Today’s Agenda. Tenets of a Profession FPSC’s role Where are we today? The challenges What’s FPSC doing about it? The Competency Profile in Detail Where to from here?. A Profession?.
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Stepping It Up …the future of financial planning, and other stories CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Today’s Agenda • Tenets of a Profession • FPSC’s role • Where are we today? • The challenges • What’s FPSC doing about it? • The Competency Profile in Detail • Where to from here? CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession? • Is financial planning a profession? • Why or why not? CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Tenets of a Profession • Requires high level of education • High standards of conduct • Generally accepted standards of practice • Clearly defined, unique set of knowledge, skills and abilities with high standards of achievement CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
More Tenets • Commitment to continuous learning • Prime purpose of rendering a public service – public accountability • Standards based on concerted opinion and force of organization CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession in the MakingFPSC’s Mission • Benefit the public by leading the evolution of financial planning through the development, enforcement and promotion of the highest competency and ethical standards in financial planning as defined by CFP professionals CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession in the MakingFPSC’s Purpose • Build and continuously define the financial planning profession through CFP certification, ensuring that it is a viable, sustainable and rewarding profession that serves the public interest CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Stepping it UpThe Result • Through our work (and the work of the professional community) we build trust in the profession and the CFP practitioner community • This in turn paves the way for CFP professionals to succeed CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession in the MakingThe Result • Recent survey in the U.S. of CFP professionals listed obtaining CFP certification as number three success factor. • First two factors spoke to subsidiaries of CFP certification – communications and trust CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
FPSC’s VisionFor FPSC • The standards-setter for the profession • Influential promoter of public interest • Influential advocate for the profession • Unique in our clearly defined role as the professional regulatory authority for FP • Influential promoter of the value of FP and of CFP certification • The organization that leads the way to a strong and respected profession represented by CFP professionals CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Professional RecognitionJoint Responsibility Whose responsibility is it? • FPSC • Your professional association • Yourselves We all have to do our part CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Tenets of a ProfessionThe Gaps • Cannot be seen as a marketing tool • Must be recognized as serving public good • Must have uniformity and consistency of service • Must be perceived distinct value to public CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession?The facts - The Good News • 2006 independent survey of CFP professionals tells us: • CFP is most important pursuit • CFP validates skills • CFP improves knowledge • CFP gives competitive advantage CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession?Facts – More Good News • Consumer survey tells us: • One in three adult Canadians know the CFP • CFP has the highest unaided awareness of all FS designations • High levels of consumer satisfaction • Associated with positive attributes • “Cares about me” • “is accessible” • “is in tune with my needs” CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession?The Less Good News • Consumer Perceptions • Very strong association with “salesperson” • Weak association with important characteristics of a profession • Consistent • Thorough • Unbiased • Professional CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
A Profession?More Not-so-Good News • 25% of YOUR CLIENTS don’t know that you hold the CFP! • 50% of those who do know don’t know what it means CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Financial Planning? • Poor understanding of what financial planning represents, and its public value • Case in point… CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Where are We Today?The Good • 17,000 strong community • High standards of entry • Exceptionally high retention rate • Growing awareness of financial planning and of CFP as the profession’s standard • No credible alternative professional credential CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Where are We Today?More Not-so-Good • Still limited provision of comprehensive financial planning among the FP community – is this serving the public? • Very few consumers pay directly • Most Canadians don’t have a financial plan • Those that claim to have one didn’t use a financial planner to design it! CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
The Gaps –Who’s Going to Fix Them? • FPSC’s responsibilities • CFP professionals’ responsibilities CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
FPSC’s Role Revisited • Establish appropriate requirements for entry to the profession consistent (“inputs”) • Rigorous Examination • Appropriate experience requirements • Appropriate, relevant education CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
FPSC’s Role • Establish and oversee standards that CFP professionals must meet (“outputs”) • Standards of Practice • Standards of Ethical Conduct • Standards of Competent Performance CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
The Work AheadFPSC’s Ongoing Mandate • Enforce all standards • Require and enforce relevant CPD • Continue to define the profession, but through you • Promote the value proposition CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
The OutputsStandards for CFP Professionals • Ethical conduct • Practice • Competent performance CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Standards for the ProfessionEthical Conduct • Defined by Code of Ethics • Well established • Well defined • Well adhered to • Rigorous systems in place to enforce CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Standards for the ProfessionStandards of Practice • Practice Standards • Well established? • Well adhered to? • Rigorous systems in place to enforce? CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Practice StandardsWhy are They So Important? • Clarify expectations between planner and client • Better-informed public • Enhanced confidence in the profession • Establish consistency and uniformity • Guidance for CFP professionals CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Practice StandardsReaction of the CFP Community • Generally embraced – recognition of benefits to the profession • Some see this as merely another “compliance” measure • If we are going to be recognized as a profession, we need to overcome this attitude CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Practice StandardsImplementation Issues • Greatest concern from practitioners regarding Standard 100 • How do I write an Engagement Letter? • What should it look like? • I need further guidance • “We already have enough compliance burden” CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Practice StandardsFPSC’s response • FPSC guide to implementation of Standard 100 developed • Seven scenarios • Suggested phrases • Direct link: http://cfp-ca.org/pdf/FPSC-Resource-for-Practice-Standard-100.pdf CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Practice StandardsOngoing Implementation Challenges • CFP professionals not fully aware of obligations • Public not fully aware of expectations • Not all organizations fully aligned with planners • Oversight challenges CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Practice StandardsOvercoming Challenges • Use all resources available to you • Work with your organization • Share ideas with your peers – get involved in your association and join or create a chapter • FPSC will assist through ongoing guidance, employer visits, etc. • Understand the intent, scope and rationale for the Practice Standards • Ask yourself – am I meeting my personal obligations establishing the financial planning profession? CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Standards of CompetenceThe Missing Piece • While Practice Standards further define the process, they don’t address what exactly a financial planner should be able to do • Previous approaches to certification were based primarily on knowledge – what must a CFP professional “know” CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Knowledge SyllabusGaps • Students: “Why do I have to know that” • CFPs: “Getting the designation did not demonstrate my ability to perform financial planning.” • Employers: “We hire a CFP, who knows a lot, but we still have to teach them how to be a planner.” • The Public: “I don’t really understand exactly what a CFP professional can do for me.” • Internationally: “A CFP in Canada doesn’t mean the same as a CFP in Hong Kong/Australia/Japan” CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisFPSC’s Competency Profile • Principles • Content built and validated by practising CFP professionals • Future-focused • Designed to help drive the profession • Should be “job neutral” • Should be “knowledge-independent” CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency ProfileDefining the Profession • The Challenge • Establish a cross-sectoral task force of 50 experts from across the country • Charge them with creating a one-page document that defines the profession CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency ProfileDefining the Profession • Likely Result • A one page document that defines the profession, signed by the chair • A 49 page appendix made up of 49 separate one-page dissenting opinions CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency ProfileDefining the Profession • Next step – if we can get over that hurdle • Define the profession worldwide • No small task! CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency ProfileGood News! • We Did It! CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisPremise – CFP Professionals Defined • Provide wide range of financial strategies • Unique breadth of competencies • Wide breadth of knowledge • Work across multiple domains • Unique ability to identify and analyze inter-relationships among objectives – “integration” across multiple domains CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisDistinction between CFP and Specialists • Specialists can provide expert advice within their areas of expertise • Only CFP professionals can identify and create appropriate strategies across all domains to match the client’s situation, circumstances and values CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisFundamental Premise • Competencies built on definition of financial planning: • “Process of creating strategies to help clients manage their financial affairs to meet life goals” • The profile applies to the practice of financial planning – not product sales and not specialization. CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
FPSC’s Competency AnalysisWhy the big deal? • Focus in FS industry shifting from “sales” to “advice” • While CFP leads the way, potential competitors still risk threatening CFP’s authority • After 15 or more years, no clearly-defined profile currently exists for professional financial planners • Provides pre-emptive measure to ensure ISO is complementary, rather than a threat, to the CFP • Provides regulators with clear distinction between CFP competencies and those of other financial advisors • Can fit neatly into any regulatory or political agenda • Can pave the way to professional self-regulation CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency-Based ApproachMore than knowledge, More than proficiency • “Competencies provide a description of the abilities that a CFP professional must possess and represent not just the tasks, but also incorporate the job-related skills, knowledge, attitudes and judgements required by members of the profession.” CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
CompetenceMore than just knowledge • A competent professional must demonstrate the inherent characteristics of a professional, not just knowledge and skill • Knowledge, abilities and professional skills all contribute to competence CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisProfile Overview • Key to CFP professionals’ uniqueness is that competencies must be drawn upon concurrently, even across multiple domains • CFP professionals must be able to wade through the confusion and develop appropriate strategies • These are the truly distinguishing ability of a financial planning professional CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisProfile Overview – Core Domains Competencies broken down as follows: • Three broad functions: • Collection • Analysis • Synthesis • Six components: • Financial Management • Asset Management • Risk Management • Tax Planning • Retirement Planning • Estate Planning CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisProfile Overview – Three additional elements • Fundamental financial planning practices • “Competencies that cut across all financial planning components, or that supersede the components and speak directly to that part of financial planning that cannot be broken down.” • Professional skills • “Skills that speak to acting as a professional with clients and colleagues, and to the financial planner’s responsibility to the profession of financial planning.” • Underlying knowledge CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisProfile Overview - Knowledge • Knowledge elements were identified only after establishment of competencies. • 11 Knowledge domains established CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007
Competency AnalysisInternational Applicability • Competency profile developed to be transferable from country to country • Core competencies are separated from knowledge • Competencies should be consistent from country to country CIFPs Conference - June 11, 2007