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Behavioral finance is often viewed as abstract but it can be a powerful, practical tool for helping clients make better decisions and build lives that align with what matters most. This episode explores how applying behavioral insights and positive psychology can deepen client relationships and drive more meaningful planning conversations.
Dr. Daniel Crosby is the Chief Behavioral Officer at Orion, a technology platform serving financial advisors.
Listen in as Daniel shares how he's turned complex behavioral concepts into usable advisor tools, including a "money personality" framework and a flourishing goals assessment. We talk about why understanding where clients fall on five key money dimensions - like communication style or spending vs. saving - can help reduce judgment and improve client outcomes, and how identifying gaps between what clients value and how they feel they're doing in life can spark more relevant financial goals. Daniel also reflects on why advisors must examine their own money beliefs and blind spots, and how practicing nonjudgmental listening may be the most powerful behavioral tool of all.
For show notes and more visit: https://www.kitces.com/454
By Michael Kitces4.7
696696 ratings
Behavioral finance is often viewed as abstract but it can be a powerful, practical tool for helping clients make better decisions and build lives that align with what matters most. This episode explores how applying behavioral insights and positive psychology can deepen client relationships and drive more meaningful planning conversations.
Dr. Daniel Crosby is the Chief Behavioral Officer at Orion, a technology platform serving financial advisors.
Listen in as Daniel shares how he's turned complex behavioral concepts into usable advisor tools, including a "money personality" framework and a flourishing goals assessment. We talk about why understanding where clients fall on five key money dimensions - like communication style or spending vs. saving - can help reduce judgment and improve client outcomes, and how identifying gaps between what clients value and how they feel they're doing in life can spark more relevant financial goals. Daniel also reflects on why advisors must examine their own money beliefs and blind spots, and how practicing nonjudgmental listening may be the most powerful behavioral tool of all.
For show notes and more visit: https://www.kitces.com/454

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