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The AI story has shifted — and the shift matters for how we think about both our firms and our clients' portfolios. In this episode of The FutureProof Advisor, I explore how the biggest names in technology are no longer just talking about AI — they're generating real, substantial revenue from it. That changes the conversation advisors can have with clients about AI exposure, moving it from speculative growth territory into something far more grounded. And it raises the bar for how seriously firms need to take their own AI infrastructure.
One of the most practically useful things I dig into is the specialization of AI models — because the idea that one tool can do everything is a trap. Different models excel at different tasks, and the firms that get the most out of AI aren't the ones using the most tools. They're the ones who've started with one model, mastered it for a specific purpose, and built intentional processes around it. Precision in how you prompt and how you integrate matters far more than the number of platforms you subscribe to.
The episode also looks beyond the industry at what AI is doing in healthcare and housing — and why those developments matter deeply for financial planning. Early disease detection and longer life expectancy aren't just medical stories. They're planning stories. They change how we think about longevity, succession, wealth transfer, and the length of the advisor-client relationship itself. The assumptions we've built our planning models around are shifting — and the advisors who recognize that early will be the ones best positioned to serve clients through what comes next.
By Matt Reiner4.7
1313 ratings
The AI story has shifted — and the shift matters for how we think about both our firms and our clients' portfolios. In this episode of The FutureProof Advisor, I explore how the biggest names in technology are no longer just talking about AI — they're generating real, substantial revenue from it. That changes the conversation advisors can have with clients about AI exposure, moving it from speculative growth territory into something far more grounded. And it raises the bar for how seriously firms need to take their own AI infrastructure.
One of the most practically useful things I dig into is the specialization of AI models — because the idea that one tool can do everything is a trap. Different models excel at different tasks, and the firms that get the most out of AI aren't the ones using the most tools. They're the ones who've started with one model, mastered it for a specific purpose, and built intentional processes around it. Precision in how you prompt and how you integrate matters far more than the number of platforms you subscribe to.
The episode also looks beyond the industry at what AI is doing in healthcare and housing — and why those developments matter deeply for financial planning. Early disease detection and longer life expectancy aren't just medical stories. They're planning stories. They change how we think about longevity, succession, wealth transfer, and the length of the advisor-client relationship itself. The assumptions we've built our planning models around are shifting — and the advisors who recognize that early will be the ones best positioned to serve clients through what comes next.

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