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The most valuable conversations advisors can have with clients rarely start with the questions we were trained to ask. In this episode of The FutureProof Advisor, I explore why the financial services industry's natural tendency toward risk aversion doesn't just show up in investment decisions — it shows up in how we talk to clients. When every question feels like a test and every answer gets evaluated, we stay in transactional territory. And transactional relationships are exactly the kind AI and low-cost competitors can replace.
The neuroscience behind this is worth understanding. Fact-based, binary questions trigger a client's defensive thinking — the part of the brain that's scanning for right and wrong answers. But open-ended, curiosity-driven questions do something different. They activate imagination, creativity, and openness. Shifting from "Did you maximize your 401k this year?" to "Tell me about your approach to saving for retirement" seems like a small change, but it fundamentally changes what's possible in the conversation. I walk through frameworks that help advisors navigate this gradual deepening of connection — moving from surface-level facts to meaningful experiences — without overstepping into territory that belongs in therapy.
As technology continues to automate the technical side of our work, the relationship becomes the product. The advisors who thrive won't be the ones who can pull the most accurate data — they'll be the ones clients trust enough to share what's really going on in their lives. That means asking better questions, following them with genuine curiosity, and building the kind of rapport that turns a client meeting into a conversation worth having. Connection isn't a soft skill anymore. It's the competitive advantage.
By Matt Reiner4.7
1313 ratings
The most valuable conversations advisors can have with clients rarely start with the questions we were trained to ask. In this episode of The FutureProof Advisor, I explore why the financial services industry's natural tendency toward risk aversion doesn't just show up in investment decisions — it shows up in how we talk to clients. When every question feels like a test and every answer gets evaluated, we stay in transactional territory. And transactional relationships are exactly the kind AI and low-cost competitors can replace.
The neuroscience behind this is worth understanding. Fact-based, binary questions trigger a client's defensive thinking — the part of the brain that's scanning for right and wrong answers. But open-ended, curiosity-driven questions do something different. They activate imagination, creativity, and openness. Shifting from "Did you maximize your 401k this year?" to "Tell me about your approach to saving for retirement" seems like a small change, but it fundamentally changes what's possible in the conversation. I walk through frameworks that help advisors navigate this gradual deepening of connection — moving from surface-level facts to meaningful experiences — without overstepping into territory that belongs in therapy.
As technology continues to automate the technical side of our work, the relationship becomes the product. The advisors who thrive won't be the ones who can pull the most accurate data — they'll be the ones clients trust enough to share what's really going on in their lives. That means asking better questions, following them with genuine curiosity, and building the kind of rapport that turns a client meeting into a conversation worth having. Connection isn't a soft skill anymore. It's the competitive advantage.

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