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Q&A: Andrew Evans, Managing Director, Atlantic Financial GroupQ&A: Andrew Evans, Managing Director, Atlantic Financial Group

Megan Leonhardt

April 28, 2015

2 Min Read
Q&A: Andrew Evans, Managing Director, Atlantic Financial Group

WealthManagement.com.: Why did you want to become a branch manager at such an early point in your career?

Andrew Evans: I feel I’m better with the individual financial services practice owner than I am with the individual client. A lot of the time, reps are not really wired to run a business. I could ask any of my reps right now, ‘Run for me a cost-volume-profit analysis on their business right now.’ And they’re going to look at me and say, ‘What?’ and have no idea what I’m talking about. But these are the things I know, the things I’m good at.

WM: Field development and supervision are perhaps two of your bigger areas of responsibility, but what does that look like on a day-to-day basis?

AE: Wirehouse and old insurance agencies and even some independent broker/dealers still see [the] compliance manager as simply a cog in the wheel. And then you have the sales manager, whose job is to get the reps to sell more. What I have is a balance of the two.

WM: How does the recruitment process work?

AE: I’ll get a lead that an advisor is unhappy. I give them a call and typically ask two questions: ‘Where does it hurt?’ And, ‘What do you want to be when you grow up?’ And they start talking and I find out more about their business. Because of my experience in compliance—approving paperwork and email review—I can also sniff out if this is someone I want associated with me or not. If they say ‘Where I’m feeling pain is my b/d giving me guff over the variable annuity restrictions,’ I know in the back of my mind that his business is likely 95 percent VAs. Then I might ask some questions around it to see what opportunities I have not only to bring that person on, but also reshape that practice. If the answers aren’t good, I’ll maintain them as a friend, but they may go to another firm or branch.

WM: What happens once they’re brought onboard?

AE: We go through the painstaking process of transition. Transition is terrible. We’re a pilot group with Docupace to do full electronic, paperless transitions to port over a book of business. Even with that in place, it still sucks. But I’ll be there, and as I’m helping them I can look through their book and see what kind of assets they hold and the demographics of their book, and then talk to the rep to improve their long-term business strategies. This is a good time to do that.

About the Author

Megan Leonhardt

Megan Leonhardt is senior editor for WealthManagement.com and REP. magazine, reporting on national brokerage firms and the independent advisor landscape, as well as regulatory updates, legal cases and compliance issues. Prior to covering the financial services industry, Megan worked as a legal reporter breaking stories on major law firms and writing on significant court cases all over the country.