2018 Excel 401(k): The Advisors’ Conference—Your Reputation Depends on This…

401(k) Expert strategies help advisors gain recognition, prove value, and stand out through content marketing and strong branding.
401k, marketing, retirement, Excel 401(k): The Advisors' Conference
The one time Vegas is good for a reputation.

Once upon a time, proving your expertise involved talking the talk and walking the walk. But the world’s changed. Prospective clients are vetting you before they’ve ever heard you speak a word or seen you take a step.

To illustrate this point, Rebecca Hourihan of 401(k) Marketing asked attendees of Excel 401(k): The Advisors’ Conference in Las Vegas, “Where do you turn for information?”

A photo of an office telephone and an image of Google’s homepage appeared side-by-side on the projection screen behind her. Point made.

We all do it. We check out (ahem, judge) companies’ websites; we look up (ahem, stalk) people online; and we even seek out others’ opinions (i.e., tweets, reviews, ratings and comments) about businesses and people.

“Reputation is important, but if the internet says you’re an expert, you’re an expert,” Hourihan said during her Monday morning session entitled “How to Gain Recognition as a 401(k) Expert and Rise Above Your Competition.”

That being the case, advisors should focus on becoming omnipresent through content marketing—a strategy centered around creating and distributing content via blogs, videos, emails, social media, search engines, webinars and more. Doing so is a means of demonstrating experience and value as a 401(k) advisor.

“You are the expert, teaching something to your prospects that they most likely would not have access to,” Hourihan explained.

And although much effort should be directed toward digital content, she assured attendees that print isn’t dead. In fact, people appreciate direct mail nowadays—perhaps because it’s scarce. The average person receives four tangible pieces of mail per day compared to 88 emails.

One final point, relevant to both online and print content, Hourihan stressed the impact of visual presentation.

“Whatever we release from a content marketing standpoint, it actually has to look good too now. We are in this glamification industry, where everything that goes out—because we’re competing with so much shelf space—it has to look nice. It can’t just be a piece of paper with a border around it. It actually has to be designed,” she concluded.

Jessa Claeys
Insurance Editor at  | Web |  + posts

Jessica Claeys is an editor, writer, and graphic designer, who has been creating both print and digital marketing and communications content for 10+ years.

Jessa Claeys is a licensed insurance producer in the state of Colorado and an insurance editor for Bankrate. She currently covers auto, home and life insurance with the goal of helping others secure a healthy financial future. Jessa has over a decade of experience writing, editing and leading teams of content creators. Her work has been published by several insurance, personal finance and investment-focused publications, including BiggerPockets, 401(k) Specialist, BP Wealth and more.

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