Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Good Advice Begins with Better Questions

 


Many financial advisors think confidence is about speaking well.

They imagine the confident advisor as someone who is naturally charming, quick with words, and always ready with an answer.

But in real advisory work, confidence is not just about how well an advisor speaks.

Confidence is about how well an advisor can guide a conversation without fear, pressure, or confusion.

When an advisor lacks confidence, the conversation often becomes rushed. He talks too much. He explains too early. He avoids difficult questions. He becomes nervous when the client objects. He may even start pushing because he is afraid of losing the sale.

But when an advisor has quiet confidence, the conversation changes.

    • He listens better.
    • He asks better questions.
    • He handles objections with more patience.
    • He does not need to impress the client. He focuses on understanding the client.

That is why confidence is not only a personal trait. For a financial advisor, confidence is a professional tool.


1. Build Confidence Through Preparation, Not Personality

Confidence does not come from personality alone.

Some advisors are naturally talkative, but that does not automatically make them credible. Some advisors are quiet, but when they are prepared, they can lead a very meaningful conversation.

Real confidence comes from preparation.

A prepared advisor understands the product. He knows the client’s possible concerns. He prepares the right questions. He anticipates common objections. He studies the client’s situation before making recommendations.

That preparation gives the advisor stability.

He does not enter the conversation hoping he will sound convincing. He enters knowing he can guide the discussion properly.

For example, if the advisor is meeting a young parent, he should not begin only with product features. He should be ready to ask about income, dependents, monthly expenses, school plans, debts, emergency fund, and family protection.

Because when the advisor understands the client’s real situation, the conversation becomes more relevant.

An unprepared advisor usually talks too much.

A prepared advisor guides better.


2. Let Confidence Make You Calmer, Not Pushier

Confidence should not make an advisor aggressive.

It should make him calm.

There is a big difference.

A pushy advisor is often not truly confident. Many times, he is simply afraid. Afraid the client will say no. Afraid the opportunity will disappear. Afraid he will not hit his target. Afraid he will lose the sale.

That fear can make the advisor pressure the client.

But a confident advisor does not panic when the client says,                                   I need to think about it.

    • He does not become defensive when the client asks about cost.
    • He does not rush when the client raises objections.
    • He listens. He clarifies. He responds with respect.

When a client says, “Mahal,” the confident advisor does not immediately lower the proposal or force the sale. Instead, he may ask:

“Compared to your current budget, which part feels heavy—the monthly amount, the length of commitment, or the priority of the need?”

That kind of question opens the conversation.

It does not embarrass the client. It does not pressure the client. It helps the advisor understand what the real concern is.

Confidence gives the advisor emotional control.

And emotional control helps keep the conversation professional.


3. Use Confidence to Ask Deeper Questions

Many advisors stay on the surface because they are afraid to ask deeper questions.

They talk about benefits, premiums, returns, coverage, and features. These are important, but they are not enough.

Financial advice must go deeper.

The advisor must understand the client’s responsibilities, fears, obligations, goals, and risks.

But this requires confidence.

A hesitant advisor may avoid meaningful questions because he does not want the client to feel uncomfortable. But if the advisor never asks, he may never discover the real need.

A confident advisor understands that good advice begins with good questions.

Instead of asking only:

“How much insurance do you want?”

A better question would be:

“If something happens to you, how many years would you want your family to continue their current lifestyle?”

That question changes the direction of the conversation.

    • It moves the discussion from product cost to family responsibility.
    • It helps the client think not only about what he is buying, but why it matters.

This is where confidence improves the quality of the conversation.

The advisor becomes less of a salesperson and more of a guide.

He stops merely presenting.

He starts diagnosing.


4. Strengthen Confidence Through Repeated Conversations

Confidence does not appear overnight.

It is built through repetition.

The advisor who avoids conversations remains unsure. The advisor who keeps meeting people becomes sharper.

    • Every conversation teaches something.
    • Every objection improves the advisor’s response.
    • Every difficult meeting strengthens emotional discipline.
    • Every client question reveals what the advisor still needs to study.

That is why confidence is not built by waiting until you feel ready. It is built by showing up until you become ready.

After every meeting, the advisor should ask:

    • What question worked?
    • Where did I lose the client’s attention?
    • What objection did I handle poorly?
    • What should I improve next time?

These simple reflections turn experience into skill.

And as skill improves, confidence follows.

Many advisors want confidence before they act.

But in reality, action is often what builds confidence.


Confidence Is Not About Sounding Impressive

The goal of confidence is not to dominate the conversation.

    • It is not to impress the client with knowledge.
    • It is not to sound like the smartest person in the room.

The real goal is to make the client feel understood.

A confident advisor creates space for the client to speak honestly.

    • He asks questions without fear.
    • He explains without confusing.
    • He responds without pressure.
    • He recommends without forcing.

That kind of confidence improves conversations because it shifts the focus away from the advisor and toward the client.

And that is the heart of financial advice.

The client should not walk away thinking:

“This advisor talks well.”

The better outcome is for the client to feel:

“This advisor understands me.”

That is when the conversation becomes meaningful.

That is when trust begins.

That is when financial advice becomes more than a presentation.

It becomes a professional conversation built on preparation, calmness, courage, and care.


All the best my friends!!
#acgadvice

Monday, July 13, 2026

Are You Halfway to Your Goal—or Just Halfway Through the Year?

 


The middle of the year has a way of creating false comfort.

We look at the calendar and say, “There are still six months left.”

But being halfway through the year does not necessarily mean you are halfway toward your goal.

Some advisors may already be ahead of target. Others may be slightly behind but still have a healthy pipeline. Some may have been busy for six months, yet remain far from the production, income, and client goals they set at the beginning of the year.

A mid-year review is not meant to discourage you.

It is meant to give you an honest picture of where you are, what needs to change, and what you must do differently before the year ends.


1. Measure Your Progress Against the Goal, Not Against the Calendar

The calendar tells you how much time has passed.

It does not tell you how much progress you have made.

At mid-year, review the actual numbers:

    • How much production have you achieved?
    • How much income have you earned?
    • How many new clients have you acquired?
    • How many cases have you closed?
    • How many appointments have you completed?
    • How much potential business is still active in your pipeline?

Do not rely on impressions such as, “I think I am doing okay,” or “I have been very busy.”

Busyness is not the same as progress.

You may have attended many meetings, joined several events, posted regularly on social media, and spent long hours preparing presentations. But if these activities did not lead to more conversations, appointments, proposals, or closed cases, they may not have moved you closer to your target.

A proper mid-year review replaces assumptions with facts.

You cannot correct a performance gap that you are unwilling to measure.


2. Review the Activities Behind Your Results

Production is the result.

Activity is the cause.

When advisors fall behind, the natural reaction is often to blame the market, the economy, the product, the competition, or the difficulty of finding clients.

These factors may be real. But before looking outside, look at your own activity.

Ask yourself:

    • How many new people did I approach every week?
    • How many appointments did I request?
    • How many financial reviews did I conduct?
    • How many proposals did I present?
    • How many prospects did I follow up?
    • How often did I ask satisfied clients for referrals?

A weak first half does not always mean you lack talent.

Sometimes, it simply means your activity was too low or too inconsistent.

    • You may have worked hard during the last week of the month but slowed down after hitting a small target.
    • You may have prospected only when your pipeline became empty.
    • You may have relied too heavily on a few large cases and neglected the daily discipline of building new opportunities.

Results are rarely created by one dramatic effort.

They are usually created by small, productive actions repeated consistently.


3. Identify Where Your Pipeline Is Breaking Down

Not every performance problem is a prospecting problem.

Some advisors immediately conclude, “I need more names.”

That may be true, but it may not be the whole problem.

    • You may have many leads but very few appointments.
    • You may have many appointments but weak discovery conversations.
    • You may conduct good presentations but fail to ask for a decision.
    • You may have interested prospects but poor follow-up.
    • You may close cases but fail to ask for referrals, resulting in a pipeline that constantly returns to zero.

Look at each stage of your process:

    • Prospects.
    • Appointments.
    • Financial reviews.
    • Proposals.
    • Follow-ups.
    • Applications.
    • Closed cases.
    • Referrals.

Where are people dropping out?

That is the point you need to fix.

    • If you have many prospects but few appointments, improve your opening conversation.
    • If you have appointments but few proposals, improve your fact-finding and needs analysis.
    • If you have proposals but few closed cases, review your recommendation, presentation, and objection-handling skills.
    • If many cases remain pending, strengthen your follow-up system.

Working harder without identifying the real problem can lead to more exhaustion but not necessarily better results.

The right solution begins with the right diagnosis.


4. Convert the Remaining Goal into a Weekly Recovery Plan

A large annual shortfall can feel intimidating.

Do not stare at it as one overwhelming number.

Break it down.

Start with:

**Remaining annual target ÷ remaining working weeks = required weekly production**

Then work backward.

    • How many cases do you need each week?
    • What is your average case size?
    • How many proposals must you present to produce those cases?
    • How many appointments are required to generate those proposals?
    • How many people must you contact to secure those appointments?

For example, suppose an advisor still needs ₱600,000 in annualized production and has 24 productive weeks remaining.

    • That means the advisor needs an average of ₱25,000 in production per week.
    • If the average closed case produces ₱12,500, the advisor needs approximately two cases per week.
    • If the advisor closes one out of every three proposals, at least six proposals may be required.
    • If only half of completed appointments result in a proposal, around 12 meaningful appointments may be needed.
    • Suddenly, the annual goal becomes a weekly activity plan.

The target is no longer simply, “I need ₱600,000.”

It becomes:

    • Contact a certain number of prospects.
    • Set a specific number of appointments.
    • Complete enough financial reviews.
    • Present enough proposals.
    • Follow up consistently.
    • Close the required number of cases.

This is how advisors recover.

    • Not through panic.
    • Not through wishful thinking.
    • Not through one heroic month.
    • But through disciplined weekly execution.


The Second Half Can Still Change the Story

Your first-half results are important, but they are not final.

They are feedback.

They show you what has worked, what has not worked, and what must improve.

Do not use the mid-year review to punish yourself for missed targets.

    • Use it to become more focused.
    • Be honest about the numbers.
    • Study the activities behind the results.
    • Find the weak point in your pipeline.
    • Build a weekly recovery plan.

The question is not only:

“Am I halfway to my goal?”

The more important question is:

“What must I consistently do from this point forward to finish the year strong?”

You may not be able to change the first six months.

But you still have the opportunity to change how the year ends.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice