For advisors and RIAs, wealth management is one of the most in-demand services you can offer. It brings together investment management, tax planning, estate planning, and retirement planning into a structured strategy for each client. Whether you're building your service model or expanding into wealth management, this guide breaks down what it covers and what it takes to deliver it well.
Wealth management is a long-term financial advisory practice built around investment management, but it goes beyond picking stocks or managing a portfolio. It also covers tax strategy, cash flow management, estate planning, and risk management based on each client's financial situation.
For advisors and RIAs, wealth management is one of the strongest ways to deepen client relationships and grow assets under management (AUM). Clients with complex financial needs don't just want a portfolio manager. They want one professional who can connect every part of their finances.
The two terms get used interchangeably, but they aren't the same service. Financial planning focuses on building a roadmap to reach a client's goals. It covers budgeting, saving, retirement planning, and debt management. Wealth management takes it further by putting that plan into action through investment management, tax strategy, estate planning, and risk management.
Think of it this way: financial planning maps out where a client wants to go, while wealth management handles how to get there and keep the wealth intact along the way. Knowing where one service ends and the other begins helps you structure your offerings, set the right client expectations, and position your practice in the right market.
The table below highlights the key differences between wealth management and financial planning.
| Category | Wealth Management | Financial Planning |
|---|---|---|
| Primary focus | Executing and managing the plan | Goal-setting and roadmap creation |
| Client base | High-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) | Broad, any income level |
| Services | Investment management, tax strategy, estate planning, risk management | Budgeting, saving, retirement, debt management |
| Time horizon | Long term | Short to medium term |
| Relationship type | Ongoing, relationship-based | Often project-based or periodic |
| Fee structure | Typically a percentage of AUM | Flat fee, hourly, or commission |
A strong wealth management practice is built on several key service areas. Each one addresses a different part of a client's financial situation. Together, they form the foundation of a full-service wealth management offering:
Each of these areas works best when they are managed together under one strategy. For the latest news and insights on wealth management, visit and bookmark our GoRIA Practice Management section.
Not all wealth management practices offer the same services. What a firm provides depends on its size, specialty, and the clients it serves. Many advisors and RIAs also work with lawyers, accountants, and other specialists to fill gaps and offer a more complete range of services. Most full-service wealth management offerings cover some version of the following:
The more services you offer, the more value you bring to each client relationship. This is also what sets a full-service wealth management practice apart from a narrower investment management model.
Want to see how the top wealth management teams in the US do it? Check out this special report for a closer look at the practices leading the industry.
Wealth management is not just for the ultra-wealthy. While HNW individuals are the most common clients, anyone with a complex financial situation or a major money event on the horizon can benefit from this level of guidance. That said, most wealth management clients share one thing: they need more than basic investment advice.
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HNW clients typically hold at least $1 million in liquid assets, while UHNW clients hold over $30 million, each with different planning needs and service expectations
Entrepreneurs preparing for a business sale, IPO, or major liquidity event who need strategies to manage the wealth that comes after
Younger clients, including Millennials and Gen Z, who are receiving or set to receive large wealth transfers and need advice tailored to their goals and digital-first habits
Professionals with equity compensation, such as RSUs and stock options, who need coordinated tax and investment planning to manage concentration risk
Non-profits, endowments, and family foundations that need specialized asset management, grant-making strategies, and long-term stewardship for their funds
Your client base will shape the services you offer and how you structure your practice. Knowing which client segments you serve best also helps you position your practice more clearly in a competitive market.
"Wealth manager" is not a regulated title, which means the standard of service can vary widely from one advisor to the next. What separates a strong wealth management practice from a basic advisory model comes down to depth of service, accountability, and how your compensation lines up with your clients' goals.
Here are some essential roles advisors and RIAs play in wealth management:
IARs and RIAs are legally required to act in their clients' best interests, a standard that goes beyond the suitability standard applied to broker-dealers. This also means disclosing conflicts of interest, filing a public Form ADV, and putting client interests ahead of the firm's at all times.
Beyond managing portfolios, many advisors and RIA firms offer full-service planning that covers retirement, tax strategies, estate planning, and in some cases, philanthropic planning. They also coordinate with CPAs, lawyers, and other specialists to fill gaps that fall outside standard investment advice.
RIAs develop tailored investment strategies and manage client portfolios on an ongoing, discretionary basis, adjusting allocations based on goals, risk tolerance, and market conditions. Most charge a fee based on a percentage of AUM, typically around 1 percent annually, which aligns the advisor's income with the client's portfolio growth.
Advisors and RIAs build portfolios across asset classes based on each client's financial situation and long-term objectives. They also reassess allocations as clients move through different life stages to make sure the portfolio stays on track.
Your role in wealth management isn't just about picking the right investments. It's also about building a practice that covers every aspect of a client's financial life, from taxes and estate planning to risk management and legacy.
Want actionable strategies from top advisors and industry experts? Head over to our Expert Advice section for in-depth guidance on building and growing your wealth management practice.
Good investment returns matter, but they are no longer enough on their own. Clients today expect their advisors to go beyond portfolio management and address every layer of their financial lives. Here are some wealth management strategies that advisors and RIAs can use to raise the bar:
This approach builds portfolios around specific life goals, such as buying property, funding education, or retiring at a set age, rather than chasing benchmark performance. You can use risk capacity, not just risk tolerance, to set asset allocations that match each client's actual timeline and financial situation.
Tax-efficient investing covers strategies like asset location, tax-loss harvesting, and coordinating taxable and tax-advantaged accounts to boost after-tax returns. It isn't just an end-of-year exercise. Managing for tax efficiency year-round can make a difference in what clients actually keep.
Going beyond portfolio management means weaving in estate planning, cash flow management, and, for HNW clients, access to private markets like private equity or real estate. In a 2024 survey, 77 percent of clients said that increased, personalized communication boosted their confidence in their advisor.
CRM systems and AI-powered tools free up advisor time by automating notetaking, portfolio reporting, and client communications. Turnkey asset management platforms (TAMPs) also give you access to institutional investment strategies while offloading back-office work, so you can focus on client relationships.
Specializing in a specific client segment helps you build deeper expertise. Corporate executives, expats, medical professionals, and business owners are all strong niche markets for RIAs. Satisfied clients from a niche community also tend to refer like-minded contacts, which can speed up organic growth.
No single strategy works for every practice. The advisors who consistently grow their client base combine the right mix of planning strategies with a service model built around the clients they serve best.
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