Thursday, July 2, 2026

You Know You Need Prospects, But Don't Know Where to Start


 Every financial advisor knows this truth:

  • No prospects, no appointments.
  • No appointments, no presentations.
  • No presentations, no clients.
  • No clients, no business.

And yet, one of the most common struggles of many advisors is not product knowledge, not presentation skill, and not even closing.

It is prospecting.

Many advisors wake up knowing they need to talk to more people, but they do not know where to begin. They understand the importance of building a pipeline, but the work feels heavy because there is no clear starting point.

The advisor may ask:

    • Who should I approach?
    • What should I say?
    • What if they reject me?
    • What if they think I am only trying to sell?
    • What if I run out of names?

This is where many advisors get stuck. Not because there are no people to talk to, but because there is no clear direction.

The real issue is often not the lack of prospects. It is the lack of a system.


The Problem Is Not Always the Market

Many advisors say, “I do not have prospects.”

But more often, the deeper problem is this:

They have not clearly defined who their market is.

When the advisor says, “everybody is my prospect,” prospecting becomes confusing. The advisor does not know where to focus, what message to use, or how to approach people meaningfully.

A better starting point is to choose a clear group of people.

    • It may be young professionals.
    • It may be parents with young children.
    • It may be business owners.
    • It may be employees in a certain company.
    • It may be former classmates, colleagues, or members of an organization.

The advisor does not need to reach everybody at once. The advisor only needs to begin with a market he can understand, serve, and approach with confidence.

Clarity creates movement.


Start Near Before You Go Far

Some advisors think prospecting means immediately approaching strangers. That is why the work feels intimidating.

But in many cases, the best place to begin is not the cold market. It is the nearest market.

    • The people who already know you.
    • The people who share a common background with you.
    • The people who belong to the same community.
    • The people who may already have a basic level of trust.

This does not mean the advisor should depend only on family and friends. The warm market is a starting point, not a permanent business plan.

But starting near allows the advisor to build confidence, practice conversations, learn objections, and develop momentum.

    • The mistake is not starting small.
    • The mistake is staying passive.


Prospecting Is Not the Same as Selling

Many advisors hesitate to prospect because they think every approach must immediately lead to a sale.

That creates pressure.

The advisor begins to feel that every message, every call, and every invitation must result in a client. When that happens, prospecting becomes emotionally exhausting.

But prospecting is not forcing a sale.

Prospecting is simply opening a door.

    • It is starting a conversation.
    • It is discovering a concern.
    • It is finding out if there is a need.
    • It is giving the other person an opportunity to think about something important.

The advisor does not have to begin with the product. The advisor can begin with a question, a concern, an observation, or a simple invitation to talk.

When the advisor changes the mindset from “I need to close this person” to “I need to start a meaningful conversation,” prospecting becomes less threatening and more professional.


What Advisors Need Is Routine, Not Just Motivation

Many advisors prospect only when they feel motivated.

But motivation is unstable.

Some days, the advisor feels excited. Some days, discouraged. Some days, confident. Some days, afraid.

That is why prospecting cannot depend only on emotion. It must become a routine.

A simple routine may look like this:

    • Write new names daily.
    • Contact a fixed number of people daily.
    • Invite people to appointments.
    • Follow up consistently.
    • Ask satisfied clients for referrals.
    • Review the pipeline every week.

The process does not need to be complicated. But it must be consistent.

    • A weak prospecting habit today becomes pressure tomorrow.
    • A strong prospecting habit today becomes opportunity tomorrow.


The Advisor Must Build Momentum

When an advisor does not know where to start, the answer is not to wait until confidence arrives.

Confidence usually comes after action, not before it.

    • The advisor starts with one list.
    • Then one message.
    • Then one call.
    • Then one appointment.
    • Then one follow-up.
    • Then one referral.

Small actions, repeated consistently, create momentum.

Prospecting becomes less frightening when the advisor stops treating it as one big mountain and starts treating it as a daily discipline.


Final Thought

    • Prospecting is not begging for attention.
    • It is not disturbing people.
    • It is not forcing a product into someone’s life.

Done properly, prospecting is an act of professional responsibility. It is the advisor’s way of opening a conversation that may help someone protect income, prepare for emergencies, build savings, secure the family, or plan for the future.

When you know you need prospects but do not know where to start, start with structure.

    • Define your market.
    • Build your list.
    • Open conversations.
    • Follow up.
    • Repeat the process.

Because in this business, the advisor who learns how to prospect consistently gives himself the chance to survive, grow, and serve more people.

#acgadvice

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Problem Is Not Rejection. It Is Having Too Few Prospects.



Every financial advisor will face rejection.

  • It may come as a polite “I’ll think about it.”
  • It may come as “Next time na lang.”
  • It may come as an ignored message.
  • It may come as a cancelled appointment.
  • It may come as a prospect who seemed interested at first, but suddenly disappears when it is time to decide.

For many advisors, rejection is one of the most painful parts of the career.

Not because they do not understand that rejection is part of sales, but because repeated rejection can slowly affect confidence. It can make an advisor question his ability, his value, and sometimes even his future in the profession.

But here is an important truth:

Rejection is part of the advisory career, but losing confidence does not have to be.

The best advisors are not the ones who never get rejected. They are the ones who learn how to handle rejection without allowing it to destroy their confidence, discipline, and desire to serve.


Rejection Is Feedback, Not a Personal Verdict

One of the biggest mistakes an advisor can make is to treat rejection as a judgment of personal worth.

When a prospect says no, the advisor may quietly think:

    • “Maybe I am not good enough.”
    • “Maybe I am bothering people.”
    • “Maybe I am not meant for this career.”
    • “Maybe I should stop.”

But a rejection does not always mean the advisor failed.

    • Sometimes the timing is not right.
    • Sometimes the prospect does not yet understand the need.
    • Sometimes the client is not financially ready.
    • Sometimes trust has not yet been built.
    • Sometimes the advisor simply needs to improve the way he asks questions, explains value, or follows up.

A “no” is not always a final answer. Sometimes it is information.

It tells the advisor where the client is emotionally, financially, or mentally at that moment. It may reveal hesitation, lack of urgency, unclear priorities, fear, or misunderstanding.

That is why rejection should be studied, not absorbed as a personal wound.

The strong advisor does not ask, “What is wrong with me?”

He asks, “What can I learn from this conversation?”


Confidence Should Come from Activity, Not Immediate Results

Many advisors allow their confidence to rise, and fall based only on production.

    • When they close a sale, they feel strong.
    • When they do not close, they feel weak.
    • When prospects reply, they feel encouraged.
    • When prospects ignore them, they feel discouraged.

But financial advisory is not always an instant-result profession.

    • Trust takes time.
    • Education takes time.
    • Follow-up takes time.
    • Decision-making takes time.
    • Client readiness takes time.

This is why an advisor must not measure confidence only by closed cases.

He must also learn to measure confidence by disciplined activity.

    • Did I prospect today?
    • Did I follow up properly?
    • Did I ask better questions?
    • Did I listen more carefully?
    • Did I explain the value clearly?
    • Did I stay professional even after the rejection?
    • Did I learn something that can improve my next conversation?

When an advisor anchors confidence only on results, he becomes emotionally unstable. One good day makes him feel great. One bad week makes him feel like quitting.

But when confidence is anchored on discipline, the advisor becomes harder to discourage.

Because even when the result is not yet visible, he knows he is still doing the work that builds future success.


Rejection Becomes Lighter When the Advisor Has a Full Pipeline

Rejection hurts more when the advisor has too few prospects.

When everything depends on one person, every delay feels heavy. Every unanswered message feels personal. Every cancelled meeting feels like a major setback. Every “no” feels like the end of the opportunity.

This is why prospecting is not only a sales activity.

It is also emotional protection.

An advisor with a healthy pipeline does not allow one prospect to carry the weight of his entire career. If one person says no, there are still others to educate. If one meeting is cancelled, there are still other conversations to develop. If one case does not close, there are still other opportunities in motion.

A full pipeline gives the advisor perspective.

It reminds him that one rejection is not the whole story.

This is one of the reasons consistent prospecting is so important. It is not simply about finding more clients. It is about protecting the advisor from becoming emotionally dependent on one prospect, one proposal, or one possible sale.

The advisor with too few prospects becomes anxious.

The advisor with a working pipeline becomes steadier.


The Best Advisors Separate Emotion from Improvement

Rejection can hurt.

Even experienced advisors feel disappointment when a case does not push through, especially after investing time, effort, and hope into the conversation.

But the best advisors do not waste the pain.

They review it.

Instead of immediately blaming the client or blaming themselves, they ask better questions:

    • Did I understand the client’s real concern?
    • Did I ask enough questions before presenting?
    • Did I talk too much?
    • Did I explain the value clearly?
    • Did I connect the solution to the client’s actual need?
    • Was the timing right?
    • Did I follow up properly?
    • What can I improve next time?

This is how rejection becomes training.

    • It sharpens the advisor’s listening.
    • It improves the advisor’s questions.
    • It strengthens the advisor’s follow-up.
    • It teaches the advisor how to handle future conversations better.

A weak advisor allows rejection to stop him.

A growing advisor allows rejection to refine him.


Do Not Let Rejection Redefine You

A rejected proposal is not the end of the advisor’s journey.

It is often part of the advisor’s formation.

Every advisor who succeeds in this profession must learn how to stand up again after discouragement. He must learn how to return to prospecting after silence. He must learn how to follow up without shame. He must learn how to improve without self-pity. He must learn how to remain respectful even when the answer is no.

    • Because confidence is not built by avoiding rejection.
    • Confidence is built by surviving rejection with professionalism, humility, and discipline.

The advisor who keeps learning, keeps adjusting, and keeps showing up will eventually become stronger.

Not because rejection no longer hurts, but because rejection no longer controls him.

And when an advisor reaches that level of emotional strength, he becomes more than just a person trying to make a sale.

He becomes a professional who understands that every “no” can either weaken him or prepare him.

The choice is yours.


#acgadvice