We can talk about AI, automation, and tools all day long. And to be clear, they matter. They make growing practices and businesses more efficient. They create leverage. They remove friction.
But none of that changes the hardest part of development for consultants.
Putting yourself out there is still personal.
When a potential customer doesn’t move forward, it doesn’t have to feel like the process is broken. This is what personal and professional rejection feels like – a silent judgment on your value, your experience, your ability to help. No technology has solved this.
Advisors who lead with confidence are not those who pretend it is not true. They are the ones who accept that growth is personal – and then create enough discipline around it so that emotions don’t take over.
Development plan is not a goal. It is a discipline.
Most advisors want to move on. Very few people can clearly explain how this growth should occur.
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How many actual at-bats are you getting?
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Are those conversations with the people you really want to serve?
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Do those possibilities move forward—or stagnate?
The actual development plan doesn’t live in a document you revisit once a year. It depends on how closely you’re paying attention – to your channels, to your conversations, and where momentum builds versus where it doesn’t.
The most effective advisors keep track of what’s happening in real time. They set a goal, yes—but more importantly, they observe. Which sources consistently bring ideal prospects. Which conversation naturally leads to a conclusion. Where possibilities get stuck. And what it tells them about their message, position or process.
That level of clarity requires discipline.
I learned this lesson early in my career. When I was completing my MBA, I was sure I wanted to work in consumer-packaged goods. Those roles seemed exciting and creative and that’s where I focused my energy. But as recruitment unfolded, a different pattern emerged. The companies where I moved forward – the companies where the conversations deepened and I went through multiple interview rounds – were all in financial services.
At first, I contested that data. It didn’t fit the story I had in mind. But I paid attention. I took a role at American Express, and it proved to be the best fit for my talents and long-term trajectory. If I had ignored what the data was showing me, I might have missed the perfect opportunity altogether.
Evolution works the same way. When you pay attention to where prospects move forward and where they don’t, that’s usually where the truth lies.
Make it personal—even if it feels uncomfortable
Many consultants are so focused on serving their clients that it feels wrong to focus on themselves.
She has built her career based on listening, supporting others, and putting them first. So when it comes time to talk about who they are, what they do best, and why they’re a good fit, it can feel like self-promotion—or out of alignment with their values.
But potential customers don’t experience your service until they choose you.
Before that moment, all they have is your ability to tell them how you help people like them. And vague language or industry jargon – no matter how well-intentioned – doesn’t inspire confidence.
Making it personal doesn’t mean making it about you. This means being unique enough that someone can see themselves working with you.
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Who do you help make complex investment decisions?
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What planning situations have you seen again and again?
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Where does your decision matter most?
Those answers are not about ego. They’re about relevance.
And exclusivity also does something else that matters just as much: It creates healthy opt-outs. When you’re clear about who you help and how, not everyone will be on board – and that’s a good thing.
Visibility is how momentum is built
You can’t pursue prospects you don’t want to see.
Visibility doesn’t need to be sharp. It requires intentional presence. I am writing an article. Making introductions. Follow with clarity. Creating a clear next step—and having the confidence to ask for business.
This is where discipline reappears. Not in imposing results, but in keeping the focus on progress. Did this conversation lead to the possibility – yes or no?
Growth does not mean collecting more and more customers. It’s about building momentum with the right people.
And when no one steps forward, don’t let your ego rest there. Take lessons. Refine the approach. Then keep going.
Because development is personal.
And with the right discipline, it doesn’t have to be painful—it could be obvious.
