Family Office
Schwab starts advisory group for breakaway brokers

Custodian assembles council of advisors who have been there and
done that. Schwab Institutional has formed a new advisory council
to guide advisors who leave traditional financial-service
companies to start their own independent firms. The council is
made up of advisors who have themselves made similar
transitions.
"Those who have lived it are the best resource for advisors
considering a transition, and we believe they will be
instrumental in helping us fine-tune our offering," says Barnaby
Grist, Schwab Institutional's business development head. "The
average new advisor at Schwab Institutional has more than $100
million in assets and grows at about 30% in the first year. With
that kind of successful business at stake, there is a real
premium on getting it right the first time."
Names
Members serve two-year stints on the council. The inaugural
council is:
John Burns: Burns Advisory Group, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Jeff Flohr: Lakeside Capital Management, Seattle
Michael Hebert: First National Corporation, Rockland, Mass.
John Krambeer: Camden Capital, El Segundo, Calif.
Felipe Luna: Concert Wealth Management, San Jose, Calif.
Bill Spiropoulos: Corestates Capital Advisors,Newtown, Pa.
The council met for the first time in Austin, Texas, last month.
Members identified technology implementation as the most
time-consuming aspect of making the transition, according to
Schwab Institutional. As it happens, Schwab Institutional
provides consultants to help firms define best practices and help
pick appropriate technologies for their advisory businesses.
The second most time-consuming transition element was meeting
legal and compliance requirements. Schwab Institutional has
scheduled a webcast on this topic for 26 June 2007.
Schwab Institutional, a division of San Francisco-based discount
brokerage Schwab, custodied $524.5 billion in client assets for
around 5,000 advisors on 31 March 2007. -FWR
.