How to Share Your Work (as a Financial Advisor)
An easy way to market yourself without feeling salesy
Remember Kenny Brooks? The door-to-door salesman who went viral when cat videos were still the most popular thing on YouTube?
He was known for funny lines and more importantly, product demonstrations:

People don't like to be sold, but they love to buy.
So don't tell them what you do, show them.
And for some inspiration, wanted to share a few more tangible examples of how to show what you do as part of your marketing process:


Last week, I finished & launched Thomas' new personal website:

In the past two days, I've gotten two new website project leads.
I didn't ask for anyone's business or try to educate about the importance of web design—I just shared my work on Twitter and people who wanted something similar done for them ended up reaching out.
Different Ways to Share Your Work
Josh Spector is one of my favorite creators to follow. He shares regular content to help creative entrepreneurs grow their audience & build better businesses.
While the below tips aren't tailored for financial advisors, the general ideas of each can be applied when thinking about how to market yourself & your business online:

And below are my thoughts on a few of the points:
1) Rather than educating about a Roth IRA, record a video & screenshare actually setting one up. Tutorial videos can perform well on YouTube too.
2) You're meeting with clients and answering questions every day. We have unlimited content to create, you just need to figure out what formats work best—articles, videos, short podcast episodes.
3) Similar to client success stories/case studies, you can anonymously share client wins or unique problems you help solve. The more you put yourself out there, the more you become known for the things you talk about.
4) You could easily curate a list of publicly-available tools you use to help clients, or share any grouping of resources to help someone on their financial journey
8) Sam Parr recently started a personal finance podcast for high net worth people, and the initial response is overwhelmingly positive (view tweet). There are a lot of basic personal finance podcasts out there, but very few that share "post-success" stories from the other side—and in the world of content, different stands out.

While this post didn't get a lot of engagement, I think it's a great example of sharing your work:

Side note: It's surprising how many people never engage with your work, yet end up reaching out/becoming a client. You never know who's watching and the only way to make the most of an online presence is always showing up & putting out your best work.
Take a look at the original post and consider what you could share each week based on conversations & planning tasks with clients