reaching younger clients
3 Critical Mistakes Keeping Financial Professionals from Being Seen, Heard, and Hired by Next Gen
PLUS… 7 Tips for Getting Noticed in a Good Way
Attracting younger clients isn’t complicated, but it is different. Their expectations, communication preferences, and decision-making styles rarely mirror those of Baby Boomer clients—and treating them the same can cost you next-generation relationships.
When it comes to earning the business of Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z, there are really two main things that determine whether you get seen, heard, and ultimately paid:
Relevance: Showing you understand their goals, challenges, and stage of life
Resonance: Communicating in ways that feel modern, authentic, and trustworthy
This brief guide breaks down the three most common mistakes financial professionals make when engaging younger generations—and the seven simple shifts that can help you stand out in a good way.
JUMP TO:
Mistake 1
Waiting to Engage
- Don’t assume relationships will transfer with wealth:
Up to 81% of high-net-worth individuals plan to leave their financial professional within one to two years after wealth transfers.2 Start building relationships now.
- Preempt issues:
- Meet each generation where they are:
Mistake 2
Approaching All Generations the Same Way
Adapt the medium
Default to digital-first with self-serve scheduling, virtual meetings, secure messaging/portals, and brief video or voice-note recaps
Speak their language
Replace jargon with transparency and acknowledge their unique situation
Align to motivations
Frame advice around values (flexibility, lifestyle, family, impact), show progress, and work together to help them stay accountable to their goals
Mistake 3
Publishing Content That Doesn’t Connect — or convert
Generic content aimed at “everyone” won’t resonate with Millennials, Gen Z, or younger Gen Xers.
Next Gen wants personalization — content that shows you ‘get’ their world. Skip the long lectures and self-promotion. Keep it short, relevant, and focused on what’s in it for them.
Otherwise, they’ll scroll right past — and never schedule that meeting.
When you talk to everyone, you connect with no one. The result is content that sounds fails to inspire action.
Keep the focus on their pains and desired outcomes—cash-flow confidence, student-loan trade-offs, equity-comp decisions, work-life balance—and use plain language with quick, at-a-glance takeaways that fit how Next Gen learns.
Also keep in mind that each post or email should advance the conversation—acting as a gateway to the next step, whether that’s joining your list, downloading a guide, or booking a call.
Get Specific
Define the exact Next Gen niche you serve and address their real challenges, e.g., Managing Restricted Stock Units (RSUs), first home, daycare, retirement tradeoffs.
Advance the Conversation
Every piece should have one clear next step—subscribe, download, or schedule.
Ditch the Lecture
Use plain-English, concise explanations, and visuals with a focus on outcomes they care about.
7 Tips for Getting Noticed in a Good Way
Tip #1: Start Family Discussions Sooner Rather Than Later
To avoid losing assets under management as wealth transfers, start having conversations now. These family meetings help you establish relationships with inheritors, clarify the value of a financial professional, and outline your clients’ wishes.
- Prep your clients for 10–15 minutes to agree on purpose, boundaries, and who attends.
- Run a 45-minute, jargon-free session that covers multigeneration priorities plus the essentials—who does what, where documents live, and your contact details.
Learn more about the family by making these huddles collaborative. Ask open-ended questions such as “How do you feel about giving as a family?”, dig deeper with “Can you tell me more about college or parent-care concerns?”, and drive engagement with “What questions do you have about what I shared?”
Actively paraphrase to show you heard them, invite quieter voices to add to the conversation, and tailor your communication style to generation and gender. For example, many women tend to prefer partnership and shared decisions; younger heirs want transparency, options, and clear next steps.
Keep product and performance talk out of this first meeting.
Prioritize Gen X heirs—they’re often in the Sandwich Generation and are the most immediate opportunity.
- Offer evening/Zoom options.
- Send a one-page recap within 24 hours.
- Schedule a quick 1:1 welcome call to capture goals, preferred channels of communication, and near-term needs (caregiving, college, benefits, mortgage).
- Within a week, debrief with your clients and agree on a regular cadence for future meetings.
Tip #2: Niche Beyond “Next Gen”
- To find your niche, start with where you already have experience, interest, or connections. Then confirm there’s enough demand and reach — look at professional groups, LinkedIn, or employer networks — and make sure the clients in that space have both planning needs and financial viability.
Tip #3: Learn and Apply Generational Insights
Tell Me More
Ask directly
Use short, anonymous surveys to learn what your Next Gen clients value most in communication, education, and service. Review their responses with them to co-create a personalized experience that feels collaborative, not prescriptive.
Observe trends
Follow reputable sources for studies on generational wealth, behavior, and financial confidence. Then take it a step further by observing trends within your specific client base as each individual will have their own unique set of beliefs, challenges, and preferences as well.
Learn from experts
Watch our on-demand webinar, The Gen-Savvy Financial Professional with Cam Marston, to deepen your understanding of generational differences and how to apply that knowledge in client conversations.
Tip #4: Build a Digital-First Client Experience
For younger generations, your digital presence is your first impression. A digital-first approach isn’t just about offering virtual meetings—it’s about creating experiences that are intuitive, interactive, and educational by design.
Next Gen clients expect digital engagement that feels natural and personal. They’re used to learning as they scroll, click, and explore—so meet them where they are. Use short videos, infographics, and interactive tools to turn curiosity into discovery.
- For example, show how volatility works when someone selects a fund. Let them see the power of compounding as they adjust contribution rates. This hands-on learning helps concepts stick and builds real confidence in financial decision-making.
Tip #5: Share Content that Connects with Next Gen
- Bonus points if you can make it “edutainment."
- Focus on value, not production.
Tip #6: Optimize for Next Gen Search Terms
The way people search for financial guidance has evolved—and so must your approach.
Discovery now happens everywhere: Google, YouTube, social feeds, podcasts, and increasingly, AI tools that summarize results in seconds. These changes have made visibility less about keywords and more about relevance, clarity, and credibility.
To reach the next generation of clients, start by understanding what they’re searching for and how.
Gen X wants guidance on retirement readiness, college costs, and caring for aging parents.
Millennials look for ways to balance debt, build savings, and invest for flexibility and purpose.
Gen Z is exploring side hustles, digital assets, and financial independence early in life.
When your content speaks directly to these motivations—using their language, not industry jargon—it naturally aligns with what search engines, AI, and social algorithms prioritize.
Get Recommended by AI
- Write for context, not clicks.
- Structure content for comprehension.
- Create what algorithms can’t.
- Broaden your digital footprint.
- Ask your clients directly.
Tip #7: Be Present on Next Gen’s Preferred Platforms
- Start with small, consistent actions.
- Post one high-quality video or insight per week on LinkedIn or YouTube
- Join conversations in comments—listen as much as you post
- Share stories, quick takeaways, or personal lessons learned
Consumer expectations are changing—are you doing what it takes to be seen, heard, and paid by Next Gen?
Stories from the field
Find Success Serving Millennials
read time: 4 min
become gen savvy
Overcome the Roadblock to Next Gen
read time: 5 min
Win with Next Gen
Sharpen Your Competitive Edge
read time: 10 min
The future of advice is human —strengthen the skills that help you win with Next Gen
1 It’s time to change your mind about young investors eBook
2 https://www.capgemini.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/WWR_2025.pdf
3 Niches Improve Advisor Marketing Satisfaction And Efficiency
Financial professionals should consult with their firm’s compliance department for guidance on the appropriate use of social media and digital marketing channels.
NXT-004 10-25