One of the most common and costly mistakes financial advisors make is treating business owners like traditional personal wealth clients.
They’re not.
Many advisors say they “work with business owners.” But if we’re being honest, in many cases that simply means the client happens to own a business, not that the business is actually part of the advisory process.
Business owners think differently, make decisions differently, and define success differently. Yet many advisors still approach them with the same planning process used for retirees, executives, or high-net-worth individuals whose wealth already sits outside the business. This mismatch creates friction, limits trust, and is a major reason advisors struggle to become known as true Business Owner Specialists.
If financial advisors want to win and keep business owner relationships, they need a distinct, intentional process designed specifically for owners. One that starts not with assets under management, but with the single asset that matters most to them: their business.
Most advisory processes are built around personal net worth, portfolio construction, and long-term financial goals. All important, but largely secondary for business owners.
For most owners:
Traditional wealth planning assumes assets are liquid, diversified, and emotionally detached. Business owners, on the other hand, have most of their net worth locked in a single, illiquid, emotionally charged asset, one they also happen to run 60 hours a week.
Without a process that acknowledges this reality, advisors remain helpful but not central.
To serve business owners effectively, advisors need a framework that elevates insight, creates momentum, and delivers value long before liquidity is on the table.
The goal here is simple: earn the right to talk about the business.
The advisor initiates a discovery conversation focused on how the company operates, what’s working, and where the owner feels constrained.
Key outcomes:
Trackable metric: Number of business owner conversations held
This is the inflection point.
When owners understand what their business is worth and why, every financial conversation changes. Decisions move from emotional to strategic, and advisor credibility accelerates.
Ask most business owners about “exit planning” and you’ll often get one of two responses: “I’m not ready to think about that yet,” or silence followed by a quick subject change. Enterprise Value reframes the conversation away from selling and toward understanding.
Key outcomes:
Trackable metrics:
Once value is understood, the natural question becomes: How do I grow it?
Here, the advisor delivers a strategic roadmap focused on increasing enterprise value and creating future optionality. Exit becomes one strategic option, not the sole objective.
At this stage, trust is reinforced through a tangible, differentiated deliverable, and the advisor begins to introduce M&A or investment banking adjacency where appropriate.
Trackable metric: Number of strategic roadmaps delivered
With growth underway, both professional and personal risk must be addressed.
This stage aligns protection strategies with value creation. Buy-sell planning, key person coverage, treasury strategies, benefits, and asset diversification are no longer check-the-box solutions. These strategies all become integrated into the broader value story.
Trackable metric: Number of risk mitigation plans delivered
Success here is defined by creating optionality. It is not necessarily forcing a sale.
When liquidity does occur, the advisor remains central rather than displaced, delivering value through stewardship, coordination, and long-term alignment. And yes, sometimes this is the moment when owners finally say, “I wish we had started this sooner.”
Trackable metric: Number of liquidity event opportunities.
Becoming a Business Owner Specialist comes down to process.
Advisors who adopt a business owner-specific framework build deeper trust, engage earlier, and stay relevant longer. Enterprise Value is the key that unlocks better conversations, better planning, and better outcomes.
For advisors serious about working with business owners, the question isn’t whether a different process is needed.
It’s whether you’re ready to use one.