Adam Correa, VP of Financial Planning at LPL who drives planning adoption across thousands of advisors. He recounts his fintech-to-advisor path and why emotional intelligence and storytelling beat raw IQ. They discuss focusing on ideal clients, charging for planning as a standalone service, streamlining delivery for profitability, and using AI to scale paraplanning and capacity.
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question_answer ANECDOTE
Unconventional Path To Scaling Planning
Adam moved from fintech at eMoney into advisory and then into an LPL coaching role to scale planning impact.
He chose coaching to affect many advisors rather than limit himself to ~100 clients as a practitioner.
insights INSIGHT
EQ Trumps IQ In Client Outcomes
Great advisors win by asking better questions and communicating clearly, not just by being the smartest.
Adam found that deep client connection and EQ make complex planning useful and actionable.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Audit Your Book And Define Ideal Clients
Do a honest self-reflection on your book: identify ideal clients and target revenue needs.
Then decide which clients to deepen, elevate, or move away from to create capacity for planning.
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Sten interviews Adam Correa, CFP®, Vice President of Financial Planning at LPL, who supports financial planning adoption across a massive advisor network (30,000 advisors, 2,000+ 1:1 engagements, 500+ presentations). Adam shares his unconventional path into financial advice—starting in fintech at eMoney, becoming an advisor, then transitioning into an LPL home office coaching role focused on helping advisors move into a planning-led, fee-for-service model.
Together, they unpack the “head trash” many advisors face about charging for advice, the real reason some advisors outperform (communication + EQ, not just IQ), and why the industry is rapidly shifting away from product-centered value toward holistic, planning-driven client relationships. Adam emphasizes that advisors must self-reflect on their book of business, focus on ideal clients, streamline their planning process, and embrace tools (including AI) to create capacity. Sten reinforces that offering planning as a standalone service creates optionality, improves client trust, increases AUM long-term, and transforms the advisor from a “salesperson” into a “problem solver.”
Key Takeaways
Financial planning isn’t “one-size-fits-all.”
Adam emphasizes planning varies by practice and client type—what matters is aligning it with your ideal client and service model.
The best advisors don’t win because they’re the smartest — they win because they communicate best.
Sten and Adam both agree that communication, storytelling, and client connection are the “10X skill.”
EQ builds buy-in faster than IQ.
Advisors can build amazing plans, but if the client doesn’t feel understood, they won’t act.
Most advisors are overloaded because they never “self-reflect” as business owners.
Advisors get stuck serving too many clients, which kills their capacity to deliver real planning.
You must identify your ideal client—and stop building a random book.
The old “anyone with a financial pulse” model creates burnout and limits growth.
Advisors need to stop leading with investment performance conversations.
Adam suggests “shock therapy”: push the statement aside and ask, “What’s important about money to you?”
AI won’t replace advisors—but it will replace advisors who don’t evolve.
Adam explains AI can become a paraplanner-like assistant, freeing time and increasing scale, but the human coaching role remains irreplaceable.
Fee-for-service planning removes conflict of interest and increases trust.
Adam highlights a key point: paying directly for advice can feel more objective than “free plans” attached to product incentives.
Charging planning fees doesn’t cannibalize AUM — it can jumpstart it.
Adam states LPL data shows active planners grow faster, and planning often leads to larger, stickier relationships.
Planning-first relationships create better clients and filter out bad ones.
If someone isn’t responsive during planning, you get paid and you avoid years of headaches.