High-net-worth investors (HNWIs) have access to multiple channels for finding financial advisors—referrals from friends and family, CPAs and attorneys, word of mouth, industry rankings, and traditional networking.
However, the Internet has already become the “easiest” way to vet and compare multiple financial advisors, even for those with significant wealth. Depending on time and inclination, they may not choose to do the work themselves.
While referrals may still carry weight, affluent investors increasingly turn to online research before making contact. The question isn't whether HNWIs use the Internet to find advisors—the question is how they use it and what advisors can do to produce improved digital marketing results.
Seven primary reasons are based on Paladin’s more than two decades of research and experience:
Searching online is faster and easier than asking a friend or waiting for a CPA’s recommendation. A high-net-worth investor (HNWI) can find dozens of advisors within minutes, filtering by services, specialization, and minimum asset requirements.
Not every investor blindly follows a recommendation. A CPA or attorney may refer an advisor based on familiarity rather than true knowledge of results. The Internet allows investors to research and compare multiple options without relying on someone else's personal bias or lack of knowledge.
HNWIs are not restricted to advisors within their immediate network. The Internet provides access to specialists nationwide who may be a better fit for their financial situation and goals.
Instead of relying on a single recommendation, investors can compare advisors side by side—services, fee structures, credentials, regulatory records, and client reviews—before initiating contact.
The Internet gives HNWIs increased control over their selection processes. They are not as dependent on the knowledge of a referral source who may or may not know if they are receiving competent financial advice. A referral may be a good friend of the referral source.
Many HNWIs prefer to retain their anonymity until they are ready to schedule introductory calls. They lose some of that anonymity when they are referred to financial advisors by people they believe to be knowledgeable and trustworthy.
Most HNWIs want to interview multiple financial advisors before making a selection decision. This means they would need multiple referrals, so they have choices. It is much easier to find, vet, and compare multiple financial advisors on the Internet.
Yes, but they don’t just fill out a generic “Contact Us” form. Instead, they use a more “deliberate vetting process” before initiating contact - after all, they have more to lose if they make a mistake. Here’s what that looks like:
Investors with $1M+ in investable assets want to see upfront details—investment philosophy, services, fees, and credentials—before considering a conversation. Websites that provide vague or generic content won’t hold their attention.
High-quality advisors often produce blog articles, videos, whitepapers, investor guides, or case studies that affluent investors can download. HNWIs are more likely to engage with advisors who demonstrate expertise before they initiate a direct conversation.
More affluent investors watch for consistency—articles, videos, interviews, and insights demonstrating deep expertise. A financial advisor who shares meaningful content regularly (not generic fluff) is likelier to earn their trust.
Before contacting an advisor, an investor may check regulatory records (SEC, FINRA, or state databases), client reviews, or rankings on industry sites like Barron’s or Forbes. Credibility suffers when advisors lack visibility outside their own website.
Does the financial advisor have substantial experience working with clients like themselves? This can mean the advisor can produce more complex financial plans or is experienced working with clients’ generational wealth requirements.
Seven business practices will increase the odds that affluent investors will initiate contact with your firm:
HNWIs don’t search for “financial advisor near me.” They look for “specialized expertise”—such as succession planning for business owners, tax-efficient investing, or generational wealth management. Advisors must clearly highlight their niche(s) on websites and use SEO (Search Engine Optimization) or SEM (Search Engine Marketing) to build online visibility and relevance for specific keywords.
HWNIs will compare several financial advisors to each other. This makes it easy for them to see who is practicing transparency and who is withholding information. Transparency is key to building trust with affluent investors. Withholding information is a risky business practice. Being transparent and describing how the information benefits your clients is much safer.
Advisors with high minimums should make those requirements “obvious” on their financial advisor websites to filter out unqualified leads and attract the right audience. A key to success is explaining how those minimums benefit your clients.
HNWI investors don’t search the Internet using general search terms like "wealth management." Instead, they use searches like:
Advisors should tailor their websites and content to match the keywords in these types of searches.
HNWIs are unlikely to book a free consultation with a random advisor. Instead, they prefer low-commitment options to get to know the advisors:
HNWIs validate advisors by checking third-party sources. Strong Google search visibility, media mentions, and regulatory transparency are essential. An advisor without external credibility won’t make it past the research phase.
Be open about the assets that your firm invests. This is not a track record and is subject to compliance approval.
High-net-worth investors use the Internet to find, vet, and compare financial advisors. While referrals still play a role, the Internet provides speed, efficiency, anonymity, and a way to evaluate advisors independently without relying on others’ judgment.
However, HNWIs don’t engage with advisors like retail investors do. Advisors with high asset minimums must create a digital presence that attracts sophisticated investors, provides transparency, and makes vetting easy. If done correctly, digital marketing is one of the most effective ways for elite advisors to connect with the right clients—without relying solely on random referrals.