The Problem With Traditional AUM Pricing

Assets Under Management pricing sounds simple: pay 1% of your portfolio annually, and your advisor manages it. Straightforward.

Except it's not. It's built on a hidden conflict of interest that most advisors don't acknowledge and most business owners don't see until it's too late.

How AUM creates misaligned incentives

Under AUM, your advisor's revenue is directly tied to the size of your investment portfolio. This creates a powerful incentive: grow your portfolio, and the advisor's fees grow proportionally.

Sounds fine, right? The problem surfaces when you consider what's best for you:

The problem with AUM isn't that advisors are dishonest. It's that the fee structure creates incentives that don't align with your best interests over the long term.

The Math: What You're Actually Paying

Let's walk through a real scenario. You're a business owner with $1 million invested and $2 million in the business (total net worth $3M).

Scenario 1: AUM at 1%

Scenario 2: Flat fee $5,000/year

Over 20 years, the flat-fee advisor saved you $198,000 while delivering the same investment results. And because the fee wasn't tied to portfolio size, they had no perverse incentive to keep you from making tax-optimal decisions that might temporarily shrink your assets.

The AUM premium grows as you scale

This advantage amplifies if your business grows and your investable assets increase. If you're a $500K revenue business owner with $2M invested, and AUM is 1%, you're paying $20,000 per year—money that could go into tax-advantaged accounts, your emergency fund, or opportunities you spot.

Flat Fee vs. AUM vs. Hourly: A Real Comparison

AUM pricing

Cost: 0.5% to 1.5% of assets annually

Pros: Simple, scales with your wealth (in theory, as you grow richer, fees grow too—but that's actually backwards), established model

Cons: Incentivizes keeping money invested rather than spending it, disincentivizes tax-loss harvesting or major rebalancing, doesn't account for the complexity of your business, fees compound forever

Hourly billing

Cost: $200 to $600+ per hour, typically billed in quarterly or annual retainers ($10K-$50K+/year)

Pros: You pay for time spent; if you only need 5 hours of advice, you pay for 5 hours

Cons: Incentivizes long meetings and busy work; advisor may rush if they're over-committed; hard to know total cost upfront; not great for ongoing portfolio management

Flat fee (retainer)

Cost: Fixed annual fee, typically $5,000 to $30,000+ depending on complexity

Pros: Aligns incentives (advisor benefits when you succeed, regardless of portfolio size), transparent cost, no incentive to bloat your portfolio, works well for business owners with concentrated assets, can include unlimited access

Cons: Higher upfront cost for simple situations; must vet advisor carefully to ensure they're not skimping on work to hit margin targets

Why Flat Fee Aligns Better for Business Owners

Business owners face complexity that W-2 employees don't: concentrated assets, tax optimization across business and personal income, entity structure decisions, succession planning, and exit strategy.

Under flat-fee pricing, your advisor's incentive is to solve your problems comprehensively, not to manage a larger investment bucket. If the best move is to restructure your business entity and reduce your AUM temporarily, the advisor recommends it—because their fee doesn't change.

Real scenario: The entity restructuring decision

You operate as a C-corp and realize you'd save $15,000 annually in taxes as an S-corp. The conversion costs $5,000 in legal and accounting fees, reduces your business profit on paper by 10% for one year (temporarily shrinking your investable assets), but saves you $150K over 10 years.

Under AUM: Your portfolio shrinks from $1.5M to $1.35M. Your advisor's annual fee drops from $15,000 to $13,500. Over 10 years, that's $15,000 in lost fees. Many AUM advisors would recommend studying it to death—and never quite pull the trigger.

Under flat fee: Your fee stays the same. The advisor has zero incentive to delay the decision. If it saves you money, you implement it, and the advisor's job is to help you manage the process.

The Hidden Cost of AUM for Business Owners

If 60% of your net worth is in your business and 40% is invested, 1% AUM pricing only covers 40% of your financial picture. Meanwhile, the biggest decisions—business structure, succession, exit planning—get treated as side issues.

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What to Expect From a Flat-Fee Engagement

If you're transitioning from AUM to flat-fee, here's what a good engagement looks like:

Year one: The deep dive

Ongoing: Annual reviews and updates

What's typically NOT included

Clarify upfront what's in scope: Are we managing your personal investments? Your business retirement plan? Your spouse's accounts? Most flat-fee advisors carve out clear boundaries.

How to Choose Between Pricing Models

Ask yourself:

The Real Reason More Business Owners Are Switching

It's not because flat-fee advisors are newer or trendier. It's because business owners eventually figure out what economists have known for decades: fee structure matters.

When your advisor's paycheck depends on portfolio size, they're incentivized to focus on investments rather than your business, your taxes, your succession plan, or your exit strategy. Those are the conversations that move the needle for business owners—and they're the conversations that AUM pricing discourages.

Flat-fee advisors solve that problem by removing the conflict. Your success is their success—regardless of whether success looks like growing investments, optimizing taxes, restructuring your business, or preparing to exit.

Know What You're Paying For

Whatever pricing model you choose, make sure you understand it. Ask: What does this fee cover? What's excluded? How do you handle changes in my situation? Does the fee change if my business grows?

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