“What is your floor and desk number?”
In my former career on Wall Street this was a question I asked my colleagues regularly.
However, it wasn’t so I could locate them to talk about a work-related issue, it was to help them set up their company provided 401(k). It spread quickly within my firm that I knew how to set up these retirement plans and would frequently help co-workers do so.
I was always interested in saving money. For me, money equaled independence. This was something I valued and realized from a young age. Fast forward many years later and I was presented with the opportunity to buy my family’s wealth management business, which in turn led me to start my own personal finance education platform, Planancial.
When I left Wall Street, I expected to find more women in personal finance. While there were more women in this field relative to a trading floor, there was a pretty glaring gap. Even today, only 15 percent of financial advisors are women and less than a quarter of Certified Financial Planners (“CFPs”) are female.
At my first industry conference, many people assumed I was not attending as a financial advisor. At check-in, when asked what type of badge I needed, the first guess: “Assistant?”
Nope.
“Wholesaler?” Nope again.
“Home office?” Still no.
To their shock I answered “advisor.”
The personal finance industry has been predominately male for a long time. It’s an “eat what you kill environment” at best and a “boys’ club” at worst. It also has a staggering failure rate … more than 90 percent of advisors fail in the first five years. It also has the second largest gender pay gap amongst industries.
Those two statistics alone make it easy to understand why most women don’t consider this field – and who would blame them?
But there’s a promising silver lining that’s gone largely unnoticed. Being a financial advisor offers flexibility, unlimited income potential, and most importantly it’s a career where you can have a tangible positive impact on the lives of others.
So why has this never been brought to light? Well, I just don’t think there have been enough women to lead the way.









