Investment Proposal

description: Create professional investment proposals for prospective clients. Covers the firm's approach, proposed allocation, expected outcomes, and fee structure. Use when pitching new clients or presenting a new investment strategy. Triggers on "investment proposal", "prospect presentation", "pitch new client", "proposal for [client]", or "new client presentation".

Published by @w95·0 agent reads / 30d·0 saves·

Investment Proposal

description: Create professional investment proposals for prospective clients. Covers the firm's approach, proposed allocation, expected outcomes, and fee structure. Use when pitching new clients or presenting a new investment strategy. Triggers on "investment proposal", "prospect presentation", "pitch new client", "proposal for [client]", or "new client presentation".

Workflow

Step 1: Prospect Context

Gather:

  • Prospect name and household details
  • Current situation: Existing advisor? Self-directed? What prompted the meeting?
  • Assets: Estimated AUM, account types, current holdings (if shared)
  • Goals: Retirement, wealth preservation, growth, income, education, estate
  • Risk tolerance: Conservative, moderate, aggressive (or questionnaire score)
  • Constraints: ESG preferences, concentrated stock, illiquidity needs
  • Fee sensitivity: What are they paying now?
  • Competition: Who else are they considering?

Step 2: Proposal Structure

I. About Our Firm (1 page)

  • Firm overview, history, AUM
  • Investment philosophy (in plain English)
  • Team bios (relevant to this client)
  • Client service model (how often do we meet, who do they call)

II. Understanding Your Needs (1 page)

  • Restate their goals and concerns — show you listened
  • Key planning considerations identified in discovery
  • What success looks like for them

III. Proposed Investment Strategy (2-3 pages)

  • Recommended asset allocation with rationale
  • How allocation maps to their goals and risk tolerance
  • Investment vehicles (ETFs, mutual funds, individual securities, alternatives)
  • Tax-aware strategy (asset location, tax-loss harvesting)

Proposed allocation:

Asset ClassAllocationVehicleRationale

IV. Expected Outcomes (1-2 pages)

  • Projected growth scenarios (conservative, moderate, optimistic)
  • Monte Carlo probability of meeting goals
  • Income projections (if retirement or income-focused)
  • Risk metrics (max drawdown, volatility)
  • Comparison to current portfolio (if known)

V. Fee Structure (1 page)

  • Advisory fee schedule (tiered if applicable)
  • Underlying fund expenses
  • Total all-in cost estimate
  • How fees compare to industry averages
  • Value proposition — what they get for the fee

VI. Getting Started (1 page)

  • Account opening process
  • Asset transfer timeline
  • Transition plan (if moving from another advisor)
  • First 90 days — what to expect
  • Required documents and next steps

Step 3: Customization

  • Match the tone to the prospect (corporate executive vs. small business owner vs. retiree)
  • If they have a concentrated stock position, address it directly
  • If they're comparing you to robo-advisors, emphasize the planning and relationship value
  • If they're price-sensitive, lead with total value and outcomes, not just fees

Step 4: Output

  • PowerPoint presentation (12-15 slides) with firm branding
  • PDF leave-behind version
  • One-page summary for follow-up email

Important Notes

  • The proposal should feel personalized, not templated — reference their specific situation
  • Don't oversell performance — set realistic expectations and emphasize process
  • Always include disclaimers (projections are hypothetical, past performance, etc.)
  • The transition plan matters — clients fear the disruption of switching advisors
  • Follow up within 48 hours with the proposal and a clear next step
  • Compliance must review before presenting to prospects

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