Hiring Guide
The stakes in financial decision-making are high, and the landscape of people willing to give financial advice is far wider than the set of those qualified to give it well. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that full-time financial managers earn a median of $156,100 per year — a figure that reflects the economic value of rigorous financial oversight. Yet the designations that signal genuine expertise vary enormously: a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) is trained in comprehensive personal financial planning; a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) is credentialed in investment analysis and portfolio management; a Registered Investment Adviser (RIA) is a fiduciary legally required to act in your interest — not just recommend suitable products. That last distinction matters more than most clients realize. Many financial professionals operate under a suitability standard, meaning they can recommend products that are adequate for your situation but not necessarily optimal. A fiduciary must put your interests first. Understanding this difference — and asking directly — is one of the most important steps in evaluating any financial advisor. Whether you need help with personal financial planning, cash flow modeling, fundraising strategy, capital structure optimization, or fractional CFO services, this guide helps you identify the right financial expert, prepare the right questions, and spot the warning signs that should send you elsewhere.
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Use these in an intro call or first session to quickly assess fit and expertise.
1.Do you operate as a fiduciary, and will you put that in writing?
Why it matters: The fiduciary standard requires an advisor to act in your best interest at all times — not just recommend products that are technically suitable. This distinction directly affects every recommendation they make and every product they suggest. An advisor who hesitates to confirm fiduciary status in writing is giving you important information about their orientation toward their clients.
2.What are all the ways you are compensated — fees, commissions, referral arrangements, or otherwise?
Why it matters: Compensation structure is the lens through which every recommendation should be interpreted. An advisor who earns commissions on products they recommend has a structural incentive that can conflict with your interests, even if they're acting in good faith. Understanding every component of their compensation — including referral fees from third parties — is essential for evaluating whether the advice you receive is independent.
3.What credentials do you hold, and specifically what do those credentials qualify you to advise on?
Why it matters: Financial credentials are not interchangeable. A CFP credential covers personal financial planning comprehensively; a CFA covers investment analysis; other credentials cover insurance, real estate, or specific product categories. Knowing which credential your advisor holds — and what it specifically qualifies them to address — ensures you're getting advice from someone trained in the right area. Mismatched credentials are a common source of inadequate guidance.
4.Can you walk me through a client situation similar to mine and how you approached it?
Why it matters: Abstract claims of expertise are much less informative than a concrete account of how an advisor has handled a comparable situation. This question surfaces pattern recognition from real engagements — the specific complications they encountered, the decisions they made, and the outcomes they achieved. Advisors with genuine depth give specific, detailed answers; generalists give vague descriptions.
5.What would you identify as the two or three biggest risks or weaknesses in my current financial situation or plan?
Why it matters: This question tests whether the advisor will tell you what you need to hear rather than what is comfortable. The best financial advisors proactively surface risk and challenge assumptions — not just confirm your existing plan. An advisor who only reinforces what you're already doing is not providing independent analysis. The specificity and honesty of their answer is a direct signal of the quality of guidance you'll receive.
6.What assumptions are embedded in the projections or recommendations you're giving me?
Why it matters: Financial projections are only as good as their underlying assumptions, and those assumptions are often where advisors diverge most in quality. Asking this question reveals whether the advisor is giving you honest scenario analysis or a single optimistic projection. Good financial advisors are explicit about the assumptions behind their models and give you ranges rather than false precision.
7.How do you handle situations where the right advice for the client conflicts with the more profitable recommendation for you?
Why it matters: This question directly surfaces how the advisor navigates conflicts of interest. The ideal answer describes a clear policy — referral to a more appropriate specialist, full disclosure of the conflict, or explicit confirmation of fiduciary status. Vague or defensive answers to this question should materially reduce your confidence in the advice you'll receive.
8.What does success look like for this engagement, and how will we measure it?
Why it matters: Advisors who can define clear, measurable success criteria for the engagement are more accountable and more likely to deliver concrete value than those who describe success in vague terms. This question also ensures your expectations are aligned before the work begins — the most common source of client dissatisfaction in financial engagements is misaligned expectations about what the advisor will deliver.
Sessions typically start with a deep dive into your current financial situation — your P&L, cash position, burn rate, and goals. From there, a finance expert will identify gaps, model scenarios, and walk you through a clear action plan. Expect candid, numbers-driven guidance, not generic advice.
Fractional CFO
A Fractional CFO is a senior financial executive who works part-time across multiple companies, providing CFO-level strategy and leadership at a fraction of the cost of a full-time hire.
Burn Rate
Burn rate is the pace at which a company spends its cash — typically measured monthly — before it becomes cash-flow positive. It is one of the most critical metrics for any startup.
Financial Modeling
Financial modeling is the process of building a structured, quantitative representation of a company's finances — typically in a spreadsheet — to forecast future performance and support major decisions.
EBITDA
EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It is a widely used measure of a company's core operating profitability, stripping out the effects of financing decisions, tax environments, and non-cash accounting charges.
Working Capital
Working capital is the difference between a company's current assets (cash, receivables, inventory) and its current liabilities (payables, short-term debt). It measures whether a business has enough short-term assets to cover its short-term obligations and fund day-to-day operations.