When you run a financial advisory practice, there’s never a shortage of things you could be doing. Clients need reviews, prospects need follow-up, marketing needs attention, and administrative work seems to multiply on its own. Many advisors start the day with the best intentions, only to watch the hours disappear into calls, emails, and the occasional urgent market headline.
The challenge is not simply finding time. It is protecting time for both parts of the business: serving current clients well and creating opportunities for future growth. Neglect either one and the health of your practice suffers. The good news is that with a few intentional shifts, you can make space for both.
Here are five strategies that can help.
Related: How Advisors Can Help Clients Stay Calm—Even When the Headlines Aren’t
Before you change your schedule, you need to understand it. Track your time for one to two weeks and be honest about where the hours go. Include everything: client meetings, prep work, marketing, administrative tasks, and personal distractions.
Most advisors discover patterns they did not expect. Common time drains include:
An audit also reveals how much time is consumed by “invisible” work, such as answering quick questions, solving small client issues, or attending meetings without a clear purpose. These tasks feel productive in the moment but take up significant space in your week.
Once you see the full picture, you can make decisions. Which tasks could be shortened or delegated? Which activities consistently move the business forward and deserve more time? The goal is not to account for every minute forever, but to identify the patterns that pull time away from high-impact work.
Client service is essential, but so is business development. If you don’t schedule time for growth, it will always get pushed to “later.”
Choose consistent blocks each week for growth activities and treat them like fixed appointments. Use this time for high-impact work: reaching out to prospects, preparing for a marketing event, deepening relationships with centers of influence, or building strategic partnerships.
Protect these hours from low-impact interruptions, including the temptation to check and respond to every email as it arrives. If a message does require immediate attention, handle it during your designated client communication time rather than at the expense of your growth hours.
If you have a team, make them aware of your growth blocks so they can help protect that time. Consider starting small with two focused hours a week and build from there. Over time, you create a steady rhythm of client service and lead generation that does not rely on bursts of activity when business slows.
Switching between unrelated tasks is one of the biggest productivity killers. Group similar activities into dedicated blocks so you can focus without constant mental resets. For example:
Delegation is equally important. If a task does not require your expertise, someone else should be doing it. This could be an assistant, a junior advisor, or an outside vendor. Outsource tasks like document preparation, compliance paperwork, and certain marketing functions.
Technology makes delegation easier and more efficient. Use shared calendars to manage scheduling, CRM systems to track client interactions, and automated reminders to reduce follow-up time.
Batching and delegation create more uninterrupted time for the work only you can do—the work that strengthens client relationships and drives growth.
Many advisors build their pipeline through one-on-one prospect meetings. While personal, these meetings can be time-intensive and unpredictable. Some prospects are simply curious. Others are not ready to act. You can spend hours building custom presentations for people who never become clients.
An alternative is an education-first, one-to-many approach. This is the model we use at FMT Solutions. By hosting a classroom session for 20 or 30 prospects, an advisor can deliver valuable information once, answer questions in real time, and let interested attendees signal their readiness for a deeper conversation.
The benefits go beyond efficiency:
This approach frees up hours that would otherwise be spent on lower-yield meetings. That time can be reinvested into client service, deeper planning work, or the next marketing event. When you can market at scale without sacrificing quality, you create room for growth without crowding out client service.
A balanced calendar is one where client meetings, growth activities, and strategic work all have a place. Without a plan, urgent requests will always push the important but non-urgent work aside.
Start by mapping your ideal week. Here’s one example:
Review your calendar quarterly to see if the balance still works. In busy seasons, you may shift toward more client time. In slower periods, you can lean more heavily into growth. The goal is to give each priority the space it needs, while allowing for adjustments as the business changes.
If you are unsure how to start, look back at your time audit and block your most important activities first. Then add in the rest. This ensures that growth and client service have equal footing from the start.
Balancing Today’s Service with Tomorrow’s Opportunities
Advisors often think about time management as a way to squeeze more in. I see it as protecting the work that drives both strong relationships and steady growth.
When you give client service and business development equal priority, you prevent the feast-or-famine cycle that can creep into a practice. You fulfill the commitments you have today while building a consistent pipeline of new opportunities.
Ready to free up more time while consistently attracting the right prospects? Contact FMT Solutions to learn how our classroom-based marketing system can work for your practice.