News

Mann on a mission to diversify financial advice

White, middle-aged, affluent interests are overrepresented in the New Zealand financial advice industry, says The Advice Hub's Dylan Mann with the company launching a new scholarship to help improve diversity across the industry.

Mann says the industry desperately needs more diversity, particularly from women, Pasifika and Māori, so The Advice Hub is offering up to 100 fully paid scholarships  – particularly to those displaced by Covid – as a pathway into the financial services industry and to help uplift some of New Zealand's less affluent communities.

Mann says Covid-related job losses and career changes have caused an influx of Kiwi’s seeking personalised financial advice, and New Zealand doesn't have enough people qualified to deal with this influx.

Compounding the Covid issue is the looming Baby Boomer bubble of Kiwis about to leave the workforce and retire.

"The fact is that most financial advisers are middle-aged white men over 55, who will focus on the wealthy," Mann says.

He says advisers who will work with people from all walks of life and income levels are desperately needed and women, Pasifika and Māori financial advisers are rare, "and this needs to change".

"Giving personalised financial advice to local communities needs to come from a new generation of financial advisers that can best communicate, educate and offer researched working strategies to their problems.”

Mann says The Advice Hub has a formal agreement with the Open Polytechnic to fund the course fees of 100 scholarships, enabling recipients to become licenced financial advisers.

The online course takes between three and six months and includes a tutor from the Open Polytechnic and a senior financial adviser mentor from The Advice Hub, followed by full-time employment within New Zealand.

The scholarship will include:
- The entire cost of the New Zealand Certificate in Financial Services (Level 5) qualification.
- Financial Markets Authority registration fee.
- Criminal, insolvency and credit checks.
- The required malpractice and professional indemnity insurance.
- The required Financial Ombudsman service.
- And all the financial adviser tools “needed to be amazing”.

“This new generation of financial advisers will be empowered to help their family, friends and wider community," says Mann.

"The only way we are going to improve outcomes for all New Zealanders is to make personalised financial advice available to more diversified groups, as well as to people on lower incomes and the average-income Kiwis."

Mann says he grew up with no financial stability after he was born to a mother who was only 16-years-old at the time.

Experiencing that lack of financial stability drives him to help others from underprivileged situations.

"There is nothing more rewarding than sitting at a person's kitchen table, hearing their financial worries and then coming back to provide personalised financial advice to protect and benefit that family."

Mann says he is on a mission to change the world by making personalised, high-quality financial advice accessible to all people to ensure that everybody benefits from the kind of financial advice only the wealthy currently enjoy. 

For applications, click here

Most Read

Get TMM delivered to your inbox each week

Sign Up