You built a real advisory practice serving real clients. Your website looks smaller than the practice is. Prospective clients (and referring COIs) are noticing. That's a one-day fix — no six-month agency engagement required.
The referral matters. The AUM matters. The credentials matter. But the website check happens before every meaningful conversation — and if the site doesn't match the practice, the conversation doesn't happen.
CPA or estate attorney was going to refer their client to you. Checked your website first (they always do). Site looked like a solo shop when you're actually a growing practice. Referred to a competing RIA instead.
Prospect was retirement-planning shopping. Considered your firm and two national wirehouses. Yours had better philosophy and lower cost. The website made you look smaller than you are. They went with the big firm 'to be safe.'
Your practice serves clients in one of the most competitive wealth-management markets in the country. The market has specific expectations for what a boutique advisory website looks like. Your site sits below that bar.
Your current site was built years ago before the SEC Marketing Rule updated. Some language in the site is technically noncompliant now. You know you should fix it. You keep not doing it.
One flat rate. One focused day. The site that matches the practice you actually run — SEC-Marketing-Rule-appropriate, HNW-facing, boutique-tier design.
Not generic 'we help you plan for retirement' filler. Substantive content about your actual philosophy, process, and specialties. The specific depth HNW prospects (and COIs) actually read.
CFP, CFA, CPA, ChFC, MST — whichever credentials you and your team have. Real specifics on training, experience, industry tenure. The specific credentialing HNW prospects check.
Site language framed to work within current Marketing Rule requirements. Testimonials structured appropriately if included. Performance content handled correctly if displayed. Not compliance advice — but structural fit.
Your specific service offerings — wealth management, financial planning, tax strategy, estate planning integration — explained clearly. Fee structure transparency where appropriate.
Foundation for client resources, market commentary, or ongoing content when your firm publishes. Not a heavy content obligation — infrastructure for future depth.
Domain, hosting, source code — all yours. Firm evolution, breakaways, acquisitions, succession — the website goes with the practice.
Four pieces from the onerate blog that walk through the specific problems and decisions your peers are working through.
The specific questions your peers ask before booking.
One flat rate. One focused day. SEC-appropriate, boutique-tier, HNW-facing. Live by sundown.