I think the world went title hungry a while back, diluted the value of most titles.
Put PHd on the end of your name, nobody cares. Put Dr. in front, it makes a difference, even though they are the same thing. It's perception, people think Dr. is a medical doctor, which isn't necessarily true.
Most titles help you relate to peers, more than they help you relate to clients. On the other hand, ask 100 workers on an assembly line if a college degree makes their manager smarter than they are, everyone will probably say no way. Ask the manager if he makes more money.... decide for yourself.
I do think titles like CFP mean something to individuals. Ironically, ChFC means little, though it's the same classes.
To each is own. I don't think it hurts to have the title. I think if you look at the numbers, for the real titles (not the 1/2 hour lecture, here is your title), the ROI is there over the long haul. It's hard to know if its the title or the dedication of the agent though.
Dan
Put PHd on the end of your name, nobody cares. Put Dr. in front, it makes a difference, even though they are the same thing. It's perception, people think Dr. is a medical doctor, which isn't necessarily true.
Most titles help you relate to peers, more than they help you relate to clients. On the other hand, ask 100 workers on an assembly line if a college degree makes their manager smarter than they are, everyone will probably say no way. Ask the manager if he makes more money.... decide for yourself.
I do think titles like CFP mean something to individuals. Ironically, ChFC means little, though it's the same classes.
To each is own. I don't think it hurts to have the title. I think if you look at the numbers, for the real titles (not the 1/2 hour lecture, here is your title), the ROI is there over the long haul. It's hard to know if its the title or the dedication of the agent though.
Dan