If you ask most investors what protects them, you’ll hear the same answer: “My advisor is a fiduciary.”
Fiduciary Is Fine Print. Structural Separation Makes It Real.
Fiduciary is a powerful word backed by law. It implies loyalty, prudence, and undivided service to the client’s best interest. And the word duty adds an ongoing obligation to uphold, protect, and enhance those qualities. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: fiduciary is still a standard, and standards aren’t invincible on their own. Structural separation complements fiduciary duty and makes it understandable to consumers.
Because there is demand for implementation, most firms naturally manage portfolios or distribute products. As a result, business models in financial services ask advisors—often employees with equity packages and other incentives—to serve two masters at once: the client and the firm. That structural requirement means fiduciary, no matter how well-intentioned, will often fall short in practice.
In a recent LinkedIn discussion, I wrote:
“Fiduciary duty absolutely matters. The real question is whether it can truly function inside a business model designed to serve two masters.
We’ve chosen to separate advice from all forms of financial sales and to pair it with a truth-in-advertising standard so expectations are clear, consistent, and non-discretionary… This isn’t about motives; it’s about incentives.”
Fiduciary’s Two Masters Problem
At its core, fiduciary is about loyalty. But loyalty is compromised when it’s divided between two masters:
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Master #1: The Client — their goals, financial security, and long-term best interest.
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Master #2: The Firm — asset retention, product revenue, and profitability.
This isn’t abstract; it’s structural. Advisors working under an AUM model have incentives to retain assets, even when risk reduction or annuitization might better serve the client. Flat fees and “fee-for-service” models still tie revenue to firm profitability. Referral arrangements create non-monetary obligations that quietly shape advice.
Nearly a century ago, Judge Benjamin Cardozo captured the fiduciary ideal in Meinhard v. Salmon (1928):
“A trustee is held to something stricter than the morals of the marketplace. Not honesty alone, but the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive.”
That’s the bar fiduciary was meant to meet. But when advisors serve two masters, fiduciary becomes conditional—stretched thin between client loyalty and firm survival.
Where Disclosure Fails
A recent enforcement action illustrates the point starkly.
In September 2025, the SEC fined a major advisory firm $19.5 million for misleading clients about incentives in its managed-advice program. Public materials claimed advisors had “no financial incentives,” yet compensation and promotions were tied to enrollment and retention. Disclosures across Form CRS, brochures, and websites were inconsistent and incomplete. If fiduciary plus disclosure were enough, this case wouldn’t exist. And it wasn’t an outlier—another large provider was fined for similar managed-account disclosure failures.
Lesson: Disclosure doesn’t erase incentives. It explains them—often in fine print—while the incentives continue to operate.
Fiduciary Reform on Repeat
The history of fiduciary reform is a cycle of déjà vu—always circling back to disclosure instead of structure.
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RAND Report (2008): Investors couldn’t distinguish brokers from advisors → recommend clearer disclosures.
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Dodd-Frank (2010): Authorized a uniform fiduciary standard → years of study, no structural change.
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DoL Fiduciary Rule (2016–2018): Extended fiduciary to retirement accounts → vacated after industry pushback.
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SEC Reg BI (2019): Marketed as higher standard → preserved broker/advisor duality and leaned on disclosure.
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“New” policy priorities (2025): Call for fiduciary for all advice → strong rhetoric, still light on structure.
The pattern is clear: reforms double, triple, and quadruple down on disclosure while incentives remain intact.
The Hypocrisy of Wealth Management
For years, industry campaigns painted brokers as the villains—“conflicts, commissions, and fees.” But wealth management is not conflict-free:
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Asset-based compensation rewards asset retention over alternative strategies.
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Proprietary platforms and recommended lists restrict choice.
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Referral networks and reputational favors create non-monetary obligations.
The truth: the two-masters flaw is universal. Any model that blends advice with sales asks advisors to serve both the client and the firm—sometimes as employees, sometimes as partners or equity holders. The higher your standards, the more you risk a competitive disadvantage inside a conflicted model that rewards operating right up to the red line.
The Pivot: Creating a Different Model
This is where my own story comes in.
I started where many advisors start: in asset management. For a while, I believed fiduciary + disclosure was sufficient—that good intent could overcome structural conflicts I didn’t fully see. Over time, I watched incentives shape behavior, even among well-meaning mentors. Pursuing the highest standards became a disadvantage.
That realization forced me to pivot.
Before formalizing the Advice Only™ methodology in 2019, I saw an industry with entrenched conflicts and no standardized, reliable process for delivering truly objective advice. Fiduciary tells us what to do. Structure is how we do it consistently. Consumers were left to second-guess whether guidance served their interests or hidden incentives.
So I asked a fundamental question: How can we create a structured, repeatable process that anyone—client or advisor—can rely on to ensure financial advice is genuinely objective and trustworthy?
I began using and refining my process with clients, then built the policies and procedures to make the experience objective, consistent, and auditable.
Advice Only™: How Structural Separation Complements Fiduciary Duty
Advice Only™ doesn’t replace fiduciary. Structural separation complements fiduciary duty, making it operational.
1) Separation of Advice from Sales
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No commissions.
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No AUM retention incentives.
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No reciprocal referral favors or quid-pro-quo.
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Advice stands on its own, paid only by invoice.
2) Truth-in-Advertising
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Clients know upfront what they’re getting.
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No hidden qualifications or “maybe if you qualify” filters.
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A defined planning process where fiduciary duty is explicit and binding from day one.
3) Defined, Repeatable Process
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Step 1: Paid Consultation — A fiduciary agreement upfront, actionable advice
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Step 2: Present Position & 40-Point Inspection — Math-based snapshot + a review across 40+ areas of financial planning topics.
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Step 3: Final Plan — Scenario modeling and a transition-ready handoff any professional can implement.
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Step 4: Ongoing Support — Paid updates to keep the plan aligned as life evolves.
Taking the Pressure Off: How Structural Separation Complements Fiduciary Duty
Here’s the plain fact: fiduciary is overloaded.
The Advice Only™ methodology takes the pressure off by giving fiduciary duty a compatible structure. Instead of forcing advisors to balance competing interests, our process creates a planning environment where the client’s goals are the only focus.
This isn’t anti-fiduciary; it’s about making the fiduciary promise real. By pairing the standard with a deconfliction procedure—a defined planning module that reduces conflicts, avoids pre-determined solutions, and asset qualification filters—our duty becomes more than just a title. It becomes a lived and verifiable outcome for the client.
Serving Just You, By Design
Let’s be real: fiduciary today often serves two masters—the client and the firm. That’s the flaw.
We’ve tried disclosure. Enforcement actions show it doesn’t fix incentives. Consumers deserve better. And advisors deserve a framework that doesn’t punish higher standards.
That’s why we built Advice Only™. Because structural separation complements fiduciary duty, making it real, practical, and understandable to the consumer.
One master, by design.
Editor’s note: This blog offers informal investment and financial planning insights. We know nothing about your unique financial situation. The buying or selling of any financial product or security should only be considered in context. If appropriate, seek the counsel of experienced, objective financial, tax, retirement, or estate-planning professionals. Past performance is not indicative of future results.