A career in financial advice is built over time – through experience, relationships and the ability to guide clients through increasingly complex decisions. The Mattioli Woods Financial Adviser Academy is designed to give you that starting point. What follows is how that career develops.
As your career develops, you may choose to focus your work. Specialisation is not required - but it is common. Specialisation often emerges naturally, based on the clients you work with and the challenges you enjoy solving.
There’s no single answer. Some advisers prefer to:
+ Build a broad client base
+ Provide holistic, end-to-end advice
Others choose to:
+ Focus on specific areas
+ Develop deeper technical expertise
In practice, many do both, offering broad advice while developing depth in key areas. The right approach depends on your strengths, your interests and the clients you serve.
In practice, both models start from the same place.
Advisers are still required to fully understand a client’s situation, objectives and the range of solutions available. The difference lies in how those solutions are selected and presented.
Independent advice considers products from across the whole market, assessing a broad range of providers and product types before making a recommendation. This offers maximum breadth, but can involve a wider and more complex research process.
Restricted advice also begins with a whole-of-market perspective but operates within a carefully selected and governed range of solutions. These are chosen based on quality, consistency and suitability, creating a more focused and manageable framework for advice.
Mattioli Woods operates a restricted advice model.
This approach is built on curation – narrowing the universe of options into a disciplined, well-researched set of solutions that advisers can use consistently. The aim is not to limit choice, but to provide clarity, governance and confidence in the recommendations made.
Both models are designed to deliver suitable outcomes for clients.
The distinction is not about the quality of advice, but about how choice is structured and delivered.
One of the biggest challenges in financial advice is not qualification. It’s the transition into practice. The academy is designed to bridge that gap.
From entry level to experienced adviser
“What we focus on is not just knowledge, but the ability to apply it. That’s what defines an adviser over time.” - David Wright, Mattioli Woods
Every adviser’s journey is different. Some join from financial services backgrounds, many from entirely different industries. What they share is progression.
Over time, individuals:
+ Move from learning into advising
+ Build their own client relationships
+ Develop areas of specialism
+ Take on broader responsibility
These are not fixed paths, they evolve.
Competitive earning potential
Income grows over time, reflecting:
As your capability develops, so does your earning potential.
Work-life balance
Advisers typically have greater control over their diary as they progress. Over time, this creates more flexibility in how you structure your work – balancing client commitments with your wider priorities.
Purpose and impact
At its core, financial advice is about helping people make better decisions. That might mean:
The work is varied but consistently meaningful. You’re not delivering a product, you’re providing clarity and confidence at important moments in people’s lives.
Variety and long-term engagement
No two clients are the same. Each situation brings different challenges, from tax planning and investments to life changes and long-term goals. This creates a career that:
What makes financial advice sustainable as a career isn’t just the financial rewards, it’s the combination of purpose, variety and long-term relevance.
Whether you’re starting from a different profession or building on existing qualifications, the academy provides a structured route into financial advice.
It’s not just about qualifying, it’s about building a long-term career.
You begin advising clients after completing the initial 12-month programme, at the start of Term 4 (the Launch phase).
At this stage, you start working with clients directly, initially under close supervision. Support remains in place to help you build confidence, apply your knowledge in practice and ensure advice is delivered to the right standard.
As your experience develops over the following months, that support gradually reduces and you take on greater responsibility for managing your own client relationships independently.
Yes.
Qualification is only the starting point. Development continues through ongoing coaching, supervision and structured professional development. The aim is to support your progression over time, not just help you reach the entry point into the profession.
Yes, for those who choose to pursue it.
Advisers are supported in progressing beyond RQF Level 4 through further qualifications and development. Chartered status is not a requirement, but it is an option for those who want to deepen their expertise and continue building their professional credibility.
Specialisation often develops naturally over time, shaped by the clients you work with and the challenges you enjoy solving.
Common areas include pensions, investments, tax planning and estate planning. As your experience grows, these areas often become more interconnected – requiring you to think across multiple disciplines rather than in isolation.
You may also choose to specialise in:
Some advisers develop a niche based on client type or profession, such as medical professionals, legal professionals or business owners, building deeper expertise in the specific challenges those groups face.
Others take a broader approach, providing holistic financial planning while developing depth in one or two key areas.
In practice, most advisers sit somewhere in between. They offer well-rounded advice but become known for particular strengths over time.
A financial adviser works directly with clients – understanding their needs, building relationships and providing recommendations.
A paraplanner supports the advice process behind the scenes by conducting research, preparing reports and developing technical solutions. Both roles are critical, but they focus on different parts of the client journey – one client-facing, the other technical and analytical.
There is no fixed timeline.
Progression depends on your experience, the strength of your client relationships and how your capability develops over time. Building the judgement, confidence and track record required to run a firm typically takes a number of years, which is why many advisers choose to develop within a structured environment first.
At Mattioli Woods, the model is designed to offer a different path.
Rather than needing to set up your own firm to benefit financially from your success, advisers are able to share in the growth they create within an employed, supported environment. This removes the pressure of building a business from scratch, while still allowing you to develop your client base and progress commercially.
For many, this provides a more sustainable route – where you can focus on becoming a better adviser, building relationships and delivering high-quality advice, without taking on the additional complexity and risk of running your own firm.