Six steps , four risk profile components , three portfolio types (defensive, balanced, growth): this is financial planning by the numbers.
A computer could do it.
The truth is software is already deeply embedded in the financial advice process but most clients, to date, have preferred it to have a human face, leaving the systems to operate behind the scenes.
But a new Australian company is having a crack at deleting the humans from their traditional 'client-facing' positions.
Officially launched late last year, Trulity promises its customers a fully-rounded financial advisory experience for a flat fee of only A$27 per month.
"The software produces exactly what you would receive if you visited a financial planner but does so at a fraction of the cost," the Trulity website boasts.
Tellingly, Trulity wasn't created as a revenge project by a disgruntled ex-client with nerdish, digital expertise but by an experienced former financial planner steeped in the traditional ways.