Employment requires more luck than hardwork - Financial Consultant Equitable Advisors Employee Review

3.0
Apr 11, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

*Free to set schedule (most of time, if traditional, or non-RBG group) *Easy to join even with no finance background; may help you get experience other firms need before they'll consider you. *Online training and frequent branch training (though sometimes too frequent). *Cumulative quotas means, if you are lucky, one big case can set you ahead for years. (Though falling behind can also make the next "validation" period much harder.).

Cons

*High turnover rate - majority stay less than a year; better (or luckier) offices keep maybe 25% of new hires past 4 years, though a lot retain less than 5%. *Rigid quotas (Contrary to popular opinion, they CAN make AN exception once if you miss the deadline however it's VERY rare. Even if you do, you must make up the missing production on top of your next quota or else.) *Sure, can set own schedule, but new "advisors" should expect to spend 80% or more of their time as a telemarketer/mailbox stuffer if you want to stay expect 80+ hrs/wk unless you have a lot of rich friends/family or if you pay for an assistant. *Cannot retain clients upon leaving. Your accounts will eventually be given out in orphan call lists for other new hires to telemarket. (Note: Plenty of firms do not put a non-compete in their contract.) *Even if you close more life sales than your peers, a string of bad luck could cause every one of your cases to be rejected by underwriting.

Explore other reviews about Equitable Advisors

5.0
Apr 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Compensation structure, product availability, brokerage system, overall tools, open structure to do best for your clients

Cons

Support staff are more hands off, not a lot of in house support staff members.

1.0
Jun 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Complete freedom to build your book of business anmd schedule.

Cons

Horrendous place to start. Managers run their own practice and have little to no time to actually help you outside of your joint meetings so you're on your own. They only give you 2 options to get clients, cold calling or their retirement benefits group through schools. Basically the whole advising piece is to just to sell life insurance and annuities. The support staff is thin so you're kind of on your own with paperwork and compliance docs. They just genuinely offer you nothing. No help with covering costs (you pay for all your licensing and marketing materials), they even charge you for using the company laptop and fees for programs you will never use. They will mislead you about the commission payouts and you only really get something if you get them to buy an annuity or life insurance. If you also have a remaining balance of any fees when you leave, they will literally sending you threatening letters demanding the money and threaten you with claims court if you don't pay it back.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All