X
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the ifa bulletin
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Risk
  • Events
  • Video
  • Promoted Content
  • Webcasts
No Results
View All Results
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Risk
  • Events
  • Video
  • Promoted Content
  • Webcasts
No Results
View All Results
No Results
View All Results
Home News

Could SOAs remain in a different format?

QAR’s promise to cull the overbearing paperwork that has become synonymous with advice is the most anticipated.

by Reporter
January 31, 2023
in News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Speaking on a recent ifa podcast, Scott Miller CEO of Asendium reflected on his time as an adviser, noting that an overwhelming amount of paperwork has since crippled the industry.

Statements of Advice (SOA) are customarily loathed by advisers, not only because they swallow a large chunk of an adviser’s time but because they considerably cut into their profit margins. As such, technology providers are always looking for new ways to simplify processes and enable advisers more one-on-one time with their clients.

X

Asendium’s latest offering promises to do just that.

“The main challenge of bottleneck did end up being the SOA. It could be a four-to-eight-week turnaround time, a $1,000 document and so the way we’re addressing not only past challenges, but future challenges are with what we’ve developed over the last six months, which is what we’re calling a statement of digital advice,” Mr Miller explained.

“It’s a new mechanism in order to manage, create, store and document advice strategies, risk bids that are personalised to each individual user.”

One of the challenges that a lot of industry participants face is the customisation of an SOA, Mr Miller explained.

“Every planner, including myself, has their own unique way of wanting to explain things or document things. The previous ways to manage that, and even the current ways are quite cumbersome, expensive, and time-consuming to manage an SOA. Simply getting an SOA into a legacy system can take up to three months and then it’s the management from there and it’s the tens of thousands of dollars to look after it,” he said.

“One of the main challenges of the SOA creation phase is really the post-editing time. Sometimes it takes longer to post-edit the SOA coming out of a system than it actually does to create the SOA in the system. Some planners and paraplanners we’ve spoken to, take anywhere from two to eight hours in post-editing of an SOA,” he continued.

What Asendium has done is it has built a unique statement of digital advice mechanism that allows it to easily manage all strategies and wording for every planner and every user.

“We have digitised and stored all the strategies ready to be retrieved based on the individual circumstances from that Asendium login. Once you can configure your SOA and how you deliver advice into Ascendium, even if it’s 16,000 different ways, one for every planner, we can handle that; we do that through our SODA system as we like to call it,” Mr Miller noted.

“Now, one of the benefits of this system is minimal post-editing so it gets post-editing down to under an hour and we’re looking to improve that even further. The speed to market now only takes two to four weeks to get a comprehensive, complex SOA in with a library of wording.”

Commenting on QAR’s promise to scrap SOAs, Mr Miller said the general consensus in the industry is that SOAs will remain but in a different format.

“What I’m hearing throughout the industry is licensees, planners will still do an SOA, but they’re not going to give that SOA to a client, they’re going to give a more friendly, understandable client-facing document if that proposal is to go through,” Mr Miller said.

“You look at the SOA now, not as a client-facing document but as a compliance document, which is what it has so badly become, it’s just filled with coveralls and ticking boxes to make sure the compliance is checked off. It’s not really made to be easily read and understood.

“If that comes through, I see a lot of planners switch into more digital presentations or a shorter client-friendly document to explain the advice with the SOA being held on file and that seems to be some of the trends I’m hearing from licensees as well,” he concluded.

To hear more from Mr Miller click here.

Related Posts

Image/Commonwealth Government

Mulino remains committed to ‘complicated’ DBFO reforms

by Keith Ford
November 13, 2025
4

Speaking at the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) Conference on the Gold Coast, Financial Services Minister Daniel Mulino...

Advice reform legislation essential for positive results: HGA

by Alex Driscoll
November 13, 2025
0

Speaking on the ifa Show podcast Andrew Gale and Stephen Huppert from the Actuaries Institute’s Help, Guidance and Advice Working...

InterPrac, SQM Research hit with lawsuits over alleged Shield, First Guardian failures

by Keith Ford
November 13, 2025
8

On Thursday morning, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) announced it has commenced civil penalty proceedings against InterPrac and...

Comments 1

  1. No SoAs says:
    3 years ago

    Hopefully SoAs don’t remain at all

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VIEW ALL
Promoted Content

Private Credit in Transition: Governance, Growth, and the Road Ahead

Private credit is reshaping commercial real estate finance. Success now depends on collaboration, discipline, and strong governance across the market.

by Zagga
October 29, 2025
Promoted Content

Boring can be brilliant: why steady investing builds lasting wealth

Excitement sells stories, not stability. For long-term wealth, consistency and compounding matter most — proving that sometimes boring is the...

by Zagga
September 30, 2025
Promoted Content

Helping clients build wealth? Boring often works best.

Excitement drives headlines, but steady returns build wealth. Real estate private credit delivers predictable performance, even through volatility.

by Zagga
September 26, 2025
Promoted Content

Navigating Cardano Staking Rewards and Investment Risks for Australian Investors

Australian investors increasingly view Cardano (ADA) as a compelling cryptocurrency investment opportunity, particularly through staking mechanisms that generate passive income....

by Underfive
September 4, 2025

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

Poll

This poll has closed

Do you have clients that would be impacted by the proposed Division 296 $3 million super tax?
Vote
www.ifa.com.au is a digital platform that offers daily online news, analysis, reports, and business strategy content that is specifically designed to address the issues and industry developments that are most relevant to the evolving financial planning industry in Australia. The platform is dedicated to serving advisers and is created with their needs and interests as the primary focus.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About IFA

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • News
  • Risk
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Promoted Content
  • Video
  • Profiles
  • Events

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Risk
  • Events
  • Video
  • Promoted Content
  • Webcasts
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited