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Home News

UFAA-sanctioned conference leaves advisers high and dry

An overseas conference sanctioned by a recently established industry association has left advisers high and dry by advertising CPD points attached to the event that were never awarded.

by Staff Writer
June 10, 2020
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The Real Future of Advice Conference, hosted in Vietnam by advice group Australian Advisory in September last year, attracted over 350 attendees, of which more than 100 were advisers entitled to CPD.

The event, which was attended by ifa at the time, was promoted by the United Financial Advisers Association. While the website associated with the conference has been taken down, an existing promotional video bills the event as attracting 20 CPD points, and being jointly hosted by the UFAA, Australian Advisory and Consilium Advice.

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Insurance 4 U principal adviser Lester Beling told ifa he spent around $7,000 on attending the conference including flights and accommodation, and has yet to receive his CPD points from the event.

“They still haven’t sent me my certificate – the guy running the CPD has done nothing,” Mr Beling said.

“In real money it would have cost me around $7,000, but in time away from the business it cost me around $10,000 to $12,000 because I was travelling for nearly 10 days.” 

Mr Beling said he was disappointed with the conference content which “didn’t have anything to do with financial planning or insurance”, and has chased the UFAA repeatedly for the advertised points.

“[UFAA managing director] Alex Vagliviello came to my house in Melbourne and tried to placate me,” he said.

Responding to ifa queries, a spokesperson for the UFAA said the association had no responsibility for organising the event.

“The UFAA’s involvement was to only send out invitations to people who had registered via the UFAA website,” the spokesperson said.

“The conference was hosted by the group Australian Advisory and at that time Australian Advisory was the holding company of Consilium Advice.”

The UFAA said Consilium Advice held ultimate responsibility for marketing and attendee registration. CPD for the event was contracted to a separate registered training organisation that was advised of the 108 financial planners who had attended, the spokesperson said.

Australian Advisory was contacted for comment but did not respond before deadline.

Tags: Exclusive

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Comments 12

  1. Anonymous says:
    5 years ago

    Quick look at their website tells me I wouldn’t want to get involved in anything those blokes do

    Reply
  2. Anon says:
    5 years ago

    I can’t help but think that if you’re attending a $7k conference in Vietnam you deserve these things to happen to you. I bet they are also complaining about the cost of completing a few subjects to make sure they still have a job as well

    Reply
  3. Anonymous says:
    5 years ago

    Funny in Financial Planning the hours you get depend on the association that runs the course, and the amount that is paid for accreditation and whether you pay them $60,000 a year to be a member. No wonder FASEA scrapped that and said it’s not working and it’s certainly not how professionals work. Yet advisers continue to subscribe to that flawed process of self interest between associations and licensee’s, have a think about that when you’re sitting at your Kaplan program and you renew your fees.

    Reply
  4. Amanda says:
    5 years ago

    Pass it onto the AFA – they’ll give it 20 hours no questions asked mate 😉

    Reply
    • Anonymous says:
      5 years ago

      Or the FPA but the issue here is these licensee’s are not part of the professional partner program…not the quality.

      Reply
  5. Steve says:
    5 years ago

    Covid19 has fixed that problem

    Reply
  6. Anonymous says:
    5 years ago

    At least the UFAA is so much better than the FPA. This is the proof!

    Reply
  7. Sam says:
    5 years ago

    Why is this newsworthy

    Reply
    • Ann says:
      5 years ago

      smacks of a hidden agenda to publish a story like this

      Reply
      • Anonymous says:
        5 years ago

        perhaps it’s bringing to attention that CPD points are awarded based on the type of membership association and who pays who. Unlike other professions that don’t have these conflicts, nor the stricter requirements.

        Reply
  8. Confused? says:
    5 years ago

    the conference content which “didn’t have anything to do with financial planning or insurance”…why should there CPD applied then???

    Reply
    • Homer says:
      5 years ago

      Because he spent around $7,000 on attending the conference including flights and accommodation

      Reply

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