Structural Separation: How the Process Resolves the Two Masters Problem
Advice-Only™: Transparent by Design · Quincy Hall, CFP®
Resources
Episode 2: Structural Separation as the Foundation of Objectivity
Advice-Only™: Transparent by Design · Quincy Hall, CFP®
Episode Summary
In this episode, Quincy Hall, CFP®, details the three Process Principles—The Fee Structure Firewall, Separation of Planning and Implementation, and Ethical Transparency—that structurally resolve the Two Masters Problem. He explains how the Advice-Only Methodology makes objectivity a structural feature of the process, so your advisor is financially, legally, and structurally aligned only with you.
Full Episode Transcript
You’re listening to Advice-Only: Transparent by Design, with Quincy Hall, CFP. Today, we’re moving from talking about transparency to revealing how it quietly takes shape within the process. We’ll look at how the Advice-Only Methodology makes objectivity a natural outcome—so the structure, not the advisor, resolves the Two Masters Problem. I’m Quincy Hall, Founder and President of Advice-Only, and author of the book Advice-Only: A Retirement Planning Methodology & Handbook.
Structurally Ensuring Objectivity
In our last episode, we introduced the Two Masters Problem: the structural tension between serving a client’s best interest and serving a firm’s compensation model. That tension isn’t rare—it’s simply how the marketplace is built. The Advice-Only Methodology was created to neutralize these conflicts before they can form.
We do that by separating advice from all new forms of implementation, so objectivity isn’t dependent on an advisor’s intentions—instead, it’s built into the process. Our system is organized around three Process Principles. Together, these principles create a consistent, objective, and truly doubt-free planning experience. And they’re designed to be teachable, repeatable, and accessible—so objective advice isn’t limited to a select few, but available to anyone who seeks it. Here’s how it works.
Process Principle #1: The Fee Structure Firewall
The first and strongest defense against conflicted advice is the Fee Structure Firewall. Compensation shapes incentives—and incentives shape behavior.
-
Fixed-or-Hourly-Fees Only
Here, planning is billed as a fixed project fee or hourly rate, paid directly by you, the client. -
Zero Conflicted Compensation During Planning
To keep advice fully objective, the planning engagement is completely isolated from all new implementation. During this phase, the advisor may not receive—directly or indirectly—any compensation tied to assets, products, or future business. The only payment allowed is your planning fee.
This means:
- No asset-based compensation
- No commissions or product-linked pay
- No sales or transaction revenue
- No soft-dollar or firm-level incentives
- No reciprocal or expectation-based referral arrangements
In short: the advisor cannot earn—or expect to earn—anything from implementation while the plan is being created. This is what separates Advice-Only from Fee-Only. Fee-Only can still involve asset-based fees and has no solution for post-plan incentives. The Advice-Only process removes these incentives during the planning process entirely and, as needed, once the plan is fully developed.
Zero Asset-Based Qualification
The final point under the Fee Structure Firewall is the rejection of “qualifying” clients by assets or income.
Objectivity requires equal access. This firewall ensures our incentives align solely with your benefit.
Process Principle #2: Separation of Planning and Implementation
The second principle creates a strict separation between planning and execution. This ensures recommendations aren’t influenced by the possibility of future implementation.
- Advice Comes First: Your engagement culminates with a written, detailed plan.
- Implementation discussions happen only after the advice is fully delivered—and only at your independent request.
- Prohibition of Co-Mingling: An advice meeting and a solicitation meeting can never occur at the same time.
There’s no cross-selling, upselling, or nudging during the planning phase.
Post-Engagement Implementation: If you, independently and free of influence, choose to work with the advisor or firm for execution, it must be under a separate, clearly priced agreement—legally and operationally distinct from the Advice-Only planning process.
This ensures your plan is a document of pure advice—not a lead-in to a sale—while still giving you access to an expert’s experience and personalized help if you choose to pursue it separately.
Process Principle #3: Ethical Transparency and Accountability
The third principle establishes a public, documentable system of accountability.
- Mandatory Paid Advisory Agreement: Every engagement begins with a paid, written Advisory Agreement. This formalizes a fiduciary duty from the very first consultation—not after assets move, and not after an account is opened.
- Documented Referrals: Referral incentives of any kind are prohibited. If a referral is appropriate, the advisor must document the potential conflict and have all parties acknowledge it before the referral is given.
When the Fee Structure Firewall, the Separation of Planning and Implementation, and Ethical Transparency operate together, the result is simple: your advisor is financially, legally, and structurally aligned only with you.
This is what makes the Advice-Only Methodology unique—and what allows it to deliver clarity, consistency, and a truly doubt-free planning experience.
You’ve been listening to Advice-Only: Transparent by Design, with Quincy Hall, CFP. If you found this helpful, follow the show for short, real-world stories that bring deconflicted planning to life.
In our next episode, we’ll tackle one of the biggest objections to advice-first models: “Who pays for implementation?” And we’ll show how our structure answers that question while keeping advice deconflicted.