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Florida Financial Advisors

Engaged Employer

Florida Financial Advisors reviews

4.2

80% would recommend to a friend

(186 total reviews)
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Jason Mickool

90% approve of CEO

82% positive business outlook

Florida Financial Advisors has an employee rating of 4.2 out of 5 stars, based on 186 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an excellent working experience there. The Florida Financial Advisors employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Financial Services industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

186 reviews
1.0
Jan 22, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Culture is great, fun co-workers, out-of-office activities often

Cons

Do not take this job if you are straight out of college and have little - no savings. The LinkedIn post says $70k-$100k for first year employees, which is not true at all. I knew people who had been working there for 3+ months, and hadn't made a SINGLE CENT. They aren't transparent about job at all before you come into office. For example, I found out the day before I started that you go in at 7:30 am and don't get off till past 6pm most days. Also, all you do for the first couple months is cold call people pretty much all day. The licensing process takes ~ 3 months before you can even go in the office and start. They say they reimburse you for these exams (which are around $800 total, plus another ~$120 to get registered with fingerprints, etc.) once you get into the office, but really you have to hit your "fast start" before they give you that money back, which takes most people at least 6 months. You're relying solely on your manager to make you money at first, and some of the managers don't care about you or your success. Overall fun place to work at and there is definitely room to grow and succeed, but it will take years of dirty work and 60+ hour work-weeks. Good luck though.

4.0
Jun 24, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You can make a lot of money if it works out... They provide office space and leads. FFA pays for your licensing fees to the state. Most independent shops make you pay those fees yourself. They train you in sales and once you can set appointments you move on to financial planning classes. The culture is laid back. There is literally no HR You can vape in the office. You can drink in the office. Adderall openly flows

Cons

300 calls/10 appointments a week minimum - the job can be a GRIND No benefits, base salary, or 401k. Independent contractor type of job It's kind of a start up You usually don't make much money in the beginning. Success comes not at all then all at once. Here's what you'll do: 1. Download target contact info from websites that sell this information (Zoominfo.com) 2. Add these people on LinkedIn 3. Cold call them offering financial advice 4. Run them through a series of meetings and make recommendations on product (usually annuities, insurance, or managed money) 5. Repeat forever Your job starts out cold calling and setting meetings to be run by managers in the office (who take a small cut of the sale but close the business). Once you get good at that you start running meetings yourself and get the opportunity to make a cut of others sales. Eventually you get given a team who you run their meetings but this could be almost anytime, even weekends. Not much work/life balance but you could make good money once you start running meetings for your team.

1.0
Apr 6, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The office environment is very non-corporate. Dress code is very flexible with no set guidelines. +90% of the staff are straight out of college or in there 20s, which makes the workplace feel fun and carefree.

Cons

Here’s the reality of the whole company and the day-in day-out for new advisor hires. Predatory, manipulative, unethical. Starting with the “sponsorship program”. There is no actual hiring criteria or requirements. They will give you the job as long as you can breathe air - was told this from an employee on the sponsorship team. They will only give you a week to accept the offer, giving a false perception of an extremely competitive position. You’ll be required to pass three license exams and this is where the unprecedented levels of gaslighting starts. (We have the mind of a capitalist, with the heart of a social worker) is what the woman who runs the Tampa office uses to describe the company culture. This couldn’t be further from the truth. Once you start in office you will do nothing finance related. You will be cold calling for 10-12 hours everyday for months. (This isn’t a financial advisor job, it’s a sales job) is what the woman who runs Tampa told a colleague the day they quit. For the first 3 hours everyday, you will be in internal meetings where you only learn how to “sell” annuities and indexed universal life insurance products. The company has quarterly and annual expectations which are quotas without them using that word. If you don’t meet them they will tell you how horrible, lazy, and undedicated your work performance is and constantly compare you to the “top performers”. At the end of the day, results are driven by luck. I watched hundreds of naive, first job out of college kids make 10s of thousands of cold calls with the same results and only 1-2% getting lucky enough to have one of the “managers” get a commission for them that will keep you afloat financially for a few months. They will tell you in the interviews that they have the best retention rates in the industry. The actual retention rate might be 5% after the first year of employment. I was asked by the woman who runs Tampa if I liked living in poverty with the level of income I was receiving after being there for 6 months. One of the worst aspects of the company is the push for every advisor to go into “management”. This is the structure of a classic pyramid scheme. Drinking the cool aid is the only way to make money with the company long-term. Even though they sub-contract all new advisors as 1099, which is a non-compensated employee, they demand you follow the model of cold calling and do nothing else to generate business for yourself. I’ve never felt more condescended or shamed for the job I was doing in my entire life, having worked a dozen of positions over the past 15 years. I was berated in front of other employees multiple times and even have current employees message me about the woman running Tampa making comments about me months after leaving the company. I’m grateful for opportunity I had, but my mental health was seriously declining after being apart of this company and it made me never want to be apart of an RIA ever again. I made $24,000 my first full year, which is the same level income I had when I was working at a pizza restaurant at 18 years old. The 5-star reviews are the “district managers” being forced to give false perception of the company. Be careful if you want to sell your book of business. They will cut you off from internal software and CRM if they have the slightest inclination that you are moving on. I could write a novel about my experience, especially with the “leadership” of the company, but for the sake of getting sued, I’ll leave it here.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 186 Reviews

Glassdoor has 213 Florida Financial Advisors reviews submitted anonymously by Florida Financial Advisors employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Florida Financial Advisors is right for you.