If you’re looking for investment advice, should you be working with a financial planner,
a financial adviser, an investment adviser, or a stockbroker?
Do their titles make a difference, or do all these people provide essentially the same information and services?
The answer is that financial professionals do have different roles, and under certain circumstances, a person with a particular title or set of credentials may be more helpful to you than a person with different qualifications.
Professional designations can be confusing, in part because the distinctions among them are not intuitive. What’s more, in some cases titles are used interchangeably, so that a person who is certified as a financial planner is sometimes called a financial adviser, and at certain brokerage firms, stockbrokers are called Financial Advisers or Financial Executives. In addition, some people have multiple credentials and works as both advisers and brokers.