Why I Tell Advisors to Throw Away Their Scripts

Melissa CaroAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Scripts are part of a framework in advisor training. They can be quite useful (sometimes even necessary) when the flow just isn’t… flowing. A script helps make sure key points aren’t forgotten, expectations are set, and client meetings don’t veer off course.

In the early stages, they’re a lifesaver. Scripts stop fumbling intros. They give newer advisors a backbone to lean on. They ensure the important things get said.

But the same tool that fixes one problem can create another. Hold on to a script for too long, and it stops sounding like guidance and starts sounding like a bank disclosure. Clients tune out at the exact moment you need them to lean in. That’s when I know it’s time to remove the training wheels.

The Irony of Scripts

The irony is that the advisors who benefit most from scripts in the beginning are the ones most likely to cling to them. Six months later, I’ve heard some of them still delivering the same words in the same wooden tone. Instead of learning how to connect, they’ve learned dependency.

Clients notice. They may not call it out directly, but they feel it. The conversation doesn’t sound personal; it sounds processed. And what’s meant to build trust instead erodes it.

Why Scripts Exist

Advisors rely on scripts because client meetings are demanding. In any single session, you’re expected to build rapport, gather sensitive details, explain your process, and leave the client feeling like their time was well spent.

That’s a lot to juggle, and newer advisors often miss pieces of it. They forget to set expectations, skip key questions, or fail to lock in the next meeting. A script provides a safety net. It keeps the meeting on track and gives the advisor a sense of control.

And in the short run, it works. Meetings run smoother. Fewer details fall through the cracks. The advisor feels steadier. But confidence built on someone else’s words only carries you so far.