Selecting the right professionals to help you through your divorce process will be critical to your outcomes and your future.
Divorce Financial Professionals are specialists. Just as physicians first become professionals, then specialize, so do financial professionals. To continue the analogy, you would not want your primary care physician to perform your open heart surgery; you want a cardiac surgeon, a specialist. Likewise, when you need a divorce financial specialist, a general financial professional just won't due. Specialists have specialized knowledge and training.
If you were to ask your financial planner or accountant to assist you with your divorce in some way, not only may they not be specifically qualified to do so, you may present them with an ethical problem by making that request. They will want to be responsive and helpful, and they will do something, even if it may not be what you need. In addition, if you have joint accounts with your spouse, or file joint tax returns, your request presents a significant ethical dilemma regarding how to provide equal and unbiased service to both of you. That is something which is nearly humanly impossible, and they will most likely fall short of doing so. The best thing they could do would be to refer you to a divorce financial specialist.
First and foremost, your divorce financial advisor should be:
Less than 2% of all persons, who present themselves as "qualified," can actually meet ALL of the above criteria. You will need to ask smart questions to identify who we are but we are out here.
The Institute for Divorce Financial Analysts (IDFA) is the prominent organization dedicated to the education and certification of divorce financial professionals. The certification conferred on successful candidates is Certified Divorce Financial Analyst (CDFA). Additionally, they offer an advanced certification: Advanced Divorce Financial Analyst (ADFA).
First and foremost, your divorce financial professional ought to have already been a financial services professional, such as a financial planner, financial advisor, or public accountant. These professionals routinely work with other clients, regarding various aspects of personal finance, over extended periods of time. In a few rare cases, attorneys or paralegals have also earned the CDFA designation. Since you will also have a divorce attorney, remain focused on finding strong financial expertise. The IDFA website states that:
"The CDFA is someone who comes from a financial planning, accounting, or legal background....CDFA practitioners must have a minimum of three years work experience in a financial or legal capacity prior to earning the right to use the CDFA certification mark."
Know that you have the right, and owe it to yourself, to ask questions when contemplating hiring a professional who will play a key role in the determination of your future financial well-being.
Again, solid professional experience in financial planning or accounting provides the foundation and underpinnings of a highly qualified divorce financial professional. Having been divorced does not instantly make someone a divorce expert.
Other divorce financial certifications that are held by practitioners are: Certified Divorce Planner (CDP), Certified Financial Divorce Practitioner (CFDP®), and Certified Financial Divorce Specialist (CFDS). Most of these additional certifications had no particular prerequisites, or, unfortunately, may have been granted in reciprocity with one another.
Because most divorce financial professionals are financial services professionals, the IDFA (the primary certifying organization mentioned above) relies upon a practitioner's existing record as an indication of character and depth of financial knowledge. From the IDFA website:
"In order to become a CDFA professional, a candidate must be in good standing with his or her firm or broker/dealer and any governmental regulatory agencies."
Overall, know and understand the competencies of your divorce financial professional. Having studied finance in school or worked as a bank teller is simply not the "professional financial services experience" you require.
If you are interviewing divorce financial professionals for your collaborative divorce team, you need someone with even more additional specialized training. The International Academy of Collaborative Professionals (IACP) outlines minimum standards for Collaborative Financial Practitioners as having:
"Professional license in good standing....that requires a broad-based financial background and continuing education, and that is regulated by a governing body under a code of ethics....Background, education and experience in.... followed by a listing of a number of financial services areas apart from the financial aspects of divorce."
In addition, the IACP requires specific education in the "financial fundamentals of divorce giving the financial professional a basic understanding of family law. This requirement is met by successfully earning and maintaining the financial divorce certifications discussed above. Therefore, even a highly qualified financial services professional cannot be trained in or practice collaborative divorce without first being certified in the finances of divorce specialty.
The IACP further requires that Financial Practitioners have "interdisciplinary Collaborative training" as well as specific "client centered, facilitative conflict resolution training of the type typically taught in mediation training. All practitioners are also required to be current regarding continuing education requirements in all areas."
In summary, a prospective Financial Neutral, the title for the financial member of your collaborative divorce team, must first be a financial services professional, then be certified as a divorce financial specialist, then additionally be trained as a collaborative practitioner.
© 2015 Rosemary Frank Financial, LLC Educational purposes only. No financial, legal or tax advice provided.
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