Why a framework at all
Most advisor transitions are evaluated the same way: a recruiter pitches a payout, the advisor compares it to current take-home, and a decision gets made on the delta. That works often enough that it keeps happening. It also doesn't work often enough that more than half of advisors who change firms have done it three or more times.
The 6C Alignment Framework exists because the variables that predict long-term satisfaction are not the variables that get pitched. Culture, peer community, workflow compatibility, capability depth, real take-home over five years, and capital optionality all matter more than the headline transition number. The framework forces those into a structured comparison so the easy variables don't crowd out the predictive ones.
The six dimensions
Each C is one lens. Together they give a full picture of whether a platform actually fits a practice's reality and goals.
| Dimension | What it covers | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Culture | Leadership philosophy, autonomy, compliance environment, how decisions get made. | Determines daily experience and whether an advisor still wants to be there in five years. |
| Community | Peer network, specialist access, learning ecosystem, sense of belonging. | Top-performing advisors consistently cite peer learning as a top-three driver of growth. |
| Compatibility | Workflow fit between the firm's systems and the practice's actual operations. | Misalignment shows up as workarounds - shadow systems that drain energy long after onboarding. |
| Capability | Products, planning depth, transition support, operational scalability. | Decides whether the platform can support the practice you're trying to build, not just the one you have today. |
| Compensation | Take-home payout over the full life of the relationship - grid, transition deal, hidden costs. | Year-three economics matter more than year-one, and almost no pitch leads with year three. |
| Capital | Succession flexibility, equity opportunities, valuation support, exit optionality. | The dimension under-50 advisors underweight and over-60 advisors wish they had taken seriously sooner. |
Why the order matters
The six Cs are intentionally ordered from intangible to tangible. Culture and Community shape the daily experience. Compatibility and Capability determine how the practice operates. Compensation and Capital only matter once the foundation is right. The principle is simple: no amount of money fixes a cultural mismatch.
That ordering matters because the natural human tendency in any high-stakes decision is to lean on the dimensions that are easiest to measure. Payout is a number. Culture is a feeling. Numbers are easier to argue about, so they tend to dominate. The framework's job is to keep the harder-to-measure dimensions in the conversation long enough to actually weigh them.
The most common phrase in post-transition regret conversations is: "the economics worked, but I didn't realize how different the culture would feel."
Scoring an option
The scoring exercise is straightforward in concept and revealing in practice. For each dimension, an advisor rates two things on a 1-to-5 scale:
- Importance - how critical is this to your success? (1 = nice to have, 5 = dealbreaker)
- Satisfaction - how well does the platform you're evaluating actually deliver?
The gap between importance and satisfaction is the signal. A two-point gap on a high-importance dimension is a critical alignment problem. A two-point gap on a low-importance dimension is something you can live with. The mathematics aren't fancy - they just keep the conversation honest.
The structured scoring checklist
For each dimension, before you score, answer:
- What does "great" actually look like to me here?
- What did I learn about this dimension from talking to advisors who joined the firm in the last 18 months?
- Where could the firm be telling me what I want to hear?
- How does this compare to what I have today?
Score your current firm first. The exercise of scoring what you already have, honestly, surfaces the real reasons you're considering a change. Sometimes those reasons turn out to be addressable without a transition. Sometimes the act of writing them down makes a transition obviously the right call.
Five mistakes to avoid
1. Leading with payout
The transition number is the easiest to compare and the worst predictor of long-term satisfaction. Advisors who choose primarily on transition economics are disproportionately the ones who move again within five years. The deal is the entry, not the relationship.
2. Trusting the demo
Technology demos show happy paths under controlled conditions. The real workflow lives in trust accounts, multi-custodian households, and complex billing scenarios. Insist on a walkthrough of your hardest account, not a sample one.
3. Skipping reference advisors
Firms will offer their top advisors as references. Those calls have value but they're filtered. Ask to talk to advisors who joined 12-18 months ago, picked at random. They remember the transition pain clearly and they've had time to see the gap between pitch and reality.
4. Ignoring Capital until you need it
Succession optionality looks abstract at 45 and becomes urgent at 60. By 60 you have far less leverage. The right time to factor Capital into a platform decision is the platform decision before it matters most - which is usually now.
5. Treating culture as a tiebreaker
Culture is not the soft dimension you weigh after the hard numbers. It's the dimension that determines whether you'll still be at the new firm in five years. If the only way the firm "fits" is by setting culture aside, the framework is telling you something.
How to apply the framework this week
If you're seriously evaluating options, three steps move the conversation forward:
- Score your current firm. Honestly. Where are the gaps? Which ones are addressable? Which ones are structural?
- Identify your top three priorities. Not what you're supposed to want - what actually matters to you. Your career stage and where the practice is going both shape this.
- Stress-test one alternative. One firm, scored on the same six dimensions, with the questions in this article driving the conversation rather than the firm's pitch deck.
You don't need to make any decision at the end of that exercise. You'll just have a clearer picture than you did before, which is the whole point.