Silver Oak Securities CEO Billy Hopkins Named CEO of the Year at ThinkAdvisor 2025 Luminaries Awards

By 2034, the industry could face a shortage of 90,000 to 110,000 advisors — roughly 30% to 37% of current headcount — at current productivity levels, according to McKinsey. McKinsey also estimates that the number of advised relationships will grow at least 28% over the next decade, from 53 million today to at least 67 million by 2034. Meanwhile, Cerulli Associates projects that $84.4 trillion in wealth will transfer across generations through 2045, with $72.6 trillion going directly to heirs. 

But the much-discussed advisor talent shortage isn’t a supply problem; plenty of capable, motivated people want to build careers in this industry. The gap is in development.

Experienced advisors aren’t building environments that foster next-gen talent, and that’s a missed opportunity.

The demand curve is steep and rising, while the curve heads in the opposite direction. The advisors best positioned to capitalize on the impending chasm are the ones preparing to exit. Many of them have 30 or 40 years of experience, strong books of business, and hard-won knowledge that took decades to accumulate. If that knowledge walks out the door with them, no amount of recruiting will make up for it.

Why Firms That Want to Win Can’t Wait

Most advisors hire reactively, waiting until they’re stretched thin and then searching for a unicorn employee who can contribute immediately. But as experienced advisors continue to exit, waiting is no longer a viable option. 

Younger advisors need time to learn the work. They need to observe client conversations before they lead them and make mistakes in low-stakes situations before they’re trusted with complex ones. The kind of growth required to excel in our profession doesn’t happen within a six-month runway. It builds over years, and only when a senior advisor makes an intentional commitment to teach.

Hiring early is also a retention strategy. Research consistently shows that client attrition spikes sharply when a practice changes hands without built-in continuity. A client who has met your junior advisor, worked with them on smaller matters, and trusts them is less likely to walk away when leadership eventually transitions. 

What to Look for in a Next-Gen Candidate

Resist the urge to hire a finished product. This goal is to find someone who can learn, not someone who already knows everything. 

The traits that characterize advisory success in this role are less technical than you might expect: curiosity, communication skills, coachability, work ethic, and comfort discussing difficult or sensitive matters with clients. 

Test for these things directly. Ask candidates to explain a financial concept to you as if you’re a first-time investor. Have them sit in on a client meeting and debrief afterward. Give them a real scenario, not a theoretical one, and see how they approach it. What you’re evaluating is more about judgment and the willingness to grow than knowledge parroted back from a course or textbook. 

Invest in Development

Even advisors with the best mentoring and career development intentions can get sidetracked by the week-to-week demands of running a practice. But that leaves a junior advisor adrift, uncertain, and more likely to leave the profession entirely.

Build mentorship into a structured schedule with dedicated weekly touchpoints, gradual client exposure marked by clear milestones, and a defined progression of responsibility, so the junior advisor always knows what they’re working toward. 

One advisor recently shared a set of leads he’d ignored for nearly a decade with a younger colleague on his team, who had the knowledge and confidence to start working them. Now the senior advisor is more engaged in his own business than he’s been in years, and referrals have started flowing again. The mentorship benefited the senior advisor, the junior colleague, the leads who are now being advised, and the firm itself.

The Business Impact of Cultivating the Next Generation

Nearly 38% of today’s advisors are expected to retire within the next decade. Advisors who invest in developing younger talent will be able to capture the demand from the impending exit wave while retaining existing clients. 

Hiring a junior advisor isn’t a favor to the industry; it’s a strategic decision that expands your capacity, deepens your client relationships, and increases the long-term value of what you’ve built. Every experienced advisor who commits to developing one person creates a multiplier effect that the industry desperately needs.

JACKSON, Tenn.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Billy Hopkins, Founder and CEO of Silver Oak Securities, a leading independent broker-dealer and SEC Registered Investment Advisor, was recently named CEO of the Year at the ThinkAdvisor 2025 Luminaries Awards. Now in its fifth year, the ThinkAdvisor Luminaries Awards continue to redefine excellence in financial services, spotlighting outstanding contributions from both organizations and individuals.

The CEO of the Year award honors chief executives who demonstrate exceptional leadership through strong client service, innovation in programs and platforms, and measurable organizational growth. Hopkins was recognized for his work building Silver Oak into one of the fastest-growing independent broker-dealers in America while maintaining an unwavering commitment to advisor independence. Under his leadership, the firm has grown to 137 branch locations and 196 registered representatives as of December 31, 2025.

“We’re honored by this recognition from ThinkAdvisor,” said Hopkins. “The award belongs to our entire team and the financial professionals who trust us to support their practices. Everything we do centers on one principle: empowering advisors to serve their clients with excellence while building enduring businesses that reflect their own values.”

The firm continues to expand its advisor-centric platform, most recently launching AFX Custom Models, a curated series of multi-manager model portfolios featuring institutional-grade investment solutions from industry-leading asset managers including Invesco, Fidelity Investments,, and Aptus Capital Advisors.

“The 2025 Luminaries Awards continue to set new standards for excellence in financial services,” said Janet Levaux, editor-in-chief of ThinkAdvisor. “This year’s honorees shine not only through bold leadership and groundbreaking innovation, but also through their deep commitment to strengthening communities and advancing the industry. Their achievements highlight the dynamic, evolving nature of financial services, and we are proud to showcase their work as an inspiring example for others to follow.”

A panel of independent judges composed of distinguished industry professionals determined the 2025 winners, who were recognized at an awards ceremony at the New York Hilton Midtown on December 4th.

For more information about Silver Oak, visit www.joinsilveroaksecurities.com, and follow Billy Hopkins on Linkedin for compelling insights about Silver Oak’s approach to supporting independent advisors.

About Silver Oak Securities

Silver Oak Securities, Inc. is an independent, full-service Broker-Dealer and SEC-Registered Investment Advisor committed to supporting independent financial professionals. With equity ownership opportunities, modern technology, and a high-touch support model, Silver Oak empowers advisors to build meaningful client relationships and grow their practices on their own terms.

About ThinkAdvisor

ThinkAdvisor (ThinkAdvisor.com) provides financial advisors, registered investment advisors, and wealth managers with comprehensive coverage of the products, services, and information they need to guide their clients in making critical wealth, health, and life decisions. The website showcases advisors adapting and succeeding in new ways, translating the impact of industry regulation, dealmaking, and technology into digestible coverage, so advisors have more time to spend advising clients and running their businesses.

Fidelity Investments® is an independent company, unaffiliated with Silver Oak Securities. Fidelity Investments was not involved in the preparation of this material. [1243546.1.0]

 

Contacts

Media Contact:
Hollie Murrin
Director of Marketing
Silver Oak Securities
[email protected]