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Ah c'mon Ralph, give it up. The basic proposition of any venture outside of Charities etc is to make a profit, ie costs plus a margin. I've continuously argued that (a) most Irish people want face to face advice which costs at least €150 per hour to deliver when all business costs are added, and (b) a reasonable margin would allow that to float to €200 per hour.
If you take 4 billable hours per day and a 44 week year at 5 days per week, a cost recovery alone amounts to €132,000 which isn't too far removed from the cost of maintaining a financial advisor when labour costs, travel, admin, indemnity insurance etc is taken into account. Even if 8 hours was billable it still amounts to a moderate €264,000 contribution to costs.
Personally I wouldn't hire someone unless they could generate at least €350,000 btw, of which they'd get about a third. But apart from my position any person not setting a turnover target of at least in the region of €150,000 is probably wasting their time. When the sums are done the person will find that they'll be lucky to get a third of that in remuneration, and that's for a boot of the car operation with one employee back in a shared office.
If the advisor wants to operate upmarket they'll need to spend a lot more, hence the earlier figure of €350,000. That's reality.
Here on AAM you can pontificate all you like about paying €100 for advice, meeting, (statutory) fact-find, (statutory) report, processing, and issuing, but you're not in the real world. Anybody who thinks he can make a profit using the RyanAir model but without the physical ability to deal with the vast volumn necessary to make it work, probably would want to see his pharmacist.