Archive for the ‘Certified Financial Planner’ Category

September is Client Appreciation Month at Quest CE Solutions

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

This year at Quest CE we have a great deal to be thankful for. Within the past few months we have celebrated our 5th Anniversary as Quest Continuing Education Solutions; awarded one of the ”Top Milwaukee Workplaces” by the Milwaukee Business Journal; and honored on Inc. Magazine’s 500|5000 List of the Fastest Growing Private Companies in America.

However, we would not have been able to accomplish this without our clients. It has been a pleasure to work with you and we truly value your business. At Quest CE, we strive to satisfy our clients by providing a level of customer service unparalleled in this industry.

We would like to show our appreciation by extending to you a 10%* discount on our suite of products listed below:

  • Instructor Filings
  • New Course Filings
  • Custom Course Authoring
  • Voucher Card Orders
  • Custom Portal Development
  • Quest Proprietary Course Licensing
  • Firm Element Training
  • ACM - Annual Compliance Meeting
  • ACQ - Annual Compliance Questionnaire
  • NA - Needs Analysis Survey
  • OBA’s - Outside Business Activities
  • G&E’s - Gifts and Entertainment
  • AML – Anti-Money Laundering Training
  • State Insurance Training

As an additional thank you to our retail customers, we are proud to offer a 10%* discount on our CE courses at learn.questce.com during the month of September. Simply use the discount code “THANKYOU” during checkout to receive the discount.

For more information on this limited special promotion, please contact Quest CE at 877-593-3366 or e-mail us at info@questce.com.

We are happy to have served you in the past, and we look forward to continuing to meet your Continuing Education needs in the future.

* Discount not applicable to State Fees

2010 CFP Updates to CE Sponsor and Program Registration Process

Monday, February 1st, 2010

The CFP Board announced upcoming changes to CFP Board’s continuing education policies. The following is an overview of some changes that went into effect January 1, 2010:

•    CE Sponsor registration with CFP Board is required on an annual, calendar year basis.
•    CE programs offered by registered CE Sponsors must be registered with CFP Board on an annual, calendar year basis, with program application fees determined by the length of each individual program (number of hours).
•    The CFP Board discontinued the “Web link” option and associated fee for CE Sponsors who wished to have their Web site appear as a link on CFP Board’s listings of CE Sponsors; CFP Board’s Web site will hold links for all sponsors who provide valid Web site addresses.

The updated policies were established by the CFP Board in an effort to best meet the needs of a growing sponsor registry, to ensure the ongoing widespread availability of quality continuing education options, and to maintain the standards the CFP Board has established.

CFP Board Contact Information:

1425 K Street Ste 500
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 800-487-1497
Phone: 202-379-2200
Fax: 202-379-2299
email: renewal@CFPBoard.org
Information: info@CFPBoard.org
Website: www.cfp.net

Quest CE Develops New CFP® 2008 Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility Course

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

Brookfield WI - Quest CE the leading provider of Online Compliance management solutions for the financial services industry just announced the availability of their new course that covers CFP Board of Standards’ 2008 Code of Ethics. The course, CFP® Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility, was designed to meet the 2-hour continuing education requirement on CFP Board’s Code of Ethics, which applies to all certificants. The new online course has already been approved by CFP Board.

Quest CE offers CFP® professionals over 150 hours of different courses to help them fulfill their required 30 hours of CE annually. Quest CE’s courses have all been approved by CFP Board and are available online for only $12.95 each or unlimited access to the entire Quest CE CFP library for only $39.95 annually.

About the CFP® Ethics CE Requirement

On May 31, 2007, CFP Board announced the adoption of an updated Standards of Professional Conduct, which sets forth the ethical standards for CFP® professionals. The updated Standards, which have an effective date of July 1, 2008 and an enforcement date of January 1, 2009, were designed to maintain CFP Board’s high ethical standards, strengthen them in several important ways, and present the standards in a manner that will be easily understood by CFP® professionals and the public they serve.

About Quest CE

Over the past 20-plus years, Quest CE has built a reputation of being the premier provider of Continuing Education to the financial services industry.  In addition to offering CE for professionals holding insurance licenses and professional designations like the CFP, CIMA, CLU/ChFC, and CPA designations, Quest CE also provides a complete spectrum of training solutions. Each year Quest CE delivers over 150,000 continuing education courses either over the Internet or through live CE training. More information is available at the company’s web site at www.questce.com or by calling 877-593-3366.

CFP Board Picks Five Members For Discipline And Ethics Commission

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards on Tuesday chose five new members for its Discipline and Ethics Commission (DEC) to replace the five individuals who quit in March to protest changes to the DEC’s operations. The new members–all CFP designees–are Daniel Moisand, V. Raymond Ferrara, James Knaus, Yvonne Dean, and Michael Ross.

The DEC is an all-volunteer body of nine board members and four additional volunteers that meets three times a year to hear cases of possible infractions by CFP designees. On March 8, five of the nine DEC members resigned to protest changes to longstanding DEC procedures that were undertaken without their prior knowledge or consent.

In particular, they objected to new procedures that give CFP Board CEO Kevin Keller oversight of the selection and election process of DEC members, as well as the decision to have a CFP Board staffer present when the DEC ratifies its disciplinary decisions.

Previously, DEC chose its own members, who were approved by the CFP Board of Directors.  And cases brought before the DEC have been open hearings with a CFP Board staff member presenting the case against the respondent (a CFP licensee or a CFP applicant). The DEC panel–traditionally comprised of CFP licensees–deliberated the case in private before it rendered a verdict.

Disgruntled former DEC members voiced two main concerns about the changes. First, that non-CFP licensees might now serve on the DEC, and they might not be versed enough in the issues surrounding a case to make a sound judgment. Second, and perhaps more important, that allowing a CFP board staff person to participate in the deliberation process would be analogous to letting a prosecuting attorney sit in on jury deliberations, and they worried that the CFP staff person could overturn DEC decisions. In short, they and others in the financial advisory community feared the changes could damage the peer review process, and, potentially, the credibility of the CFP designation itself.

“I take the criticisms from resigning DEC members very seriously because I know many of them and I respect them for the work they do,” says Moisand, who was appointed the DEC’s chair for the rest of 2008. He’s a principal with Spraker, Fitzgerald, Tamayo & Moisand in Melbourne, Fla., and recently completed a five-year term on the Financial Planning Association’s board of directors.

“I also know and respect the members of the Board of Directors and I’m willing to give them latitude regarding their actions,” says Moisand, adding that he believes he was chosen as chair because he can lend outside perspective to both sides of the issue.

Moisand says the DEC faces two main tasks: to make sure the process during the July hearings works without a hitch; and to help the CFP Board improve the process however possible. “I don’t think it’s currently broken,” he says, “but there is room for improvement.”

One area Moisand thinks needs improvement is better communication from the Board of Directors. Indeed, the board was criticized for how it announced the changes to the DEC–the changes were made in January but they didn’t tell DEC members until they met on March 8, and then didn’t make any public comment about it until four days later when they issued a press release.

In March, Board of Directors chair David Strege said the changes to the DEC were made because the board believes the stakes will be higher after the CFP Board’s strengthened ethical standards take effect this July, and that they wanted to give full-time staff the oversight function to make sure it “improves and guarantees a valid, defensible process that benefits the public.” He also acknowledged that the board of directors “probably didn’t give them (DEC members) enough ramp up time to let the changes be absorbed.”

The CFP Board couldn’t be reached for comment on Tuesday. 

Along with Moisand, the new DEC members include:

V. Raymond Ferrara, president and CEO of ProVise Management Group in Clearwater, Fla.

James Knaus, co-founder of Global Wealth Advisors in Troy, Mich.

Yvonne Dean, the Houston-based launch manager for the Texas Regional Financial Office of Thrivent Financial for Lutherans.

Michael Ross, founder and CEO of The Connection Group in Plainview, N.Y.