Why Go With Us?
What's in the Alphabet Soup
We believe in constant improvement, accreditation, and continuing education to provide our clients with excellent service. The more we achieve the more value we can create for you.
- AIF®
Accredited Investment Fiduciary (AIF®) - This designation is obtained by completing a web-based or capstone program and a final certification exam. There is no prerequisite. The designation requires 6 hours of continuing education every year.

- AIFA®
Accredited Investment Fiduciary Analyst (AIFA®) - This designation is obtained by completing a 3 day classroom program and a final
certification exam. As a prerequisite the IAR must be an Accredited Investment Fiduciary graduate and meet the requirements from the AIFA matrix (the matrix requires a score of 4 or more in categories covering highest level of education, industry credentials, industry experience and professional auditing experience). The designation requires 10 hours of continuing education per year.

- CCFS®
Certified College Funding Specialist (CCFS®) - This designation is obtained by completing self-study courses (16 video courses) totaling 16 hours and a test after each course. As a prerequisite the IAR must have one of the following: Professional financial certification or designation; Professional financial license (securities, insurance, account, etc.); or a combination of educations and experience deemed satisfactory by the ACCFS. This designation requires 24 hours of continuing education every 2 years; using ACCFS approved courses.

- CPFA®
Certified Plan Fiduciary Advisor (CPFA®) - This designation is obtained by completion of a self-study course and a certification exam. The
study course covers ERISA fiduciary roles and responsibilities, ERISA fiduciary oversight, ERISA plan investment management and ERISA plan management. The designation does not have any prerequisites. The designee must complete 20 credits of Continuing Education every two years and remit an annual renewal fee.
- MRFC®
Master Registered Financial Consultant (MRFC®) - This designation has a prerequisite of four years full-time experience as a financial
planning practitioner in the field of financial planning or financial planning services, maintain the required licenses to engage in financial planning education and have a sound record of business integrity with no supervision or revocation of any professional designations or licenses. The education requirements are to hold one of the following: a Series 65 or a combination of Series 6 and 63, Series 7 and 63, Series 7 and 66; or hold a Life Insurance License; or have a Bachelors' or advanced degree in Business, Finance, Economics or a related field; or hold one of the following designations: AAMS, CFA, CFP, ChFC, CLU, CPA, EA, LUTCF. The recipient must pass a certification exam (proctored). Continuing Education requirements consist of forty hours every year in the field of personal finance and professional practice management. Four hours every two year must be devoted to ethics.
- RFC®
Registered Financial Consultant (RFC®) - This designation is obtained by completion of an approved college curriculum in personal financial
planning or completing an IARFC self-study course (10 series course) and passing the final certification exam. As a prerequisite, the IAR must have an undergraduate or graduate financial planning degree, or have earned one of the following designations: AAMS, AEP, CEP, CFS, CFP, ChFC, CLU, CPA, EA, LUTC, MS, MBA, JD, Ph.D, or completed a CFP equivalent IARFC- approved college curriculum; must also meet licensing requirements for securities and life and health insurance (if operating as fee-only and not licensed, then must be registered as an investment adviser); and must have four years full-time experience as a financial planning practitioner. The designation requires that the designee complete 40 hours of Continuing Education every year, including two hours of business ethics every two years.
- RICP®
Retirement Income Certified Professional (RICP®) – This designation is obtained by completing 3 courses in the RICP program. As a
prerequisite, the IAR must also have 3 years of full-time business experience (undergraduate or graduate degrees may qualify as 1 year of business experience). The RICP recipient also must adhere to a Code of Ethics, the Professional Pledge and eight Canons. A mandatory continuing education requirement set by the state the IAR is located in, is also required every 2 years.

- NQPC™
The Nonqualified Plan Consultant (NQPC™) credential – developed by some of the nation’s leading advisors and retirement plan experts – demonstrates your knowledge, expertise, and commitment to working with nonqualified deferred-compensation and executive-compensation plans. Consultants who earn their NQPC™ credential demonstrate the expertise required to consult with employers on nonqualified plan design and plan financing.

What to Look For
One of the most important decisions you can make regarding your wealth is choosing your advisory team. Here are some criteria to consider when making that decision
- Does your Financial Advisor have adequate education at a top tier school?
What to Look out For: Some advisors’ education backgrounds can be surprising. Some never went to college.
Richard is proud to have earned his degree from the Carroll School of Management Honors Program at Boston College. In 2016, BC was the #22 ranked college in the county according to Forbes and Bloomberg ranked it #3 of all U.S. undergraduate business programs. Richard is also honored to be an alumnus of The London School of Economics. In 2016, LSE was ranked #6 in Europe and #23 in the world according to the Times Higher Education World University Rankings. Boston College was ranked #8 in Finance in 2023.
- Does your Financial Advisor have a Finance or related degree?
What to Watch Out For: Some advisors attain credentials at the secondary, professional continuing education arms of reputable institutions and then pass that off as the place they matriculated. A quick check of Linkedin can demonstrate the difference between a 4-year degree and a 4-day course. Do not be fooled by training certificates masquerading as diplomas.
Richard attended Boston College and the London School of Economics and is an active member of both institutions’ alumni associations. Further proof of his matriculation can be provided upon request.
- Does your Financial Advisor have proper training?
What to Watch Out For: Some advisors get 3 weeks of product training and then are presented to the public as adequately trained to handle million dollar accounts. Nothing could more frightening and further from the truth. Only comprehensive training programs fully prepare an advisor to give advice regarding your future. Do not work with someone whose training is only comprised of how to sell you something.
Richard has comprehensive training at a number of institutions. Beginning with his intensive 3-month investment banking training at JPMorgan Chase, he has reinforced his knowledge of the financial and economic forces that can impact investments. He has further participated in financial advisor training at Merrill Lynch for which he has an extensive training log of hundreds of hours of financial classes and continuing education courses. Building on this knowledge base he participated in significant training programs at Fidelity Investments as well. He has a well-rounded and thorough understanding of the financial world learn from multiple sources, multiple disciplines and multiple perspectives.
- Does your Financial Advisor have adequate industry experience?
What To Watch Out For: Some advisors include non-advisory, non-wealth management roles in their experience. These roles are primarily support and sales related and provide limited experience of fundamental decision-making in the financial planning and investment process. Ask what roles or titles your advisor maintained and what were the duties of those positions. Selling credit cards is not the same as financial advisory experience.
Richard worked in investment banking until 2001. Post 9/11, he transitioned into the Private Wealth Group at Merrill Lynch working on a billion-dollar private wealth team until it dissolved. Richard then went through advisor training at Merrill Lynch and then ended up working for a top 100 Merrill Lynch producer. He had extensive interactions with a variety of clients in many capacities, learning the right way to do business in a comprehensive and thoughtful way. After several years on a successful team, Richard decided to pursue a different avenue and left Merrill for Fidelity Investments. Again, through extensive interaction with hundreds of clients through Fidelity’s branch network, he obtained first-hand knowledge of the discount brokerage world and how it fits with client objectives. Richard spent 5 years as a financial advisor in the JPMorgan Chase headquarters and prestigious Chrysler Building branches managing assets for over 800 clients After his tenure at JPMorgan, Richard went independent and started working toward founding The Cahill Group. Through servicing clients of all kinds, from retail to private wealth, from individuals to institutions, Richard has a deep well of experience from which to draw in the execution of his duties as a loyal, financial advisor.
- Does your Financial Advisor have any client complaints on their record?
What to Watch out For: Client complaints are sometimes, but not always, a good way to judge how an advisor conducts business. They can be an indicator of honesty, trustworthiness and competency. Look to see if any damages were granted as a result of a customer dispute. This can demonstrate that independent third parties have reviewed the complaint and found there was legitimate financial error on the part of the advisor.
Richard has zero client complaints on his record. Over thousands of client and hundreds of investments, not a single client has filed any type of complaint against him.
How We Protect You
- We, at The Cahill Group, are bound by several codes of ethics.
- We provide our institutional clients with the knowledge and discipline to put their own clients and employees first using our mastery of fiduciary principles and practices. We apply this same understanding to our individual clients.
- Our advisory accounts are bound by fiduciary standards, are fee-only and meet the rigid requirements of putting the clients’ best interests first.
- Our brokerage business, while only held to the standard of suitability, still requires our utmost ethical process and we feel we have acted in the spirit of clients’ best interests especially in cases when a commission would cost the client significantly less over the life of the investment.
- We encrypt our clients’ data meeting all regulatory standards of information protection