Marketing
Digital Marketing for Accountants and Financial Advisers in Brisbane
Most accounting practices and financial planning firms in Brisbane grow through referrals. A client mentions you to a colleague. A mortgage broker sends someone your way. A business owner passes your name to a friend starting a company. Referrals are valuable, and for many practices they represent the core of the business.
But here’s what happens after a referral: the prospective client Googles you.
They look at your website. They check your Google Business Profile. They look for reviews. They look at your LinkedIn. They form an impression before they ever make contact. If what they find looks dated, incomplete, or generic, the referral doesn’t automatically convert. Trust built by the referrer starts eroding the moment your online presence fails to support it.
That’s the gap this article is about: not replacing referrals, but making sure your digital presence supports them, and increasingly, supplements them with clients who find you directly.
The Trust Challenge in Financial Services
Accountants and financial advisers face a specific challenge in marketing: you’re asking clients to trust you with something deeply personal. Their finances, their business decisions, their long-term security. That trust takes time to build and has to be earned before someone will pick up the phone.
Digital marketing for financial services isn’t about being flashy or aggressive. It’s about being credible, specific, and consistently present. The practices that do this well don’t chase clients. They build a presence that attracts the right clients steadily, over time.
What a Strong Digital Presence Looks Like
1. A website that communicates specialism, not just services
The most effective accounting and financial planning websites don’t try to speak to everyone. They speak clearly to a defined client type: small business owners, medical professionals, property investors, self-managed super fund holders. Specificity creates recognition. A business owner who lands on a page that clearly describes their situation feels understood, and is far more likely to make contact.
Lead with outcomes, not credentials. Credentials matter and should be listed, but they shouldn’t lead. Your website’s headline and first paragraph should describe what a client’s situation looks like after working with you, not your qualifications. Credentials belong on your about page and team bios, where they reinforce trust rather than open with it.
Make the next step obvious. A “Book a Free Initial Consultation” button that links to a calendar is more effective than a generic contact form. Visitors who know exactly what happens next are more likely to take the step. Remove as much friction as possible between interest and action.
2. Google Business Profile: your most underused asset
A completed Google Business Profile with your services listed, your areas of specialism described, and real photos of your team puts you ahead of the majority of Brisbane practices, many of which have unclaimed or half-finished profiles.
Build your reviews systematically. Reviews on Google are one of the most trusted signals a prospective client can find. For financial services in particular, where trust is the primary barrier to engagement, genuine reviews from real clients carry significant weight. Ask satisfied clients directly, make it easy with a direct link, and respond to every review you receive.
Post monthly updates. A monthly post on your Google Business Profile, a tax deadline reminder, a service update, a change in regulation that affects your clients, signals that your practice is active and engaged. This has a direct impact on how Google ranks your local listing.
3. Content that demonstrates expertise
The questions your clients ask in meetings are the questions they’re also typing into Google. “What can I claim as a sole trader?” “How do I structure my business for tax?” “Do I need a financial adviser or can I manage my super myself?” Answering these questions in blog posts or explainer pages builds search visibility and positions you as the knowledgeable, accessible expert your clients want to work with.
Use your newsletter to stay front of mind. A short monthly email with one relevant financial insight, a reminder about upcoming deadlines, and a brief note on what’s been happening in your practice keeps you present with clients who aren’t actively looking for new services right now, but will be.
4. LinkedIn: your professional credibility channel
For most accounting and financial planning practices, the principal’s personal LinkedIn profile is more powerful than a business page. People hire people, not logos. A well-written profile with a clear headline (“Accountant for Brisbane small businesses and property investors”), a genuine summary, and regular activity puts you in front of clients who are actively looking for exactly what you do.
Post one useful thing per week. You don’t need to post daily. One piece of genuinely useful content per week, a tax tip, an industry update, a question worth asking yourself about your finances, builds familiarity and demonstrates expertise consistently over time.
Where to Start
If you’re reviewing your digital presence for the first time, prioritise in this order:
- Claim and complete your Google Business Profile
- Review your website homepage: does it clearly say who you help and what life looks like after working with you?
- Ask your last three satisfied clients for a Google review
- Update your LinkedIn headline to be specific about your specialism and location
- Publish one piece of content this month that answers a question your clients regularly ask
None of this requires a large budget or a dedicated marketing team. It requires clarity about who you work with, a professional and consistent online presence, and the discipline to maintain it month after month. That last part is where most practices find the most value in outside support.
If you’d like to discuss what a stronger digital presence could look like for your practice, book a free discovery call.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Do accounting and financial planning practices need digital marketing if they rely on referrals?
- Yes. Even referred prospects Google you before making contact. If your website looks dated or your Google Business Profile is incomplete, the trust built by the referrer erodes before they ever call. Digital marketing also creates a second channel for enquiries that works independent of your referral network.
- What should an accounting or financial planning website focus on?
- Speak clearly to a defined client type rather than everyone. Lead with outcomes, not credentials. A visitor should understand within seconds who you help and what their situation looks like after working with you. Make the next step obvious, ideally a direct booking link to a free initial consultation.
- How important are Google reviews for accountants and financial advisers?
- Very important. For financial services, where trust is the primary barrier to engagement, genuine reviews from real clients carry significant weight. Ask satisfied clients directly after a positive interaction, include a direct link to your review page, and respond to every review you receive.
- Is LinkedIn worth the effort for a financial services professional?
- Yes, particularly the principal's personal profile. People hire people, not logos. A well-written LinkedIn profile with a clear headline describing your specialism and location, combined with one useful post per week, builds familiarity and demonstrates expertise consistently over time.
- What content should accountants and financial advisers publish?
- Answer the questions your clients ask in meetings: what can I claim as a sole trader, how do I structure my business for tax, do I need a financial adviser for my super. These are the same questions people type into Google. Blog posts and explainers built around these queries build search visibility and position you as an accessible expert.