When Kristine Goodwin, Director of Growth and Distribution at North, sits down with Ashley Tilston, CEO of Spectrum Wealth Partners, the conversation quickly moves beyond markets, products and performance. Instead, it lands on a far more complex question facing advisers today: what does retirement actually mean now and how should advice businesses evolve to support it?
Kristine frames retirement not as a moment in time, but as an aspirational concept. “It’s no longer just an age dependent, forced event,” she observes. “It’s a deliberate choice about how people want to live.” Ashley agrees, it’s a shift he sees play out daily in client conversations.
“Very rarely do we see clients who just want everything to stop,” he says. “People want flexibility. They still want purpose. They want to choose their own adventure.”
That single insight sets the tone for a wide-ranging discussion about the changing retirement landscape, the growing psychological burden placed on advisers, and the pressure on advice businesses to deliver deeply personalised outcomes at scale.
Retirement is now a journey advisers must help design
Historically, retirement advice was built around an end point: stop work at 65, fund a predictable lifestyle, preserve capital. According to Ashley, that framing no longer holds.
Clients today are living longer, staying healthier and approaching retirement with far more intention. They want to travel, work parttime, consult, or contribute in different ways, all while maintaining optionality. For advisers, that creates a new kind of complexity.
“You’re taking something emotional, how someone wants their life to look and turning it into a quantifiable measure,” Ashley explains. “That’s not easy, but it is essential.”
Kristine notes that this evolution has coincided with heightened anxiety. Clients are not just worried about their own longevity, but about their children’s financial futures. Helping adult children into housing, supporting grandchildren through education or acting as guarantors has become a common feature of retirement planning.
As Ashley points out, this introduces a constant push-and-pull. Parents are often willing to compromise their own security to support family, and advisers are left navigating those trade-offs with care.
The adviser’s role has shifted from optimiser to interpreter
Throughout the conversation, Kristine returns to a central theme: confidence. Many Australians, she notes, don’t feel confident about retirement, despite having accumulated significant assets.
Ashley believes the root cause often isn’t financial at all.
“People compare themselves to the world now, not their immediate network,” he says. “Social media, the news cycle, housing affordability, it all feeds anxiety.”
In that environment, advice is less about chasing the best possible return and more about interpretation.
Ashley argues that if clients are only focused on performance, they’ll always be reacting. But if advisers can help them define why they need a particular return and what success actually looks like, decision making becomes steadier.
This is where psychology becomes central to advice. Ashley spends significant time undertstanding clients’ relationship with money, shaped by upbringing, life experience and past economic shocks. For some retirees, the hardest moment isn’t market volatility, it’s the final pay cheque.
“No matter how many times you show them the numbers, there’s something psychological about not earning another dollar,” he reflects.
Personalisation versus profitability: the modern advice tension
Kristine then steers the conversation toward a challenge many practice owners feel acutely: how do you deliver deeply personalised retirement advice while still running a profitable, scalable business?
Ashley is candid about the difficulty of wearing both hats, adviser and business owner. He describes a clear specialisation trend emerging across the industry. Practices can no longer be all things to all people.
“The cost and complexity of delivering advice means you have to be very clear on who you serve,” he says. Accumulators, pre-retirees and retirees all have different needs and trying to service them all drives inefficiency.
To manage this, Ashley leans on a familiar 80/20 rule. Roughly 70–80% of advice work, data collection, modelling, reporting and administration, can and should be automated. The remaining 20% is the human element: judgement, psychology and connection.
“That 20% is where we add value,” he says. “And that’s what clients actually want time spent on.”
Where platforms fit and where they must evolve
As the discussion turns to technology, Kristine positions platforms as sitting “somewhere in the middle” of this challenge, between efficiency and experience.
Ashley is clear that investment management itself is now hygiene. It needs to be seamless and intuitive. Anything less creates friction. But he argues that managing portfolios alone isn’t where platforms truly add value.
For retirement advice, the real differentiator is cashflow modelling and scenario planning.
Every year, Ashley’s practice revisits retirement projections with clients, tracking how changes in markets, spending or family support affect longevity. These conversations Can I gift this money? What happens if markets fall? How long does my money last? are where confidence is built.
The problem, as Ashley sees it, is fragmentation. Data often lives in multiple systems, forcing advisers to duplicate work just to produce insight. That duplication adds cost, consumes time and ultimately reduces capacity.
“We’re not coders,” he says. “Our skill set is EQ, not building tech stacks.”
A subtle shift in expectation
As the interview draws to a close, Kristine reflects on what she’s hearing: advisers don’t need more technology, they need better integrated technology that shortens the gap between client questions and meaningful answers.
By bringing portfolio data, cashflow modelling and reporting into a more interactive, client friendly environment, Kristine suggests platforms can help advisers spend less time stitching systems together and more time doing the work that can’t be automated.
For advisers navigating the next phase of retirement advice, the message from both sides of the conversation is clear: the future belongs to practices that combine clarity of purpose, thoughtful use of technology and a deep understanding of what money really means to the people they serve.
Retirement may no longer be a finish line, but with the right balance of psychology, scale and support, it remains one of the most impactful journeys advisers can help clients navigate.
MyNorth Lifetime webinar series
24 February 2026 Brush up on your knowledge of our retirement solutions and tools or ask us the questions you’ve been mulling in these drop-in weekly webinars. Read more
Rethinking retirement advice: Shifting from balances to behaviour
20 February 2026 Advisers and industry leaders at a recent North roundtable have agreed that retirement advice is going through a fundamental shift to a more lifestyle-focused framework. Read more
Stores of Value: Part 3 - Role in Diversified Portfolios
17 February 2026 This third instalment in an educational series discusses whether there is a role for store of value assets in diversified portfolios. Read moreImportant information
The information on this page has been provided by NMMT Limited ABN 42 058 835 573, AFSL 234653 (NMMT). It contains general advice only, does not take account of your client’s personal objectives, financial situation or needs, and a client should consider whether this information is appropriate for them before making any decisions. It’s important your client consider their circumstances and read the relevant product disclosure statement (PDS), investor directed portfolio guide (IDPS Guide) and target market determination (TMD), available from northonline.com.au or by contacting the North Service Centre on 1800 667 841, before deciding what’s right for them.
MyNorth Investment and North Investment are operated by NMMT. MyNorth Investment Guarantee is issued by National Mutual Funds Management Limited ABN 32 006 787 720, AFSL 234652 (NMFM). MyNorth Super and Pension (including MyNorth Lifetime), MyNorth Super and Pension Guarantee and North Super and Pension are issued by N.M. Superannuation Proprietary Limited (ABN 31 008 428 322, AFSL 234654 (NM Super) as trustee of the Wealth Personal Superannuation and Pension Fund (the Fund) ABN 92 381 911 598. NMMT issues the interests in and is the responsible entity for MyNorth Managed Portfolios. All managed portfolios may not be available across all products on the North platform. All of the products above are referred to collectively as MyNorth Products. The information on this page is provided only for the use of advisers, it is not intended for clients. This page provides a brief overview of some of the benefits of investing in MyNorth Products. The adviser remains responsible for any advice/services they provide to clients including making their own inquiries and ensuring that the advice/services are appropriate and in accordance with all legal requirements.
You can read the Financial Services Guide online for more information, including the fees and benefits that companies related to NMMT, N.M. Superannuation Proprietary Limited ABN 31 008 428 322, AFSL 234654 (N.M. Super) and their representatives may receive in relation to products and services provided.
North and MyNorth are trademarks registered to NMMT.
All information on this website is subject to change without notice.
This article is for professional adviser use only and mustn’t be distributed to or made available to retail clients. It contains general advice only and doesn’t consider a person’s personal goals, financial situation or needs. A person should consider whether this information is appropriate for them before making any decisions. It’s important a person considers their circumstances and reads the relevant product disclosure statement and/or investor directed portfolio services guide, available from NMMT at northonline.com.au or by calling 1800 667 841, before deciding what’s right for them. You can read the NMMT Financial Services Guide online for more information, including the fees and benefits that AMP companies and their representatives may receive in relation to products and services provided. You can also ask us for a hard copy.
* This example is illustrative only and does not take into account the financial objectives, situation or specific needs of any individual. In this situation, the $130,000 uplift in Centrelink benefits is an approximation for a couple spread over the first 20 years of retirement. The effectiveness of any strategy is dependent on your clients particular facts and circumstances. Results will vary and no suggestion is made about how any solution, or strategy will perform for your client.
** This statistic is based on information provided by financial advisers over the second half of 2024, using member data held by NMMT. NMMT obtained information from 100 advised couples, whose financial adviser used MyNorth Lifetime and allocated 50% to Lifetime Income and 50% to an Allocated Pension at retirement for each individual. From this group, 74% of advised couples were eligible to receive an increase in age pension of more than $100,000 in today’s dollars spread over the first 20 years of retirement.
*** The 60% more on average in retirement income is based on analysis done in May 2025 by North. We observed the retirement income of over 250 members
holding MyNorth Lifetime accounts against the retirement income of MyNorth Allocated Pension members who didn’t hold a MyNorth Lifetime account. We looked
at retirement income that members received from MyNorth Lifetime, MyNorth Allocated Pension, and our estimate of members’ eligible Centrelink entitlements with and without MyNorth Lifetime. Actual outcomes may vary for each individual due to a variety of factors and there is no guarantee that your client will achieve the average 60% outcome shown.