In this article
Welcome to the world of stockbroking
Whether you thrive on markets, pressure, and money, or you're weighing it as a career in a changing industry, this guide covers what a stockbroker actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A stockbroker buys and sells stocks and other securities on behalf of clients, and often advises them on investments. In simple terms: they execute trades and help clients invest in the markets. Think of them as the link between investors and the markets, increasingly focused on advice and relationships.
- Execute trades for clients
- Advise on stocks and investments
- Build and manage client relationships
- Stay on top of markets and news
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Composure under pressure โ markets move fast and money is at stake
- Numeracy โ comfort with prices, risk, and analysis
- Communication โ building trust and explaining clearly
- Resilience โ markets and clients can be brutal
- Discipline โ following rules and managing risk
- Drive โ a results- and relationship-driven role
Education & qualifications
A finance-related degree and regulated certification are typically required. Increasingly, the role overlaps with financial advice and wealth management.
Typical responsibilities
- Trading โ executing client orders
- Advice โ recommending investments
- Markets โ tracking news and prices
- Relationships โ building a client base
- Compliance โ meeting strict regulation
- Reporting โ keeping clients informed
Responsibilities by seniority
Trainee Broker
0โ3 years
- Supports senior brokers
- Learns the markets
- Studies for exams
- Builds early clients
- Trading basics
Stockbroker
3โ8 years
- Owns a client book
- Executes and advises
- Builds relationships
- Hits targets
- Manages risk
Senior / Wealth Manager
8+ years
- Established client base
- High-net-worth clients
- Advisory focus
- Mentors brokers
- Strong reputation
Where stockbrokers work
๐ฆ Brokerage firms
Executing and advising on trades.
๐ข Investment banks
Markets and trading divisions.
๐ค Wealth management
Advising affluent clients.
๐ป Online brokers
Tech-driven, lower-touch trading.
๐๏ธ Private client
High-net-worth advisory.
๐ Trading firms
Fast-paced market roles.
A day in the life
In early to read overnight news and pre-market moves before the opening bell.
The market opens โ orders to execute, prices moving, and clients calling for your read on the day.
A client wants to rebalance their portfolio; you advise, then execute the trades cleanly.
Researching a sector for a client recommendation, balancing opportunity against risk.
Markets close. You review the day, update clients, and prep for tomorrow. Fast, high-stakes, relationship-driven. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Fast-paced, exciting markets
- Strong earning potential
- Direct reward for performance
- Client relationships
- A path into wealth management
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Strong earning potential
- Exciting, fast-paced markets
- Direct reward for results
- Client relationships
- Path to wealth management
- Prestige in finance
- Commission upside
โ Disadvantages
- Automation is reshaping the role
- Intense pressure and stress
- Long, early market hours
- Income tied to results and commission
- Heavy regulation
- Markets can be brutal
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Wealth Manager โ advise affluent clients holistically
- Financial Advisor โ broaden into full financial planning
- Investment Analyst โ move to the research side
- Portfolio Manager โ manage money directly
- Private client director โ lead high-net-worth advisory
- Own practice โ independent advisory
Stockbroker vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stockbroker You are here | Trades and advises on stocks | Markets, platforms | Baseline | Medium |
| Investment Analyst | Researches investments | CFA, modelling | Higher | Hard |
| Financial Advisor | Plans personal finances | Planning, regulation | Similar | Medium |
| Financial Analyst | Analyses companies | Excel, modelling | Similar | Medium |
| Economist | Studies the economy | Econometrics | Lower-similar | Hard |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Technology has automated much of trade execution, pushing stockbrokers toward advice and relationships โ where the lasting value now lies.
- Automation handles much execution
- The role shifts toward advice and wealth management
- Online brokers pressure traditional models
- Human trust commands a premium for complex needs
- Relationship and advisory skills are the future
Fun facts ๐ค
Much trade execution is now automated, pushing brokers toward advice and relationships.
The trading day still revolves around the opening and closing bells โ early starts are the norm.
Top brokers earn heavily through commission on the business they bring in.
As tech handles the trades, trust and advice are what clients increasingly pay for.
Markets are humbling โ even the best are regularly wrong, and managing risk is everything.
Myths about this role
"Stockbrokers just shout on a trading floor."
โ That image is dated โ much execution is electronic, and the role is shifting to advice and relationships.
"It's a guaranteed path to riches."
โ Earnings depend on results and clients, and the industry is being reshaped by automation.
"Anyone can pick stocks."
โ Doing it well, within regulation and managing risk, is a real, hard skill.
"The job is dying."
โ Execution is automating, but advice, relationships, and wealth management are growing.
"AI will replace stockbrokers."
โ AI automates trades, but trust, advice, and complex client needs stay human.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Thrive on markets and pressure
- Are numerate and disciplined
- Build trust and relationships
- Are resilient to setbacks
- Want results-based rewards
- Can adapt as the role evolves
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want calm, predictable days
- High pressure overwhelms you
- You dislike sales and targets
- You want guaranteed income
- You dislike heavy regulation
- You won't adapt to a changing industry
Independent & advisory potential
Experienced brokers increasingly move into wealth management and independent advisory, where relationships and trust command strong, recurring income.
โ Advantages
- Move into wealth management
- Recurring advisory income
- Build a loyal client base
- Strong relationships pay off
- Advisory is the growth area
โ Challenges
- Automation pressures pure broking
- Income tied to results
- Heavy regulation
- Building a book takes time
- Markets stress clients
How to get started
- Get a finance degree economics or finance builds the foundation.
- Earn regulated certification required to trade and advise.
- Start as a trainee broker learn the markets, products, and clients.
- Build a client base relationships and trust are increasingly the real asset.
- Shift toward advice wealth management is where the role is heading.
What to know before you start
- The role is changing โ lean into advice
- Relationships and trust are the future, not just execution
- Regulation and risk discipline are essential
- Income is results-driven
- Markets are humbling โ manage risk
- Wealth management is the natural next step
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
The floor-trading image is long gone. The brokers who are thriving shifted from executing trades to advising clients, because the trades themselves are automated now.
Stockbroker ยท 7 years in
Your client book is your career. As execution commoditised, the relationships I built over years became the only thing that actually mattered.
Senior broker ยท 12 years in
Adapt or fade. The brokers who clung to the old model struggled; those who became wealth managers and advisors are doing better than ever.
Wealth manager ยท 16 years in