If you want to spend money on advice don't waste it on a financial planner.
I believe based on how complicated your financial situation is get advice from a range of other professionals. You should be looking for advice in relation to admin, tax, insurance, borrowing, asset structuring, etc. I recommend strongly against getting advice on what to invest in. I therefore advise against getting advice from a financial planer, stockbroker or property buyers agent. Basically get advice on technical stuff and further your own knowledge to make your own investment decisions:
-If you need it get accounting/tax advice from an accountant/tax agent/tax consultant. Where necessary get one that specializes in super or property or small business, etc if need be. Can help with setting up and managing the admin/compliance (outsourced to an auditor they use) if you decide to set up a self managed super fund.
-Get advice from a conveyancer or solicitor when signing any important legal contract. This is useful for small business purchases, property purchases, commercial lease agreements, etc Can help with setting up trusts, buying property inside self managed super using a structured loan, etc
-Use a personal banker or mortgage broker, etc if you are looking to borrow for any investments, etc
-Use a business advisor if necessary for small business issues.
-Use an insurance broker where necessary e.g. looking to get life insurance paid from your super
Financial advisors are salesman and completely useless generalists who don't know enough about any one topic to be useful.
Most of the plans they give you are a based on a cookie cutter template that is marginally adjusted/filled in by the para-planner at the office.
If they are commission based they care only about getting commissions. If they get flat fees they are usually focused on getting somewhere around average results to stop you leaving because iof they do something different from the herd and massively under-perform or lose they will lose the steady fees you provide as a client. Whereas under-performing the average by the amount of fees charged isn't enough under-performance to entice most clients to leave.