If an advisor wants you to move your funds, then that should be the end of the discussion - keep looking. Their objective in getting you to move your funds is to have them as their assets under management and charge you fees up front and ongoing. Any advisor worth his/her salt should be able to provide unbiased advice keeping your funds in place, simply reallocating/rebalancing with the funds T. Rowe Price has to offer.
Any advisor you end out choosing, you want to be a fiduciary. You should not be willing to work with any advisor who is not a fiduciary. Not being a fiduciary, the advisor may as well hang a sign around his/her neck stating "I will take your money and guide you to whatever makes me the most money regardless of how appropriate/suitable the investment is for you".
An old colleague of mine just put up these short YouTube videos explaining fiduciaries. It's a promotional video for his firm, however, ignore that it's labeled for his firm (which I do not endorse and have no affiliation with), and understand that the fiduciary puts the clients best interests ahead of his/her own. Pay particular attention to the second video and the questions to ask. (moderators, feel free to remove links if not acceptable)
If your advisor is not a Registered Investment Advisor who is on file with the SEC or registered with your state, then ask him/her directly and immediately if they are a fiduciary. If the answer is no, then walk/run away. If they say that they are a fiduciary, get them to put it in writing - before you have any discussion about anything regarding your finances. The reason that you need to have documentation that the advisor is a fiduciary, especially for one you plan to have managing your money over an extended period, is that if a situation arises and you end out going to arbitration against the advisor, you're going to need proof that the advisor claimed to be a fiduciary and did not act in your best interests.
I would personally never work with any advisor. If there is something I do not understand, I would go and learn about it. Nobody, even a fiduciary is going to care about my money or protect it as much as I do.