Posts Tagged ‘Financial Success’

How to Begin Planning Your Financial Future

February 4th, 2010



Financial planning today provides major benefits tomorrow, and for the remainder of your life.

Regardless of your current income level or personal situation, learn why you must be committed to the following personal finance strategies in order to secure your financial success. 

Planning now for your financial future is, quite simply, a smart thing to do.  The tools and process detailed here will pave the way for anyone who is serious about conquering their debt and taking control over their financial existence.

Financial planning is how you get from point A to point B, as well as points C, D and E. Depending on where you are financially today, you no doubt have multiple goals that you wish to accomplish.   “Hoping” for your luck to finally change, or “waiting” for your ship to come in, is NOT a financial plan – it’s simply a dream. 

Most people get into a set routine with their finances. The longer you allow yourself to continue down the same financial road without a clear map in hand, the more you lessen your chances of realizing your financial goals. 

Let’s face it, most people are not known for their patience or their planning skills, and even less people are admired for their ability to save money.   No one should be surprised to learn this given how the mass media is constantly teaching people in our society to “buy it now- pay later!”

To ensure financial success, people must break away from this destructive, and weak, mind-set.

Do not make the common mistake that financial planning is only for the wealthy, or that you must already have a good sized nest egg before meeting with a financial advisor. Nothing could be farther from the truth. 

However, you don’t need to pay out your hard earned money for a professional. The most effective financial planning occurs in the home at the dining room table or home office. 

Common tools include the household checkbook, a pen, calculator and a piece of paper with a line down the middle. One column is titled, “Cash Coming In”, and the other column reads “Cash Going Out”. 

The main goal to keep in mind is that you want to spend every dollar of your monthly income ON PAPER, before you actually spend it.   This way you will plan your expenditures for the month, knowing you have set aside adequate money to cover all the fixed expenses.  In addition, you will have thoughtfully allocated the remaining funds to the areas of your life that are most important to you. 

Examples of important financial goals might include: 
Buying a new car Saving for a down payment on a house Future college saving Dream family vacation Purchase of investment property Planning for retirement years  Regardless of what your financial goals are, your chances of realizing those goals are highly dependant upon your decision to plan ahead and your willingness to take action – right here and right now. 

There is a great tool available to anyone who is not comfortable with sitting down and creating a household budget on their own. This important tool is called a Personal Financial Statement.  

If you’ve ever applied for a loan or credit card, you have filled out the majority of what is found on a personal financial statement. Starting immediately, you can begin using the same process that a lender uses to account for all monies coming in and going out.  

Once you have completed filling out a personal financial statement, you will have all the information you need to take the financial planning process to the level – that is, creating a budget that works! 

“Budgeting” gets a bum wrap. No one likes to hear the word “budget”; however, it is the process of budgeting (aka. financial planning) that will ultimately set you free and secure your financial future.   Too often, people make the mistake of assuming “only broke people have to budget”.  The reality is that most rich folks are rich because they budget. 

The decisions you’ve made up until now are the reason you are where you are today.  The decisions you make today going forward will shape your destiny.  The only real question is, “Where are you going?”.   Decide well.

By: Richard Gorham


Smart Financial Planning – What Are the Numbers in Your Real Life Report Card?

December 5th, 2009



“My banker has never asked me for my report card”
- Robert Kiyosaki

Numbers don’t lie. Too many grown-ups that were successful, straight “A” students in school and college have to admit years later that they have been hopelessly ignorant in managing their hard earned for income in their adult life. Debt consolidation and mortgage payment seem to be a common need of the modern day family.

The average professional nowadays might have a high-paying job, a big home, a nice car, and be doing well at work, but a quick glance at his or her financial statement will reveal an excess of expenses and, in many cases, a huge debt.

Is this the successful and prosperous life those honored college diplomas so ardently promised years ago?

One thing is for sure: Our highly acclaimed education has definitely not provided us adults with the financial skills necessary to be good stewards of the money we earn.

Unless you were lucky enough to have parents that taught you how to manage your income well, you are probably one more of the crowd who thought good grades in school are a guaranteed formula to success in life.

Good grades might be important in school, but in real life it’s your financial statement that counts.

Nevertheless, many adults do not really look at their financial situation until crisis strikes. That is why most adults fail to make financial corrections that are necessary to lead a financially successful life.

Luckily enough, just like any other educational gap, this one can be repaired. Anybody who is willing — or desperate — enough to study diligently can acquire the knowledge that is necessary to make his or her financial statement, their real life report card, mirror a wise money management system that will lead to financial success.

By: Bettina Langerfeldt

Financial Planning For Business Owners

November 24th, 2009



Business owners are not looking for financial advisors to give them the life they want by making a killing in the stock market; these people have been able to create the life they want by themselves. In the early 1990s, at the beginning of my financial planning career, I was very fortunate to meet one of Canada’s most successful businessmen. He was in his late 50s and had much more life experience than me. He shared that 99.9 per cent of the investment advisors he had met over the course of his career did not have the foggiest idea of how to make money nor did they understand what successful business people were looking for when they sought out professional advice.

He told me that when he took a risk he got paid for it. He could buy a piece of property for a marginal amount, get it rezoned for a shopping mall and then get franchises to sign letters of intent to lease for five years or more when the property was developed. Once this was done he would go off to the bank and borrow on the future revenue that would be generated from these highly profitable leases to develop his properties and create a residual income. He knew he could take his own money and make 100 times the amount with 1/10th the risk that any stock broker could offer him and he was right. Business owners are not looking for financial advisors to give them the life they want by making a killing in the stock market; these people have been able to create the life they want by themselves.

Successful business people want their financial advisors to show them ways to keep their wealth. In essence, successful people want their financial advisors to provide them with financial, tax, succession and estate planning holistic solutions. They don’t need their advisors to sell them products such as stocks, mutual funds and life insurance to achieve their financial success. The point is they are already successful. Business people are looking for financial professionals who are positioned in the role of wealth manager. Someone who can see and understand the affluent business owner’s big-picture needs by constructing customized strategies to achieve their specific goals of wealth preservation, avoidance of unnecessary tax burdens, creditor protection, wealth accumulation and wealth distribution to themselves, their family, estate and charities.

Successful business owners have an understanding that a financial asset is something that puts money in their pocket, with minimum labor. They understand that a business can buy a car, but a car cannot buy a business! Liabilities are things that take money “out of one’s pocket.” For example a home is a liability even though you own the property with no mortgage, you still have to pay property taxes, utilities, and maintenance.

There are numerous advantages available to those who own their own business, who take the risk and have the creativity and fortitude to do something on their own. These people are compensated for it. As an employee in Canada, one’s equation of earning an income goes like this:

you earn; you’re taxed; then you get to spend what is left over.
When one is a business owner and self-employed in Canada, our government allows you to adopt a much more favorable equation of earning an income:

you earn; you spend, you income split, and you defer bonuses; then you are taxed on what is left over!
Business owners are different from the rest of Canadians, if for no other reason the Income Tax Act favors people who work for themselves. The biggest expense we pay in a year is taxes. Reducing taxes is not only morally and ethically right, it is also smart. There are three easy rules that keep your money in your pocket in this country and not in the government’s:

1. Find the right business structure for your business to pay less tax and protect what you have.

2. Learn to make more money by using the tax strategies of the rich such implementing health & welfare trusts, individual pension plans, retirement compensation arrangements, holding companies, charitable donations and estate freezes.

3. Pay less tax legally and still sleep at night.

The basis of success with working with a Certified Financial Planner is to have a financial plan. A true financial plan is more than simply buying and selling investments, or collecting “assets” that bring in no cash and are thus more akin to liabilities. The way most people invest, they might as well be driving in a circle. A true financial plan is mechanical, automatic, and boring. It applies “The Total Financial Planning Process.”

Assess

Clarify your present situation by collecting and assess all relevant financial data, such as lists of assets and liabilities, tax returns, records of security transactions, insurance policies, will(s) and pension plan(s).

Prioritize

Decide what you want to achieve by identifying financial and personal goals and objectives. Work with your financial professional to help clarify your financial and personal values and attitudes. These may include selling your business, providing for children’s education, supporting elderly parents or relieving immediate financial pressures to help maintain a current lifestyle and provide for retirement. These considerations are important in determining your best financial planning strategy.

Recognize

Identify and recognize financial problems that can create barriers to reaching your financial goals.

Understand

Understand your choices, your financial professional should provide you with written recommendations and alternative solutions. The length of these recommendations will vary with the complexity of individual situations.

Action

Implement the right strategy to ensure that your goals and objectives are met. A financial plan is only helpful if the recommendations are put into action.

Review

To ensure that your goals are achieved it is very important to have periodic reviews with your Certified Financial Planner and other financial advisors to see if there should be revisions to your plan. Successful business people in this world look for and build networks of experts to help them achieve their life and financial dreams. The key to managing your financial future is to plan for it.

All highly successful people I have every work with had a very clearly defined, written life, career and financial plan. They believed implicitly and unshakably in their plan and were impervious to external circumstances. So they didn’t alter their plan every time the wind changed direction, and continued to work their plan steadfastly, no matter how long it took, until their plan inevitably succeeded.

By: Peter Merrick