Keys For A Happy Financial New Year
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For many people, the New Year signifies a fresh start. The mental and
spiritual batteries are recharged after the drain of the hectic holidays. We’re
more optimistic. We’re open to new possibilities, new strategies, and new
aspirations. New Year can be a time to think about personal and financial goals
and the “new” commitments you plan to make. Yet, for all the initial
enthusiasm, keeping yourself motivated, committed and moving toward the
accomplishment of those goals is often tough. Here are personal finance tips that
can help you toward a happier new year.
1. Set clear
goals.
We’re
talking any goal you’d like to work toward or achieve in the New Year that has
financial consequences. For example, perhaps you want to work less so you can
spend more time with your family, or you want to change to a career that
excites you more but that pays less.
Setting specific, realistic goals—and
writing them down—is such a powerful financial tool for realizing them. It not
only clarifies what you have to do financially to achieve the goals, it
motivates you to achieve them within a specific timeline. Saving for something
provides much more financial incentive than merely following the standard
advice to save 10 or 15 percent of your monthly pay.
2. Discuss the
goals with your family.
They can help you clarify the goals,
motivate you to make changes, and aid in their achievement.
3. Create a
financial plan.
All
financial actions (or inactions) affect other financial actions. If your
financial left hand doesn’t know what your financial right hand is doing, one
may undermine the other. For example, lack of adequate insurance for home,
health, and other aspects of your life could decimate your retirement savings
and investments if something goes wrong.
You may need professional advice at this
stage, or you may feel you can do it yourself. Regardless, the key is creating
and following through with the plan.
4. Review the
last year.
Life is continually in flux and change
can have a profound impact on your financial plans. For example, during the
past year did you get married or divorced, have a child, change jobs, or change
short-term or long-term goals?
5. Establish a
spending plan.
Achieving
financial goals is built on a single principle: spend less money than you earn.
First, list your regular, dependable sources of income. Then track how much and
where you spend money every month (including cash). Average out on a monthly
basis periodic expenses such as car insurance or property taxes.
Subtract monthly expenses from monthly
income and…do you have a surplus, are you in balance, or are you spending more
than you’re taking in? Are you skimming 5 or 10 percent right off the top of
your income for savings and investing? If not, what expenses can you reduce or
income increase in order to save toward goals? Automate savings to make it less
painful.
6. Reduce debt.
Resolve to lower debt this year. As
interest rates rise, every dollar of accumulated debt becomes a heavier and
heavier drag on your entire financial life.
7. Diversify
your household assets.
You know not to put all of your
investment eggs in one basket (such as high-tech stocks). Apply this advice to
your overall financial household. If possible, working spouses should be
employed in separate companies in separate industries in order to reduce the
possibility of both of you losing jobs at the same time. Go easy on company
stock and industry stock where you work. If your employer or the industry
suffers hard times, you might lose not only your job but also much of the value
of your investments. Avoid investing in a single business or industry that
dominates the economy where you live. If the company or industry suffers, so
might your home values along with your investments.
8. Educate
yourself financially.
The more you understand about finances—from budgeting to
investments to insurance—the more confident and motivated you’ll be to take the
right financial steps this year.
With 2014 behind us, don’t
feel pressured to make resolutions because you feel you should. Instead, open
yourself to the possibility that setting concrete financial goals can be the
start of some truly positive changes in your life. Remember, the clearer your
goals are, the more confident and motivated you’ll be to take the right
financial steps in 2015 and beyond. Best to you in the New Year, and happy goal
setting!
Categories: budgeting, credit, debt, finance, financial planing, future, holidays, insurance, keys, management, money, personal budgets, personal finance
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