WHAT ARE YOU SAVING UP FOR?
The first step in the road to financial security begins with defining your goals. Do you want to be a millionaire by the age 30? Do you want to have your own car within three years from employment? Or do you want to retire and live off of interest income by the time you are 55?
Whatever it is that you desire to save money for, if it’s “financial security” that you are looking for, then you need to look beyond affording that wedding, or that second-hand car. You should also be looking at what kind of lifestyle you want to live by the time you are retired.
It’s not that saving for a car, a house, a wedding, or education for your children are not important. By all means, they are VERY important. But so is saving for your retirement. If you don’t appreciate what I mean, I dare you to find out exactly what it is that your company has set aside for your retirement (assuming you’re employed), or to find out exactly what your business is worth today and what it might be worth by the time you retire.
Don’t be surprised that you’re probably like the great majority of employed and self-employed individuals. After planning for your wedding, for your children’s education, for your car installment payments, and for your apartment rentals or home mortgages, you’ll find that you may not be ready for your retirement. Oh, and did I mention that you might have to provide for your aging parents who, themselves, failed to prepare for their retirement?
It’s beginning to sound depressing that you may not even want to go through this very important step in planning for your future. But, if you’re really serious, you CAN do something about it. If, after you have defined your goal, you will discover that you have a problem because you don’t know how to ever achieve it, then be consoled in the old adage that says, a problem defined is a problem half solved.
As I said in an earlier post, there is good news! You don’t have to be a genius to be financially prepared for your future, and you don’t have to be wealthy to begin with.
The first step is to face the future squarely and define the challenge: decide what your goal is first and then make a plan. Your goal will not happen just because you defined it. But neither will an investment plan work, if you have no goal to begin with. So, take the time to plan your goals. Dream a dream, if you want to. But do it. Now.
