personal money management plan

March 21, 2012

Did you see what happened this week on Wall Street? It was quite a story! Last Wednesday, an executive director at Goldman Sachs resigned through an op-ed article in the NY Times. It was really something, the guy just unloaded about the toxic work environment where doing right by clients was not even a topic at sales meetings. The focus was on ripping clients off in a variety of ways including by persuading them to invest in products left on the books that the company was trying to dump. He even shared that he had seen no less than five different managing directors refer to their own clients as “muppets” in emails. It’s shocking and yet somehow it’s also not a surprise, right?


July 6, 2011

So where did everyone's retirement money go? It went to pay for the multi-billion dollar financial services industry. It was lost due to gross investment incompetence by an industry that doesn’t know how to invest successfully, but does know how to successfully sell the idea that they do. Americans have been subjected to one of the most effective and most destructive marketing campaigns in history.


April 22, 2011

April is Financial Literacy Month and I started the month talking about defining financial literacy and how to begin.  Then I started to talk about the money rules.  There are nine rules to the game of money that I describe in my book, Money Smart.  They are absolutely critical to your success with money and its role in your life as you work to create financial freedom.  Follow them and you will quickly see a positive change when it comes to money.  Break them often enough and you will almost certainly insure that money ends up subtracting from your happiness rather than adding to it. So here is the second of three of the nine Rules of Money that I am sharing:

Money Rule: Have a Written Financial Plan and Follow It

You must have a written financial plan that identifies what you want and how you’re going to get it. If you do not, you will have created a very high probability that you will never achieve the kind of financial freedom you desire.  Your written financial plan is the map of how you will spend and save your money and reach your destination.  Over the years, through talking and working with a lot of people about their personal money management, I have been stunned that most people do not really know where their money goes. Plus, half of the people who believe they live within their means do not. They just don’t know it. If you do nothing else, you absolutely must know how you actually spend your money and its impact on your life. Write down your plan and follow it.  My book, Money Smart, walks you step by step through the process of creating a personal money management plan that is simple to follow. All the tools you need are there and electronic versions of the worksheets and calculators are free on www.moneysmartonline.com for your convenience.