Strategies Designed to Meet Your Financial Goals
by Dwight Wanken (Write for us!)
(Click on the links within the article to get definition of that word)
(Click on the links within the article to get definition of that word)
Close your eyes and visualize your dream vacation or the shiny new car that you've always dreamed of having. Sure, looks great! Unfortunately, for many of us the planning stops right there. With a little
planning and discipline the likelihood of achieving our goals can be dramatically improved. Consider implementing one, if not all, of the strategies listed below to improve your financial picture.
Write down your financial goals and objectives and include deadlines. This will help you stay focused.
Use credit cards as little as possible. Financing your lifestyle with credit cards is a trap. Reach for your checkbook instead.
Payoff your credit cards each month. With the new minimum payment requirements of around 4%, consumers will get out of debt quicker. For example, on a $2,000 credit card bill at 18% interest, paying the former 2% minimum will still leave you paying 30 years from now. The interest will cost you over $5,000 on the $2,000 charge. By making the new 4% minimum payment, you will finish up in about 10 years and the interest will be roughly $1,100.
Write down your financial goals and objectives and include deadlines. This will help you stay focused.
Use credit cards as little as possible. Financing your lifestyle with credit cards is a trap. Reach for your checkbook instead.
Payoff your credit cards each month. With the new minimum payment requirements of around 4%, consumers will get out of debt quicker. For example, on a $2,000 credit card bill at 18% interest, paying the former 2% minimum will still leave you paying 30 years from now. The interest will cost you over $5,000 on the $2,000 charge. By making the new 4% minimum payment, you will finish up in about 10 years and the interest will be roughly $1,100.
- Spend a little, but save a little more. As your debts are paid off, save the "extra" cash each month. Many people are tempted to overspend with the "extra" cash.
- Keep a savings balance of at least 6 months of expenses. This cash cushion can be used when emergencies do arise instead of charging on credit cards.
- Map out a college savings plan and begin funding early.
- Manage taxes early in the year and look for deductions, credits and deferral of income to reduce your tax bill. The savings on taxes can be used for other goals.
- Go for steady, consistent, long-term growth in your investment. By the time you read about a "hot tip" it's usually cold.
- Protect your valuables and income earning potential with appropriate insurance policies including mortgage, life, and disability policies.
- Invest for retirement. At best, Social Security will cover only a fraction of the money you will need for retirement. Talk to your financial advisor about preparing for a comfortable retirement.
- Create an estate plan. Many people think you must be super wealthy to do estate planning which is not true. Avoiding probate and passing assets to heirs estate tax free, are the main goals.
Email this Article
Cite this Article
Other Suggested Articles
Make Meaningful Milestones: Set Your Goals >
Your Path to Your Financial Goals >
Take Action: Starting Your Financial Future Today >
How Do You Make Financial Decisions? >
Finite, Not Infinite: Getting Your Financial Life in Order >
Benchmark Your Current Financial Reality >
Investing Through Different Life Stages >
Base Your Plan on What's Important to You >
Financial Planning Is Your Roadmap >
Don't Sabotage Your Financial Goals >
Other Articles By This Author
Some Financial Planning Should Be a Family Decision >
Living Trusts: Fact and Fiction >
The One Person 401(k) Plan >
The Small Business 401(k) Plan: A Safe-Harbor >
Sign and be Mine >
You And Your Financial Advisor: The Perfect Team >
Mortgages: The Long or Short of It >
Keys To Debt Management >
Common Insurance Mistakes We All Make >
Article reprinted with permission. Unauthorized reproduction of this content is prohibited.
Click here to license InvestorGuide University content.
Click here to license InvestorGuide University content.




How to use this tool
How to use this tool