Financial Planning
Financial planning is the process of arranging your finances to meet your personal goals and objectives for the future. By properly planning your finances, you are setting a roadmap to get from "point A" to "point B." The financial planning process can be complex or simple, depending upon your set objectives. In our attempt to help you get to "point B," we have put together a financial planning section of our blog. We hope that you find the articles to be both informational and useful.
Remember: These articles are meant to be educational only, and are not specific recommendations regarding any particular financial planning methodology. To implement specific advice into your overall plan, please schedule time to meet with a qualified financial advisor.
The Measurable Benefits of Having a Financial Plan in Place
Last Updated (Tuesday, 19 August 2008 09:10)
Written by Hank Brock
The psychological benefits are yours. You keep them. They include things like increased peace of mind, progress toward reaching your goals, without worry about unfinished business.
What about the monetary benefits? This is how most planners must justify their existence, their employment. For now, don't even consider the long-term strategic benefits of having a plan. For now, look at just the first couple of years. The typical client will usually see a cash-an-cash measurable, identifiable return of anywhere from eight to 30 times the fee. In other words, if your fee is $1,000, you will see anywhere from $8,000 to $30,000 in identifiable returns within the first 24 months. What kinds of returns? Income tax savings. Improved returns on investments. Savings on legal fees. Savings on insurance premiums. Increased cash flow.
Can your planner guarantee that return? No, of course not! That would be most unprofessional. But a good planner can guarantee that, regardless of what you see during the first few years, you will absolutely benefit in the long term from a solid, well-thought out financial plan designed by a professional planner.
And a good planner should be busy enough with an already active clientele that he will guarantee that, if at the conclusion of the exhaustive data-gathering interview, he doesn't feel he can accomplish something for you that will be very meaningful, then he will bow out of the engagement.
No planner worth his salt wants to do busy work. You don't want to hire him to do busy work, and he doesn't want to do it. He is in his career because he loves what he does. He knows that his clientele only grows when he has satisfied clients, and they refer him to their colleagues and neighbors. To do that, he's got to have meaningful long-term client relationships, where they get ahead financially.
Only then, do all prosper. Only then, does your planner stay employed by his employer: you. Only then, do you introduce him to neighbors and colleagues.
And that is as it should be, because like all laws governing money happiness, everyone benefits from complying.
Hank Brock is president of Brock and Associates, LLC, a St. George, Utah based financial consulting firm. To learn more about the benefits of having a financial plan, please schedule a time to meet with Brock and Associates.
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The Financial Planning Process: 5 Essential Steps
Last Updated (Wednesday, 13 August 2008 09:30)
Written by Hank Brock

The financial planning process involves five basic steps. After the initial meeting with your financial planner, the five steps to the financial planning process include: data gathering, plan preparation, plan presentation, plan implementation, and on-going monitoring.
Financial Planning Process: Data gathering.
Data gathering is a marathon. It usually takes place at your home. It may take two hours or all day. Your planner will need to examine all your documents: Tax returns. Balance sheets. Income statements. Employee benefit plan booklets. Retirement plan documents. Wills. Trusts. Insurance policies. Investment statements. Brokerage house statements. Bank statements. These are the tangible bits of information.But there's also subjective information, such as: What are your lifestyle goals? How do you want to distribute your estate? At what age do you want to retire? How much income do you want during retirement? Then there are the assumptions that need to be figured into the whole process. What's going to happen to interest rates? Where is the economy headed? How much inflation will occur? Your planner will want your feelings on these things to see if expectations are realistic.
Finally, your planner will consider your personal attitudes -- toward risk tolerance, toward tax aggressiveness, toward simplicity in your financial affairs. By the time all the data is gathered, your planner has a very good idea of where you are now and where you want to be.
The next step in the financial planning process is plan preparation.
Financial Planning Process: Plan preparation.
Preparing your plan typically takes three to four weeks, as the planner does an analysis -- the diagnostic work. The planner knows where you are, and where you want to be. Now he needs to figure out the most efficient way to get you there.For example, maybe it's a family partnership. Or a family corporation. Or a family trust. He'll look at all the pros and cons -- then prepare written recommendations. Some will be major strategic recommendations. Others will be minor tactical recommendations. They will all fit together.
The next step in the financial planning process is plan presentation.
Financial Planning Process: Plan presentation.
After all the recommendations are in writing, your planner will present them to you. During the first interview, he'll present the plan to you and review the major areas. Then you'll take the plan home. Read it. Study it. Go over it with your spouse. Jot down any questions you may have about it.When you get back together with your planner, you'll go over the plan in detail. He'll answer your questions. Clarify details. As you agree on each recommendation, your planner will prioritize them into an "Implementation Check List." It's simply a "To Do" list for you and your planner.
The next step in the financial planning process is plan implementation.
Financial Planning Process: Plan implementation.
The first three steps move quite quickly. In fact, you will probably get through them in about a month.Step four, implementing the plan, takes a lot longer-usually about five or six months. During that time, you'll meet with your planner to go over tax planning, retirement planning, estate planning, and insurance issues. Your planner may bring in other experts -- such as attorneys to help resolve certain issues.
In the end, your plan might have as many as 25 recommendations. A few recommendations will be major, broad, strategic recommendations, each worth thousands of dollars to you. The remainder will be fine-tuning recommendations -- crossing the T's, dotting the I's, and making sure your financial affairs are really in order.
The last step in the financial planning process is on-going monitoring and maintenance.
Financial Planning Process: On-going monitoring and maintenance.
Here the planner should be retained to provide periodic updates and on-going advice. Perhaps there are a couple of tax-planning sessions each year, portfolio reviews, insurance updates, etc. Perhaps you need some questions answered about whether you should refinance your mortgage, lease or buy a car, etc. Your planner should alert you to changes in conditions that directly affect your plan.Hank Brock is president of Brock and Associates, LLC. He has helped thousands of clients meet their goals through the financial planning process.
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What to Expect When Developing a Financial Plan
Last Updated (Wednesday, 06 August 2008 09:42)
Written by Hank Brock

Once you select a financial planner, what happens then? What is the process of creating your financial plan? Financial planning addresses everything that has to do with money. With your adviser's help, you'll leave no financial stone unturned. Should you refinance your mortgage? Should you buy or lease a car? What should you do with the inheritance from your grandmother? How can you get more tax-sheltered dollars out of your professional corporation? Where do the answers come from? They come from the "subsets" of financial planning -- things like cash flow management and tax planning. Let's look at a few of the most common.
Income Tax Planning
Tax planning actually spans all parts of your financial plan, such as investment strategies, retirement planning, and estate planning. Specifically, you need to make sure you're maximizing all available deductions, exemptions, and credits to minimize your tax bite.Retirement Planning
How much should you save for retirement? And how will you do it? Is retirement right for you? Your planner will discuss tax-qualified retirement plans-including IRAs, Keoghs, 401k plans, 403b plans, corporate pension and profit-sharing plans. You'll also want to look at non-tax-qualified retirement plans, non-qualified deferred compensation plans, selective incentive plans, and tax shelters.How do you know what's best for you? It's called "sensitivity analysis." It looks at your retirement goals. When you want to retire. Your income objectives. Inflation rates. Varying rates of return. The answers help determine how much you need to save -- at what rate of return.
Estate Planning
You'll start with wills. Trusts. Estate distribution issues. But that's not all. A good planner will help you construct a plan so you avoid estate taxes. Too few people worry about estate taxes. They're too far away. Too intangible. But the only way to avoid them is to strategically plan for them today.Legacy Planning
A good planner will understand legacy planning. A good legacy plan comes from knowing, living, and then planning from your values. You are building bridges that will take you and those you love to greater levels of abundance, purpose and significance. You'll talk about those things that are truly important to you, and then determine the best ways in which to pass those values on after you pass.Asset Protection
It is imperative to develop strategies that maximize protection of your assets from frivolous lawsuits or creditors in this litigious society. You don't want to spend years saving and growing your assets only to have them taken away by ambulance chasers. Your planner should address ways in which to implement asset protection.Education Funding
There are three basic sources of education funding: cash flow dollars, dollars from tax savings, and compound interest dollars. You won't want to use cash flow dollars. They're the most expensive. Income tax savings and compound interest dollars are far less expensive -- but require advanced strategic planning. That's what your planner is for.Investment Portfolio Management
Entire college courses are built around portfolio management. Simply stated, your licensed investment advisor makes sure your portfolio is "balanced." In other words, you need both long-term and short-term investments; liquid and illiquid investments; tax-advantaged and non-tax advantaged investments. You should have some fixed-income investments-such as bonds, certificates of deposit, and money market funds-and some equity investments-such as stocks, real estate, and other tangibles. This achieves the balance we've discussed. Since different kinds of investments behave differently during different phases of the economic cycle, current conditions will dictate how your assets are invested: Is the economy growing? Are we experiencing inflation? Recession?As part of portfolio management, your registered investment advisor will discuss the pros and cons of different kinds of investments -- stocks, bonds, money market funds, annuities, mutual funds, real estate, tangibles, limited partnerships, and certificates of deposit, among others. You will look at the whole thing in light of how much risk you can tolerate.
Risk Management and Insurance
There are three basic things you can do with risk: You can avoid it, absorb it, or transfer it.
First, find out what you can do to avoid risk. Your planner might advise using trusts, family partnerships, or family corporations. He should tell you how to protect your assets from frivolous malpractice claims, frivolous creditors, and similar problems.
You might be willing to absorb some of the risks you can't avoid. For example, you might increase the deductibles on your auto insurance, homeowners insurance, or health insurance. In essence you are self-insuring for the amount of that deductible.
Finally, if you can't avoid or absorb a risk, you should transfer it usually through some means of insurance. Your financial planner should do a complete review and analysis of all insurance you own -- life, auto, homeowner, health, dental, malpractice, disability, and so on.
Hank Brock, CPA, MBA, CLU, ChFC is President of Brock and Associates, LLC and author of "Your Complete Guide to Money Happiness." Hank has been in the business of financial consulting since 1979.
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Financial Planning