10.1 Personal Financial Planning - College Success | OpenStax (2024)

Estimated completion time: 13 minutes.

Questions to Consider:

  • What simple steps do I take to create a financial plan?
  • How do I use financial planning in everyday life?
  • How is the financial planning process implemented for every purchase?

If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail.

Honestly, practicing money management isn’t that hard to figure out. In many ways it’s similar to playing a video game. The first time you play a game, you may feel awkward or have the lowest score. Playing for a while can make you OK at the game. But if you learn the rules of the game, figure out how to best use each tool in the game, read strategy guides from experts, and practice, you can get really good at it.

Money management is the same. It’s not enough to “figure it out as you go.” If you want to get good at managing your money, you must treat money like you treat your favorite game. You have to come at it with a well-researched plan. Research has shown that people with stronger finances are healthier1 and happier,2 have better marriages,3 and even have better cognitive functioning.4

What Students Say

  1. What is your top immediate financial priority?
    1. Minimizing debt
    2. Get a better job
    3. Pay for college
    4. Move out on my own
    5. Get a car
    6. Increase my savings or money on hand
  2. Which aspect of your finances concerns you the most?
    1. The amount of debt I have or will have
    2. Getting a job that will pay well enough
    3. Being financially independent
    4. Supporting my family
    5. Planning/saving for the future
  3. When considering how to pay for college, which of the following do you know least about?
    1. Grants
    2. Scholarships
    3. Loans
    4. Work-study programs

You can also take the anonymous What Students Say surveys to add your voice to this textbook. Your responses will be included in updates.

You can also take the anonymous What Students Say surveys to add your voice to this textbook. Your responses will be included in updates.

Students offered their views on these questions, and the results are displayed in the graphs below.

What is your top immediate financial priority?

10.1 Personal Financial Planning - College Success | OpenStax (1)

Figure 10.2

Which aspect of your finances concerns you the most?

10.1 Personal Financial Planning - College Success | OpenStax (2)

Figure 10.3

When considering how to pay for college, which of the following do you know least about?

10.1 Personal Financial Planning - College Success | OpenStax (3)

Figure 10.4

Financial Planning Process

Personal goals and behaviors have a financial component or consequence. To make the most of your financial resources, you need to do some financial planning. The financial planning process consists of five distinct steps: goal setting, evaluating, planning, implementing, and monitoring. You can read in more depth about SMART goals in Chapter 3.

Financial Planning in Five Steps

  1. Develop Personal Goals
    • What do I want my life to look like?
  2. Identify and Evaluate Alternatives for Achieving Goals for My Situation
    • What do my savings, debt, income, and expenses look like?
    • What creative ways are available to get the life I want?
  3. Write My Financial Plan
    • What small steps can I take to start working toward my goals?
  4. Implement the Plan
    • Begin taking those steps, even if I can only do a few small things each week.
  5. Monitor and Adjust the Plan
    • Make sure I don’t get distracted by life. Keep taking those small steps each week. Make adjustments when needed.
10.1 Personal Financial Planning - College Success | OpenStax (4)

Figure 10.5 Steps of financial planning.

How to Use Financial Planning in Everyday Life

The financial planning process isn’t only about creating one big financial plan. You can also use it to get a better deal when you buy a car or computer or rent an apartment. In fact, anytime you are thinking about spending a lot of money, you can use the financial planning process to pay less and get more.

To explore financial planning in depth, we’ll use the example of buying a car.

1. Develop Goals

First, what do you really need? If you’re looking for a car, you probably need transportation. Before you decide to buy a car, consider alternatives to buying a car. Could you take a bus, walk, or bike instead? Often one goal can impact another goal. Cars are typically not good financial investments. We have cars for convenience and necessity, to earn an income and to enjoy life. Financially, they are an expense. They lose value, or depreciate, rather than increasing in value, like savings. So buying a car may slow your savings or retirement plan goals. Cars continually use up cash for gas, repairs, taxes, parking, and so on. Keep this in mind throughout the planning process.

2. Identify and Evaluate Alternatives for Achieving Goals in Your Current Situation.

For this example, let’s assume that you have determined the best alternative is to buy a car. Do you need a new car? Will your current car last with some upkeep? Consider a used car over a new one. On average, a new car will lose one-fifth of its value during its first year.5 Buying a one-year-old car is like getting a practically new car for a 20 percent discount. So in many cases, the best deal may be to buy a five- or six-year-old car. Sites such as the Kelley Blue Book website (KBB.com) and Edmunds.com can show you depreciation tables for the cars you are considering. Perhaps someone in your family has a car they will sell you at a discount.

Do you know how much it will cost in total to own the car? It will help to check out the total cost of ownership tools (also on KBB.com and Edmunds.com) to estimate how much each car will cost you in maintenance, repairs, gas, and insurance. A cheap car that gets poor gas mileage and breaks down all the time will actually cost you more in the long run.

10.1 Personal Financial Planning - College Success | OpenStax (5)

Figure 10.6 Weighing all the factors is critical when deciding on any purchase, especially a major one like a car. (Credit: Greg Gjerdingen / Flickr / Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC-BY 2.0))

3. Write Down Your Financial Plan

GoalItemDetailsBudgetTimeline
Transportation/Car2014 Toyota CamryBlack, A/C, power windows, less than 60,000 miles

Car $12,000 (max)

Down payment $3,000

Insurance $100/mo

Sales tax $900

+ Licensing $145

Cash needed $4,145

Have $3600 in savings for this.

Save $50/week.

Purchase in approximately 11 weeks.

ComputerUsed or refurbished laptopDell w/ Windows, minimum 13", 128G hard drive, HD Graphics

$300

Use free Windows update from school.

Use free Wi-Fi at school.

Sell current laptop for $100.

Buy refurbished from Dell site for $289.

$189 on credit card.

Pay off when statement comes.

Table 10.1 Examples of financial plans for a car and a computer.

4. Implement Your Plan

Once you’ve narrowed down which car you are looking for, do more online research with resources such as Kelley Blue Book to see what is for sale in your area. You can also begin contacting dealerships and asking them if they have the car you are looking for with the features you want. Ask the dealerships with the car you want to give you their best offer, then compare their price to your researched price. You may have to spend more time looking at other dealerships to compare offers, but one goal of online research is to save time and avoid driving from place to place if possible.

When you do go to buy the car, bring a copy of your written plan into the dealership and stick to it. If a dealership tries to switch you to a more expensive option, just say no, or you can leave to go to another dealership. Remember Elan in our opening scenario? He went shopping alone and caved to the pressure and persuasion of the salesperson. If you feel it is helpful, take a responsible friend or family member with you for support.

5. Monitor and Adjust the Plan to Changing Circ*mstances and New Life Goals

Life changes, and things wear out. Keep up the recommended maintenance on the car (or any other purchase). Keep saving money for your emergency fund, then for your next car. The worst time to buy a car is when your current car breaks down, because you are easier to take advantage of when you are desperate. When your car starts giving you trouble or your life circ*mstances start to change, you will be ready to shop smart again.

A good practice is to keep making car payments once the car loan is paid off. If you are paying $300 per month for a car loan, when the loan is paid off, put $300 per month into a savings account for a new car instead. Do it long enough and you can buy your next car using your own money!

Use the Financial Planning Process for Everything

The same process can be used to make every major purchase in your life. When you rent an apartment, begin with the same assessment of your current financial situation, what you need in an apartment, and what goals it will impact or fulfill. Then look for an apartment using a written plan to avoid being sold on a more expensive place than you want.

You can even use the process of assessing and planning for small things such as buying textbooks or weekly groceries. While saving a few bucks each week may seem like a small deal, you will gain practice using the financial planning process, so it will become automatic for when you make the big decisions in life. Stick to your plan.

10.1 Personal Financial Planning - College Success | OpenStax (2024)

FAQs

When it comes to personal finance the math is easy what's challenging is managing your ________? ›

Foundations in Personal Finance Ch. 1 Intro to Personal Fin.
QuestionAnswer
When it comes to personal finance, the math is easy. What's challenging is managing yourbehavior
18 more rows

What is the rate of return if a $10000 investment earns interest of $600 in 1 year? ›

If you leave your money and the returns you earn are invested in the market, those returns compound over time in the same way that interest is compounded. If you invested $10,000 in a mutual fund and the fund earned a 6% return for the year, it means you gained $600, and your investment would be worth $10,600.

What are the steps in personal financial planning Quizlet? ›

Q-Chat
  • step 1: determine your current financial situation. ...
  • step 2: develop your financial goals. ...
  • step 3: Identify Alternative Courses of Action. ...
  • step 4: evaluate your alternatives. ...
  • step 5: create and use your financial plan of action. ...
  • step 6: review and revise plan.

What makes a successful financial plan? ›

A financial plan documents an individual's short- and long-term financial goals and includes a strategy to achieve them. The plan should be comprehensive and highly customized. It should reflect an individual's personal and family financial needs, investment risk tolerance, and plan for saving and investing.

Is finance hard if you're bad at math? ›

Believe it or not, mastery of advanced math skills is not necessary to have a career in finance. With today's technology, all math-related tasks can be done by computers and calculators. That said, there are some basic math skills that would certainly make you a better candidate in the finance industry.

Is financial planning a lot of math? ›

If math scares you, don't worry! Financial planning doesn't involve lots of number crunching. Most of the calculations are handled by software that takes the financial goals you put in and suggests options for achieving them. Financial planning is a relationship-driven service.

What will 1 dollar be worth in 30 years? ›

Real growth rates
One time saving $1 (taxable account)Every year saving $1 (taxable account)
After # yearsNominal valueNominal value
307.0793.87
3510.04137.72
4014.31200.13
7 more rows

How much money do I need to invest to make $3,000 a month? ›

Imagine you wish to amass $3000 monthly from your investments, amounting to $36,000 annually. If you park your funds in a savings account offering a 2% annual interest rate, you'd need to inject roughly $1.8 million into the account.

Can I live off interest on a million dollars? ›

Once you have $1 million in assets, you can look seriously at living entirely off the returns of a portfolio. After all, the S&P 500 alone averages 10% returns per year. Setting aside taxes and down-year investment portfolio management, a $1 million index fund could provide $100,000 annually.

What are the three S's for financial planning? ›

The Three S's
  • Saving. The methods for teaching money lessons have certainly changed. ...
  • Spending. A budget is an important financial tool that can teach children how to manage money responsibly. ...
  • Sharing.
Nov 18, 2022

What are the three most common reasons firms fail financially? ›

The most common financial problems are (1) undercapitalization, (2) poor control over cash flow, and (3) inadequate expense control.

What are the five basic steps of personal financial planning? ›

Plan your financial future in 5 steps
  • Step 1: Assess your financial foothold. ...
  • Step 2: Define your financial goals. ...
  • Step 3: Research financial strategies. ...
  • Step 4: Put your financial plan into action. ...
  • Step 5: Monitor and evolve your financial plan.

What is the first key of a successful financial plan? ›

1. Define your short- and long-term goals. Financial planning is always based around the financial goals you want to achieve. Though these goals may change over time, it's important to establish some preliminary goals to help guide your saving strategy.

What are the three keys to financial success? ›

Three keys to financial success are: Always spend less than you earn. Avoid splurging. Invest the rest.

What does successful financial planning look like? ›

A financial plan is a comprehensive picture of your current finances, your financial goals and any strategies you've set to achieve those goals. Good financial planning should include details about your cash flow, savings, debt, investments, insurance and any other elements of your financial life.

What is the personal finance challenge? ›

The National Personal Finance Challenge (NPFC) is a nationwide competition that offers high school students the opportunity to build and demonstrate their knowledge in the concepts of earning income, spending, saving, investing, managing credit, and managing risk.

When it comes to managing money, success is about ________% knowledge and ________% behavior.? ›

Chapter 1 Review
AB
When it comes to managing money, success is about20 Knowledge, 80 behavior
What is the primarily widespread financial insecurity of Americans today?The saving rate of Americans is low and many borrow in order to spend more than they earn
23 more rows

How is math important to managing your personal finances? ›

You can use maths to calculate your monthly payments, to track your debt repayment progress, and to make decisions about how to pay off your debt faster. Paying bills: Maths skills can help you to calculate when your bills and help you to budget effectively to make sure that you pay them on time.

What type of math is personal finance? ›

Students apply what they learned in Algebra I and Geometry to topics including personal income, taxes, checking and savings accounts, credit, loans and payments, car leasing and purchasing, home mortgages, stocks, insurance, and retirement planning.

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