A number of personal finance bloggers write about making a plan–an Investing Personal Statement (IPS)–to keep you from doing dumb things with your money.
With a plan in place, you have guardrails for when your finances aren’t doing their normal thing. The stock market is falling and you aren’t sure what to do with your investments? Your IPS should address this. Your bonus was much bigger than expected, and you aren’t sure what to do with it? Your IPS should address this too.
I don’t have an IPS myself, at least not nearly as detailed as the ones other bloggers have published, but I have had a road map for years. Every year, at the beginning of the year, I look at my financial goals for the last year, and update them for the year to come. I decide what my goals are and decide how to send the money I (will) have to achieve them: save up a house down payment, pay off the mortgage, pay off the car, always max out retirement accounts, put aside money for travel and house repairs, etc.
Lately, however, I have been distracted by the changes in my household finances, and I realize I should probably check my map. I am still pretty sure I know where I am going, but my eyes keep straying to some of the road side billboards.
Continue reading “Do I Need A New Map?”