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Three simple questions which led to the best investment I ever made

How Three Simple Questions Led to the Best Investment I Ever Made

Life is busy, and we all have things we want to do and targets we need to meet in the short and long term. Financially speaking, this means things like reducing mortgage debt, savings, school fees, retirement and leaving a legacy. But setting aside these common financial objectives, how often do we sit down and really focus on what we want to do in our life? Or perhaps, more importantly, when we come to reflect on our lives, what don’t we want to regret not ever doing?

You could say that part of a financial planner’s job is to help turn the ‘I’m so sorry I didn’t…’ into the ‘…thank goodness I did.’ Or about transforming regret at a missed opportunity into pride and the satisfaction in a wish fulfilled. The difference between these things can be huge and leave a lasting impact on your life, as I know from personal experience.

One method I use to encourage my clients to see the world in this way is by working through three questions set by the celebrated financial adviser and thinker, George Kinder. The questions are designed to move people away from an isolated focus on savings, investments and pensions to get a deeper understanding of what matters to them and to help focus on achieving a life of fulfilment without regret. The questions are:

Question 1 – Imagine that you have enough money to take care of your needs, now and in the future. How would you live your life? Would you change anything?

Question 2 – Imagine that your doctor says you have only five to ten years to live. You won’t feel sick, but you’ll never know when death will come. What will you do? Will you change your life? How?

Question 3 – Now imagine that your doctor says you have only one day left to live. Ask yourself: What did I miss? What did I not get to be or do?

Questioning myself

I had been taking clients through these questions for a number of years when, seven years ago, I decided it was time for me to put my money where my mouth was and answer them myself. One Saturday morning, my wife, Juliet, and I worked our way through them. I have always been a careful planner – for me this was the only sensible way to meet my financial commitments, now and in the future. This was the first time we’d ever done something like this together. It wasn’t long before we discovered that we were just ‘living to work’ in order to financially support ourselves and our families, to pay our girls’ school fees, and aiming for a comfortable and early retirement. What answering Kinder’s three questions reminded us is that there is more to life than just planning and striving for these financial staging posts.

When Juliet and I compared our answers, we agreed that we wanted to do more with our money, give more to charity and to family members, travel more with our daughters (they grow up so quickly) and our parents thus enriching the lives of all three generations and creating long-lasting memories. We then understood that if you’re not intentional about making these things happen you tend to just fall back on the planning around capital items like a pension pot or achieving a certain level of savings. We didn’t want to just plough on with our lives, heads-down, only to get to retirement to realise we could have enjoyed it more along the way.

Putting it into Practice

That was the emotional side of the process; the practical side came next. Now we’d identified our life goals, how could we fund them while remaining on course to meet our existing financial commitments and plans for retirement? For example, we decided to travel much more with our daughters and bring both sets of parents along too, which meant that our annual holiday budget was going to increase. With only so much cash in the pot, we needed to weigh up our new goals against our current financial plan. It’s a trade-off and about finding a compromise that allows you to achieve both.

Luckily, we go through this process with Progeny clients, hence we calculated this by using our lifetime cashflow plan. This helped us to re-engineer our plans and work out what could change to accommodate our new lifestyle. In our case, it showed that I needed to earn more money and delay retirement by a few years – a compromise that was more than worth it in my eyes. I was fortunate enough to be a business owner, so I altered the business plan to accommodate my new earnings target and changed my pension contributions, putting my retirement back a few years.

From then on, all three generations went on amazing holidays together every year. We showed our daughters the pleasure of travel as they were growing up and treated our parents. My father passed away last year and I am now so grateful that the last seven years have been filled with the most amazing times spent together, creating memories that none of us will ever forget. Kinder’s questions had helped us avoid the pain and regret of missed opportunity and enjoy a life of fulfilment.

When we think of financial planning and investing, we tend to think of monetary sums and growing our wealth, but I believe that wealth can be a state of mind regardless of how much money you have. Taking the time to identify what was truly important to me and my family and changing our plans to achieve it is one of the greatest investments I have ever made.

If you would like some help in focusing on your life priorities and adapting your financial plans to achieve them, please get in touch, we’d be delighted to help.

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This article does not constitute financial advice. Individuals must not rely on this information to make a financial or investment decision. Before making any decision, we recommend you consult your financial planner to take into account your particular investment objectives, financial situation and individual needs.

Meet the expert
Andrew Pereira
Andrew-Pereira
Director, Wealth

Andrew has been working with families, high-net-worth clients and business owners for well over 20 years. He has a passion for delivering outstanding advice and service.

He joined Progeny in September 2017, having previously been Managing Director of The Quadrant Group, which was acquired by Progeny. Andrew originally joined Quadrant in 1993 as an adviser, eventually becoming Managing Director in 2013.

Andrew feels it is important to continue to work with clients and loves planning and implementing solutions to see them achieve their goals and aspirations for themselves and their children. He is very excited to be part of Progeny and to be able to offer clients a unique combination of financial planning and legal advice.

Andrew spends a lot of his free time with his family and works as a trustee for a number of charities. He loves playing football, traveling, reading, cooking and even shopping!

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