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Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared on NewRetirement.
I am avid watcher of and devoted participant in adventure racing.
The expedition races I follow (monitoring progress on an online map) are three- to six-day races that occur all over the world. In an adventure race, racers plot their path to checkpoints across a course that spans 300-plus miles (usually 50-100 miles a day) while mountain biking, rock climbing, running rapids, trekking, and more. All with just hours of sleep along the way.
Plotting the right path is a key part of this sport. There is no set course, and you don’t have to stay on set trails.
Navigation systems like GPS are strictly prohibited in adventure racing, but it certainly would be interesting to see an algorithmically perfected route, tuned for weather, unexpected trail closures (like downed trees), and the physical strengths of each individual team.
Mapping Your Financial Future Is Not Too Different From Mapping an Expedition Route
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Financial mapping, creating a financial plan for your entire life, is a similarly daunting to plotting your path for an expedition. In both cases you are trying to figure out how to get from a point A to a point B.
It is possible to be be like an adventure racer, and use the equivalent of a paper map and highlighter pen to plot your financial route. However, employing the expertise of financial planners can make the financial mapping process a lot easier.
These resources can essentially serve as a deluxe navigation system for your money.
A good financial plan, like a well-plotted route on a map, is like seeing into the future. You can project where you will be as you proceed along your route.
Financial Mapping: Where Are You Now and What Is Your Ultimate Financial Destination?
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The first step of any journey is to know where you are now and to set your ultimate destination.
For most people, the long-term financial goal is being able to fund their lives through longevity at a spending level at which they can live comfortably.
Understand Your Strengths and Values
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There is no one right financial map for everyone. Your perfect path to a well-funded life can be tuned for your strengths and values.
I don’t do multi-day adventure races, but I will go out for 12- to 30-hour challenges. My strengths are running and hiking, and I don’t really love steep downhill or uphill mountain biking.
That said, I also am out there for the adventure, not winning. And, I kind of love the bragging rights of doing something miserable. So, my route would avoid biking when possible and prioritize the most interesting and maybe even audacious points along the way.
My strengths and values with regards to financial planning are similar. I love challenging work and am willing to take risks like starting my own company. I also want to prioritize my role as a mother and get as much out of life as possible.
Luckily, I also like the interesting logistics of manipulating all the financial levers I have to live the interesting long life I aspire to.
Your financial plan should prioritize what you are good at as well as what you enjoy and value.
What Methods of ‘Transportation’ Are Available to You?
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Work, saving, investing, spending levels, debt, insurance, and benefits are all examples of “transportation” to your ultimate destination of an adequately funded life.
You can deploy these levers in different ways over different time periods to help you reach your long term financial goals while also living the life you want, with whatever stopovers you desire.
The NewRetirement Planner goes well beyond savings and investments, enabling you to maintain a holistic plan, a comprehensive financial map.
Choose Your Route: What Stopovers and Detours Do You Want to Take?
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When traveling, some people like the scenic route. Others prefer super highways or to take a meandering path with lots of stopovers.
Some people, like Financial Independence Retire Early (FIRE) devotees, want the most direct, fastest route to retirement — no detours whatsoever. FIRE adherents want to retire as early as possible, scrimping and saving every possible dollar, working side gigs and limiting spending to be free of work.
Most people take a more conventional path, balancing spending to enhance their life in the short term with strategic savings to retire in their sixties. There is time on the freeway at the speed limit with a 9-5 job and saving 20% of your income. However, there is also time for scenic roads and enriching stopovers.
And, then there are always people who may go off any kind of road entirely for some period of time and play catch up on the superhighway later or live peacefully in more meager circumstances.
Prepare for the Unexpected
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No matter your vehicle and route, it really isn’t enough to plot one path to your destination. You need to know what to do when circumstances change.
Inflation, stock market troughs, health events, natural disasters, and more can wreak havoc on the best laid financial plans.
The right insurance can prepare you for the unexpected. Strategies for your savings, like a bucket system can maximize your money for an uncertain future by ensuring you have cash available for living expenses if things go awry.
You want a plan that anticipates things that can go wrong and know what you are going to do when the unexpected happens.
Prepare for the Expected
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In a recent race, Expedition Oregon, the race organizers added snowshoes to the mandatory gear list at the last minute when they saw that snow was forecast. Your financial plan can incorporate similar strategies.
You know taxes are in your future. Plan in advance to do Roth conversions or strategize to minimize taxable income.
Anticipate health care spending. The average out of pocket health care cost for a 65-year-old couple has been estimated at $300,000. A plan for funding this expense is critical to achieving your long-term financial goals.
You can also build a projected budget for the rest of your life — the more detailed the better. And then, take steps to guarantee income to cover your spending wants and needs.
Measure Progress
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My number one rule when adventure racing? Don’t get lost.
It is imperative to be constantly checking the map to ensure that you are where you need to be. Check landmarks, trail crossings, measure time and distance passed.
There is nothing worse than coming to the realization that you haven’t been paying attention and you suddenly have no idea where you are and need to backtrack to regain your bearings.
It can be similarly useful and gratifying to monitor your key financial metrics.
What is your net worth now and projected to longevity? Are your savings on track? Is your spending in line with expectations? Are you making progress toward your goals?
Don’t get financially lost. Stay on track by monitoring metrics.
Remap as the Need Arises
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It is kind of frustrating but also reassuring when a GPS system starts spinning and the screen says, “remapping, stoppage ahead.” And, when I am out in the wild, I don’t mind rerouting to find a route better suited to new information and circumstances.
It is important that you do the same with financial mapping. You will not be able to anticipate every roadblock, accident, an interesting side trip, or breakdown.
When financial circumstances like inflation projections change, you need to make adjustments to your plan with the updated information and, when necessary, plot a new route to your goal.
Keep Remapping
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Life is hopefully long and interesting. You will likely make significant adjustments to your financial plan over time.
We recommend that you walk through your entire plan at least quarterly to update your data and make adjustments as necessary.
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