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Giving
the Gift of a Financial Planner
The
holiday season should be about giving, but at the end of
the season, most people can't help but think it's all about
spending and money out the door. What would happen if you
and other family members considered a different gift this
holiday season – the chance to build your financial awareness
with a trained expert?
Financial
planning is an investment. It costs money. But its potential
returns are manifold – a chance to get a handle on current
problems with spending, debt and investing and a long-term
opportunity to diffuse fear of financial issues by learning
everything possible about them. It doesn't matter if you
are a single working individual or a family with kids still
at home – the right financial planner can be a long-term
partner in re-educating everyone in a household about money
and the right ways to handle it.
For
many people financial planning is a reaction to an emergency,
such as a divorce, the death of a spouse or a sudden windfall.
But in making the decision to do financial planning as an
ongoing part of your life, you have the chance to fully
review all your spending and investing decisions and maybe
allow each of your family members to do individualized planning
that will set them on a good course for life.
Here
are some questions you should ask a prospective financial
planner:
What
training do you have? Find out how long the planner
has been in practice and what kind of certifications they
hold. A CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional is someone
with a minimum of three years who has completed a comprehensive
course of study at a college or university offering a financial
planning curriculum approved by CFP Board. CFP® practitioners
must pass a comprehensive two-day, 10-hour CFP® Certification
Examination that tests their ability to apply financial
planning knowledge in an integrated format. Based on regular
research of what planners do, the exam covers the financial
planning process, tax planning, employee benefits and retirement
planning, estate planning, investment management and insurance.
What
services do you offer? What a financial planner
offers is based on credentials, licenses and areas of expertise.
Generally, financial planners cannot sell insurance or securities
products such as mutual funds or stocks without the proper
licenses, or give investment advice unless registered with
state or federal authorities. Some planners offer financial
planning advice on a range of topics but do not sell financial
products. Others may provide advice only in specific areas
such as estate planning or on tax matters.
How
do you charge for your services? Professional
planners will provide you with a financial planning agreement
that spells out the services they provide and how they'll
be compensated. Payment can happen in one of several ways:
- Salaried planners are actually employees of a firm,
and you help pay their salaries through fees or commissions
you agree to pay.
- Direct fees to the planner through an hourly rate, a
flat rate, or on a percentage of your assets and/or income.
- Commissions paid by a third party from the products
sold to you based on the planner's recommendations. Commissions
are typically a percentage of the amount you invest based
on those recommendations.
- A hybrid of fees and commissions based on services.
A planner may charge a fee for designing a comprehensive
financial plan and occasional visits and calls to review
it, while commissions might come from products they sell
that you invest in. (Planners may offset some fees in
exchange for commissions.
Do
you have any potential conflicts of interest?
It may seem like a rude question, but the best planners
expect this one and are prepared to make disclosure. Obviously,
if a planner profits from the sale of investment products
to you, she must spell that out.
How
do you feel about teaching and training? One of
the primary benefits of having a financial planner is education
about the moves you are making or may potentially make.
Don't view a planning relationship as tossing someone your
finances so you won't have to deal with them anymore. As
long as you're paying for their services, make sure you
get a long-term education out of it.
November 2008
– This column was authored in cooperation with Financial
Planning Association.
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