2. “You may have come across the term
financial planning and wondered what
does it mean, and does it apply to me?”
3. WHAT IS FINANCIAL
PLANNING
Provides direction and meaning to your financial decisions
Considers the whole picture, so one decision impacts on another
Enables you to consider both short and long-term goals as part of your
overall life goals
Enables you to adapt more easily to life changes
Makes you feel more secure that your goals are on track
4. DO IT YOURSELF – WHY?
You have a need and know what you want, i.e. prepared to do your own financial planning and
know how to deliver your goals
You want online access and ability to trade 24 hours a day
You have access to plenty of free “advice” through online media, papers, magazines, self help
books and good investment knowledge
You don’t want to pay for “advice”, and are happy for the responsibility for decisions to rest
with you
You want to take advantage of “low charges” – no advice charges mean charges can be lower
5. DO IT YOURSELF?
- THE MARKET
Dominated by one key player, but others coming on board
Likely to become more popular as advice focuses on higher value investors, market already has a firm foothold as alternative option
to advice
Product focus, i.e. pension, ISA etc
Technology driven, online access 24 hours day
Price driven, big players can no longer get “rebates” from fund managers meaning the market is more transparent
Marketing / service driven – plenty of free / guided “advice” i.e. “popular funds”, portfolios etc
Focus on funds, but plenty of trading platforms for those wanting to invest in shares etc
6. DIY – BE YOUR OWN
FINANCIAL PLANNER
Set measurable goals
Rather than saying you want to be comfortable in retirement, quantify what you mean and how you will achieve this
Understand the effect of each financial decision
All financial decisions are interrelated, so a decision around a child’s education may effect when and how you meet your retirement goals
Review your financial situation periodically
Financial planning is a dynamic process
Goals may change over the years due to changes in your lifestyle (i.e. an inheritance)
Revisit and review your financial plan as time goes by to reflect these changes so you stay on track with your long-term goals
7. DIY – BE YOUR OWN
FINANCIAL PLANNER
Start planning as soon as you can
Don’t delay your financial planning
Save or invest small amounts of money early, and often
Develop good financial planning habits such as saving, budgeting, investing
Regularly review your finances so you are better prepared to meet life changes and handle emergencies
Be realistic in your expectations
You cannot change your situation overnight, this is a lifelong process
And remember there are events beyond your control such as inflation, stock markets and interest rates which will affect your financial
planning results
8. DIY – BE YOUR OWN
FINANCIAL PLANNER
Realise you are in charge
Be sure you understand what you are doing
Make sure you look at your whole financial situation
Ask yourself questions before making any decisions
9. FINANCIAL ADVICE - MYTHS
Financial advice is not about selling you a product
Financial advice is about working with you to develop a long-
term financial game plan, i.e. financial planning
Financial advice does not have to be paid for in cash
Financial advice can be paid for out of the investments used
to deliver your long-term financial game plan
10. FINANCIAL ADVICE – WHY?
You may need expertise you don’t possess in certain areas of
your finances. For example, an adviser can evaluate the level
of risk you are comfortable with, and adjust your retirement
plan to reflect this
You may feel you don’t have the time to spare to do your own
financial planning
You have an immediate need or unexpected life event such as
a birth, inheritance or major illness
11. FINANCIAL ADVICE – WHY?
You feel a professional financial adviser could help
you improve on how you are currently managing
your finances
You know that you need to improve your current
financial situation but don’t know where to start
12. WHAT TO EXPECT FROM A
FINANCIAL ADVISER
A financial adviser will work with you to develop a game plan that fits your financial circumstances and tailors it
to accomplish your goals by:
Looking at the whole financial picture including your goals
Understanding your tolerance for risk and what your expected returns are
Providing an unemotional assessment of what needs to be done
Delivering a comprehensive annual review
Keeping your informed
13. THE PROCESS
Analysing and evaluating your financial goals
Understand what your goals are
Analyse your information to assess your current situation
Determine what you need to do to meet your goals
Develop and present financial planning recommendations and / or alternatives
Deliver financial planning recommendations that address your goals
Go over the recommendations with you to help you understand so that you can make an informed decision
Listen to your concerns and revise the recommendations as appropriate
14. THE PROCESS
Implementation of financial planning recommendations
Agree how recommendations will be carried out
Adviser may carry out the recommendation, or act as a “coach”, co-ordinating the whole process
with you and using other professionals such as stock brokers etc.
Monitoring your financial plan
You and the adviser agree who will monitor your progress towards your goals (normally this rests
with the adviser)
If resting with adviser then they will review your situation and adjust the recommendations, if
needed, as your life changes
15. EXPECTATIONS
Set measurable goals
Rather than saying you want to be comfortable in retirement, quantify what you mean, the adviser can only help if your goals are
quantifiable
Understand the effect of each financial decision
All financial decisions are interrelated, so a decision around a child’s education may effect when and how you meet your retirement goals
Review your financial situation periodically
Financial planning is a dynamic process
Goals may change over the years due to changes in your lifestyle (i.e. an inheritance)
Your financial adviser will meet you at least once a year to review your financial situation, but you can call them anytime if things change
16. EXPECTATIONS
Be realistic in your expectations
An adviser cannot change your situation overnight but they will take control of the lifelong
process to deliver your goals
Realise you are in charge
You are in charge, make sure you understand what your adviser is doing for you and what they
are offering
Make sure you provide the adviser with all the relevant information on your financial situation
Ask questions and play an active role in decision making
17. DO YOU HAVE TO PAY?
YES
An adviser is a professional like an accountant or
solicitor and they will charge
From 2013 charges for advice must be clear and
transparent (this will applies to platforms who in the
past have offered a “free” service)
18. DO YOU HAVE TO PAY?
What you pay depends on the structure they have but may include:
Hourly or fixed fee – you will be charged an hourly rate or fixed fee for any
work they do for you
Retainer fee – some may combine the hourly rate or fixed fee with a
retainer fee. This could be a fixed amount or a percentage of your
investments
• This could be as a direct payment, or could be made out of your investment
19. DO YOU HAVE TO
PAY?
Example of charges
Note:
Based on investment of £500,000
The fee can be paid as a cash payment or taken
from the investments
Initial
Advice
On-going
service
Percentage fee 1% 1% p.a.
Fixed fee £5,000 £5,000 p.a.
20. CHOOSING AN ADVISER
Remember you are in charge:
Understand the initial process, and what they do for you
Understand what on-going service you will get – for example:
What is the annual review – not only looking at goals and aspirations but also your investment
performance, review of legislative changes, appropriateness of current strategy and
recommendations for any changes
Regular information – regular market information, alerts on regulatory changes and access to
information on your investments
Telephone contact – being available when you need them
21. CHOOSING AN ADVISER
Effectively the whole partnership is service driven, a
good service means you don’t need to worry about
financial planning because they will do that for you.
22. WHAT IF I ONLY HAVE A SMALL
AMOUNT OF MONEY AND NEED
ADVICE?
This is a gap in the market, and banks are picking up
some of this.
The service is likely to be more product focused and
less emphasis on lifetime financial planning goals.
23. CHOOSING AN ADVISER
You can find financial advisers on-line there are a number of websites you can go to like -
http://www.unbiased.co.uk/
Alternatively think about what you do for major financial decisions like buying a car or house, this is no
different:
Ask friends, family or work colleagues. Recommendations are worth their weight in gold
When you find an adviser, do your research, find out what they will do for you, look at how they
communicate with their clients (look for websites, twitter, Facebook and other social media
outlets)
Talk to them, talk to their team, be active
25. ABOUT LWM CONSULTANTS
We are financial advisers who developed a company based on Values. Adding Value is how we judge
ourselves.
We aim to:
Share knowledge; good knowledge is the pathway to understanding
Be thoughtful and challenging of set ideas and practices
Be supportive and empowering of our employees
Help those less fortunate than ourselves in the UK and overseas
Provide unbiased financial education via www.Shininglights.co.uk
26. Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/LWM_Consultants
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/InvestorsinValues
Website: http://www.lwmconsultants.com
Shareshare: http://www.slideshare.net/InvestorsinValues
LWM Consultants Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial
Services Authority. FCA Number 728107. Registered in England and
Wales under Company Number 07408315. Registered Office: The
Garden Suite, 23 Westfield Park, Redland, Bristol, BS6 6LT