Is Your Retirement Plan Similar to Your Smartphone?

Women Retirement Chispa MagazineFinancial strategist Donna M. Phelan, author of Women, Money and Prosperity: A Sister’s Perspective on How to Retire Well, relates the story of Wanda Strong—one of four sisters—one married, one widowed, one divorced, and one who never married.

Finding herself suddenly single with two kids to support and less than 15 years to retirement, Wanda had to make a choice: she could either succumb to the numbing fear about her financial future, or she could embrace new strategies for prosperity. She chose the latter.

“Many women feel an unspoken fear about money and retirement because they sense they are not prepared and don’t know what to do about it,” says Phelan. “What’s worse—they don’t talk about it!”

Women may indeed be behind, due to a lifetime of lower earnings, leaving the workforce for childcare and eldercare, working in jobs that don’t offer retirement plans, and their own longevity, according to the US Census and Social Security Administration.

Phelan provides “ahs” —awarenesshope and strategies:awareness of women’s own financial situation, hope that it’s never too late (or too early) to start planning, and real life strategies that are easy and practical for women of any age or current financial situation.

  1. CreateStackableIncome Streams to EmpowerRetirement Security (SISTERS).

Women need to stack several income streams to cover their retirement spending needs because one, such as Social Security, may not be enough. And others, such as alimony, child support or a primary earner’s income, may disappear.

  1. Get as inspired to learn about money as you are about your new smartphone!

“Women often say that they can’t understand money concepts because they are too complex to learn,” Phelan says. “But they want to learn about their smartphone—by far, a much more complex, highly advanced piece of technology that is constantly changing—because they want to stay in touch with their kids.”

“But think of the similarities between your smartphone and money:

  • Both have their own language.
  • Both give you tremendous options for freedom.
  • Both have a broad range of applications.
  • Both take time and willingness to learn.
  • Both can, at times, feel frustrating and overwhelming.
  • Both are within your intelligence and offer great potential rewards for mastering them.
  • Only one requires that you ask the advice of someone embarrassingly younger than you how to use it.”
  1. Join the conversation, start a SISTERS Club.

Wanda calls her 3 sisters and a few friends together to brainstorm new retirement strategies for stackable income streams. They could:

  • Meet with a financial advisor and develop a written plan.
  • Learn how to create income from investments.
  • Embrace non-traditional living arrangements, such as renting out empty bedrooms, or getting a roommate.
  • Consider working a little longer, or part-time in retirement.
  • Start a business.
  • Pool their talents, ideas, and resources.

A SISTERS Club, like a book club, is a safe environment where women can come together to share knowledge and experiences, generate ideas, and create investments and business ventures that will provide on-going retirement income. It is a community of women helping women, and helping themselves to improve their retirement planning success. So join the conversation!

Photo by 1000 Words | Shutterstock

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Ginny Grimsley

Ginny Grimsley

Ginny has been with EMSI for over seven years and has worked with lients in every phase of their publicity campaigns. As EMSI’s Print Campaign Manager, Ginny has experience working with print media, giving her a vital perspective of knowing what interests clients and how best to position them, so as to be included in their publications. This keen insight has enabled Ginny to obtain broad coverage in key offline and online periodicals and news sites. Ginny’s years of experience, media savvy, and understanding of the entire PR process, provides clients with a highly-skilled and qualified professional representing them to the media.

Ginny Grimsley

Ginny has been with EMSI for over seven years and has worked with lients in every phase of their publicity campaigns. As EMSI’s Print Campaign Manager, Ginny has experience working with print media, giving her a vital perspective of knowing what interests clients and how best to position them, so as to be included in their publications. This keen insight has enabled Ginny to obtain broad coverage in key offline and online periodicals and news sites. Ginny’s years of experience, media savvy, and understanding of the entire PR process, provides clients with a highly-skilled and qualified professional representing them to the media.