Moving from full-time employment to retirement is a huge transition.
You need to start thinking about it long before you plan to retire.
Barry LaValley is an author and financial educator, who specialises in preparing for retirement.
“If we want to just focus it on when you plan to leave the paid workplace, and go off and do things that you want to do, then I would say within 10 years of that, and then 5 years, and then 1 year, and you just ramp it up”.
By the time that you are ready to move into this new period of life, you have a pretty good idea of what the possibilities and the opportunities are.
A common mistake that people make in the run-up to retirement is focusing too much of their attention on insuring they have enough money.
It’s more important to think about what you really want to do with the rest of your life.
We still have this idea that retirement is the golden handshake, the pot at the end of the rainbow. And it’s not.
The Japanese call it ‘second life’, and all that means is that you get to a point in your life where it’s life balance as opposed to lopsided leisure, achieving life-long goals, as supposed to just purely having fun.
It’s about focusing on the things that are important to you, by first identifying what those are.
It’s about living a life of purpose.
If you’re approaching retirement and don’t yet use a financial planner, there is a very strong case for hiring one.
But remember, at this stage of life, it’s not really a conventional financial adviser that you are looking for.
Barry states “I’m not sure at this point in our lives it’s an adviser that we need, as much as an educator, a mentor for some who need it, a catalyst and a coach”.
The role of the adviser changes because the adviser becomes a more important part of a client’s life.
Retirement is an exciting opportunity. There are all sorts of things that you might want to do.
But it requires serious deliberation. And you should to start that process sooner rather than later.