Your first day of work elicits such a wide array of emotions, thoughts, and feelings, that are usually felt strongly and often feel in conflict with each other.
This mix of strong, intense emotions makes for a busy brain. And a busy brain is more overloaded than normal, which makes it hard to perform your best — which of course is your primary goal on your first day of work at a new job. So how can you stay on top of things to prepare for your first day of work?
To help you cut a path and get you into prep mode, we developed a first day of work success checklist. A single guide that includes everything you need to do and prepare for so you can focus on performing at your best and giving it your all at your new job from day one.
Does it mean not working? Or does it mean having the freedom to decide what kind of work you want to do? Does it mean retiring from having any sort of career at all? Or does it mean retiring from the career that is giving you income now, fueling the investing required to get there.
In other words, does it mean escaping the drudgery of clock-punching? Because being completely retired with no job income requires a lot more money! But let’s assume you’re looking to do just that. You want to break free of your corporate overseer and spend more time at home with your family or traveling the world. Here’s what you have to do:
Plan what retirement will look like
These are the big topline issues. What kind of lifestyle do you want to have? The one you have currently? Will you want to travel? Do you want to eat at great restaurants? Do you love expensive wine? Or will you?
Keep in mind that your health will be different and will change a great deal as you retire—as hard as that is to imagine at, say, 25. Factor that in to what you’ll need. And not only will you want to feel healthy, you’ll want to feel vital. What will support that? Cultural events? Travel? Certain hobbies? Are those hobbies expensive?
Figure out what you’ll need
There’s a helpful guideline for figuring out how much money you’ll need to retire. The idea is: Take you estimated annual expenses, subtract any benefit payments you’ll be receiving—from the government or your employer—and multiply that times 25. If you figure you’ll need $100,000 a year to maintain your lifestyle. And you’ll be receiving $5000 in benefits payments. You’ll need to save about $1 million.
That assume a retirement age of around 65 though. Early retirement will mean even more aggressive saving. To help you figure out roughly what you need by a certain age, a retirement calculator is the tool to use. There are dozens of retirement calculators available for free online. Some of our favorites include Bankrate’s and Nerdwallet’s. You enter your age, income, current savings, and how much you’ll be receiving in benefits, like a 401K in the U.S. or an RRSP in Canada. If you’re lucky enough to have a pension, you’ll need to factor that in, too.
Start saving now
The CRA provides a variety of tax breaks that encourage savings. And there’s GRSPs. Your savings will not only be tax-deferred, meaning you pay no income tax on any money you invest in it until you retire — but your employer may also kick in some money to match some, or even all, of your contribution. And there’s the RRSP, which is self-administered. Here’s a rundown of the various savings plans for Canadians
Cut your budget
Retiring early require serious budget cutting. You want to get your spending totally under control and eliminate all unnecessary expenditures. Use this comprehensive guide to find ways to save. But here are some easy moves that you can implement immediately.
Invest your savings!
The longer you give your money the time to make more money the better. Investing typically (but not always) provides higher returns than leaving it in a savings account, provided you can be without your money for a long time. To save for early retirement, you’ll need to invest in the stock market. Though investing in stocks is inherently risky, historically it’s averaged an 8% percent return. When saving for early retirement, you want to put all your extra money into investments. Once you cut your monthly budget down to size, take that extra money and invest it.
Get a financial planner to help you figure out what your portfolio should look like. If you’re young, your financial planner with want to create a diverse, balanced portfolio full of index funds. And they will set that portfolio to “growth.” You’ll be investing in emerging companies and markets. As you get close to your retirement date, your advisor can help you dial things back. Your portfolio will become more and more conservative. But you can’t start out conservatively. What you’re attempting to do is something extremely aggressive—some people might say it’s impossible—so you have to go big.
That means investing in stocks—both domestic and foreign. That means investing in emerging markets and lots of exchange traded funds (ETFs) which lower your risk through diversification.
Because working with a personal certified financial planner can be expensive, a robo-advisor is a prudent option for the prospective early retiree. Because they automate so much of the work that a certified financial planner or stock broker will do, they’re much cheaper. And because they are specifically targeting young clients—people in their 20s and 30s—they are primed to help the young investor. You plug in your details and the robo-adviser will create a plan that will get you there. The best ones will offer real live people to support you should you need them.
The FIRE movement is deeply compelling. And it seems to make so much sense. If you can retire early, why not? But the ideas has its detractors. the most famous of which is financial meg-expert Suze Orman who thinks that FIRE savers tend to grossly underestimate their needs when they’re older. Some FIRE proponents think you need about $1 million in the bank. She insists it’s more like []$5 million](https://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-biggest-financial-mistake-you-could-ever-make-according-to-suze-orman-2018-10-02). And she has a point. Think about it like this: You know how we and every other personal-finance expert or resource says past results can’t guarantee future ones? What we’re saying is: We have no idea what’s going to happen to the stock market or the world economy in the next 10, 20, 30 years. Just because things have been one way, just because the stock market has historically produced significant returns for investors, there’s no way of knowing that it will continue. Your life is exactly the same way. FIRE proponents tend to look at their lives as a fairly steady continuum. I can’t get by on $35,000 a year now, so I will need to get by on $35,000 a year in the future. But you might get sick. The economy might tank. Inflation may make all your liquid funds significantly less valuable in the future—even more significantly than they generally are. This is a big deal. Crises could upend your dreams.
The other factor is: Your 20s and 30s should be fun! And not buying things is… not so fun! Extreme savings can affect your social life. It can affect whether or not you have kids. It can fundamentally and somewhat artificially change your life. Of course, all that savings, may help you understand what’s really important to you. And if you don’t know what’s really important to you, how are you going to know how you want to spend those last 20, 30, even 40 years.
Early retirement is a worthy dream. But it requires a ton of work. If you’re up for some serious personal austerity and you’re willing to put off some of the joys of life, then early retirement might be move you can make. But you have to save and you have to invest and you have to be willing to wait. But once you get there, you’ll experience a remarkable level of financial freedom—and a long life ahead of you for enjoying it.
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