Racine Journal Times
June 2005
Managing Your Most Valuable Asset
Michael P. Haubrich, CFP
What would you consider to be
your most valuable asset? Typical things
that come to mind may include your home,
savings and pension. Given the number of
working years left before traditional
retirement, I would say that your career
should be listed among your most valuable
assets.
Look at it this way, if
you're in your mid-thirties you've still got
many years of working life remaining before
traditional retirement. Even if you are in
your early fifties, your career could
represent more value than the total of all
your financial assets. Your career is the
engine that drives your financial machine.
It produces the income and provides you with
the resources to invest, save, and build
toward your retirement.
If you consider your "career
asset" as the sum total of your time plus
talent plus potential, it should be managed
to maximize its long-term return just as you
would manage other asset returns. Your
career asset return is made up of not only
the current salary you are paid, but the
satisfaction you receive by doing what
really energizes you. That is much harder to
quantify but no less of an important
consideration in managing your career asset.
By not balancing your work and life
objectives you run the risk of suffering job
burnout -- reduced productivity, stress
related health issues and a lessening number
of work years prior to retirement.
By taking steps to ensure an
appropriate work-life balance, you're
helping to manage this asset in a way that
will maximize your investment in your time,
your talent, and your
potential. Managing the balance will also
help ensure that you remain in the work
force longer than if this delicate balance
is not maintained.
So how do you manage your
work-life balance to protect your career
asset? In her book,
Work+Life, author
Cali Williams
Yost, outlines a three-step process that
constantly moves you toward optimum balance.
The process she advocates involves a
combination of introspection, planning, and
action. Backed by case histories and
anecdotal stories designed to encourage and
motivate you to achieving balance, Yost also
includes exercises designed to stretch your
thinking about your career as an asset.
Step one serves to challenge
the way we think about work and life and
dispel some of the common misconceptions we
hold as fact such as believing that only our
managers or human resources has the ability
to resolve work-life conflicts. In fact,
individuals willing to work through the
process are the best positioned to create a
work-life fit that will help ensure
long-term satisfaction and sustainability.
In step two, Yost focuses on
identifying real or perceived roadblocks
that can derail a person from achieving
productive balance. Fear, resistance to
change, and in-the-box thinking are all
factors that have the potential to prevent
an individual from effectively managing
their career asset. In
Work+Life, Yost shares stories of
others who have dealt with these challenges
and offers suggestions for how to overcome
them.
After doing a lot of the
self-work in the earlier steps, step three
centers on creating the actual roadmap and
business case to help you manage your career
in a way that this asset provides the
work-life balance you need to be the most
productive.
The outcome of achieving
work-life balance doesn't mean that you have
to leave your current job and sacrifice
everything you've worked for to-date. It's
important to recognizing your career as an
asset in your life portfolio. Effectively
managing it may ultimately mean changing
jobs, but there are many options and
alternatives to such a drastic step that
could help you achieve the balance you need
and allow you to work-and earn-with higher
levels of satisfaction for a longer period
of time than you would otherwise.
Michael P. Haubrich, CFP is
President of Financial Service Group, Inc.,
a Registered Investment Advisory Firm in
Racine. Website address
www.toyourwealth.com.