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YOUR CAREER COULD BE YOUR MOST VALUABLE
ASSET
By Michael Haubrich
If you could start your career over
in a completely different field, would you? More than 51 percent
said they would in a recent survey by Korn/Ferry International. So
what keeps that majority from making a change? We believe the answer
is fear. In fact, career counselors report that employees’ fear
associated with financial factors is the most significant roadblock
to making changes that could improve their work/life fit and career
situations.
Increasingly, Financial Service Group has been advising clients
about the need to consider their careers among their most valuable
assets, along with their homes, retirement accounts, and other
traditional assets. Looking at your career as an asset means
managing your career as an asset.
It needs to be viewed with the objective
of increasing value, and if it's not providing value, we adjust the
portfolio-maybe even dump the non-performer (a bad job).
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 assets. 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 before retirement.
When we meet with clients about retirement, we’re finding they
regard retirement as an escape from a dysfunctional work environment
that no longer fits their work/life objectives. They're unhappy and
believe the only solution is the all or nothing work or retire/quit
scenario.
By viewing career as a financial asset, we can consider a range of
alternatives on the continuum between not working at all and
full-time work until retirement.
By taking steps to ensure an appropriate work and life balance,
you're helping to manage the career 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.
Client Needs Lead to Development of New Service
That's why Financial Service Group developed Career Asset ManagementTM.
It’s a new service designed for us and other financial planners to
use in partnership with career counselors to manage the financial
aspects of a career. We focus on optimizing the career asset -
extending its value -- and extending its life.
Consider a client with peak wages of $75,000 who abruptly retires at
age 60. What if, instead, we extend the career asset for an
additional eight years? The first three years he works at 75 percent
of his current schedule and income, the next three years at 60
percent, and the last two at 40 percent. Assuming an average income
and employment tax rate of 40 percent and a six percent discount
rate, the value in today's dollar of that increased income is
$174,150. Now, that's a good return on investment.
We're oversimplifying here by only considering income. Other
quantifiable measures of a career asset include employee benefits,
increased pension, and Social Security benefit accruals. Plus, there
are qualitative (non-financial) factors, such as job satisfaction
and social interaction that are taken into consideration in
determining the true value of the career asset.
Career optimization is the process of increasing career asset value.
Comparing a career to a rental property helps explain this.
If deferred maintenance (career skill set) along with a destructive
tenant (employer or negative work/life fit) are allowed to continue,
over time the property's (career) value will decline, the ability to
increase rents (maximize skills) will be reduced and the useful life
diminished. The value of this mismanaged asset (career) is
minimized. But, by evicting the destructive tenant (adjusting the
negative work/life fit factors) and rehabbing the property
(learning/applying new skills or changing jobs), we can increase
future cash flow potential along with the useful life.
Bob Veres, publisher of Inside Information, a financial planner
trade publication, calls Financial Service Group's Career Asset
Management service groundbreaking.
"It seems to me that this is one of those client service
breakthroughs that dramatically enhances the value of the financial
planning engagement and, at the same time, addresses one of those
social issues that the world is groping for a solution to," Veres
wrote recently in his publication.
By studying this issue for the past two years in collaboration with
our clients, we have learned that by reframing career as a financial
asset and working together with career counselors, we can
objectively advise and facilitate discussion and change for our
clients. By reviewing the data with clients, we can help you get
past financial fears. This will deliver measurable results through
increasing potential income, optimizing work/life fit and extending
the life cycle of your career asset.
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