Financial Feminist - 62. Setting Financial Goals for the New Year
Episode Date: January 3, 2023Welcome to 2023, Financial Feminists! Regardless of if your goals for the year revolve around spending, saving, or investing, setting those goals and actually achieving them are two very different thi...ngs. In this quick hit episode, host Tori Dunlap guides you through a goal-setting exercise to help bring your dreams to fruition and avoid the common pitfalls of goal-setting. Learn more about Financial Feminist, read episode transcripts, and get additional resources on our show notes page: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes See if Tori is coming to a city near you for her book tour! https://herfirst100k.com/hfk-events Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
so at the end of like 2020 i guess it would have been at 2021 i went on instagram live i was not
tipsy that time and And I guided everyone through
a goal-setting exercise. If you know me and you've been following this podcast or you've
been following us on Instagram, TikTok, you know that I am big on goal-setting. The 100K goal,
my origin story, was just like me reading a blog post and deciding, this seems fun.
So a part of the goal-setting process for me is taking this intangible goal and turning
it into something I can look at and visualize in a very like physical sense. I make vision boards
every year. Literally the background of my laptop is a vision board every year for the year.
I leave post-it notes around. I journal a lot. I write down almost every goal I have
from the tiny to the extremely ambitious. And here's the thing. I almost always hit all of
my goals, even if they're crazy and massive. Goal setting is one of the best things you can
do for yourself, regardless of whether it's related to money or not. Big or
small, your goals help you become the kind of person you want to be and live the life you want
to live. And of course, it isn't guaranteed that every goal you have will happen exactly as you
planned because that's fucking life. And it's also likely that your goals should and can change
as you start working toward them. But you are so much better
off for having set them and changed and adjusted the goals when life demanded it rather than never
setting them at all. We see this with money a lot, right? We're like, okay, if I can't do
the crazy thing, I'm not going to do anything at all. And the truth is, is that some sort of
progress is better than no progress. And that's one of the things I see with goal setting all the time too, is it's like, it's either I go crazy and I work out every
single day, right? Or I don't work out at all. And the truth is, you will not be able to work
out every single day. You will not be able to save a million dollars in a year unless you're
already making $10 million. So do set goals, even if they're small,
even if they're small to you. Being able to set these goals and make some progress is better than
completely opting out at all. So today I'm taking you through this goal setting exercise.
You can literally come back to this episode any time of the year. We don't just set goals on
January 1st, right? We set goals
constantly. We adjust them constantly. So whenever you need to reset your goals or you just need a
good pep talk or you're like, okay, I need to re-get my shit together, this episode's for you.
So if you are able to, grab yourself a pen and paper or open up the notes app on your phone,
start a Google Doc, and let's get into it.
This episode is going to take you through the goal-setting method that I use in my life and
that will help you set these actionable goals for the year ahead. Go ahead and get set up. We're
going to do a little like woo-woo vibes today. If you can, find a space that inspires you and maybe
pause the episode if you're not in a space that inspires you. Maybe that means you take a walk to your local park. Maybe you go to a coffee shop.
Maybe you find a cozy corner in your house. Maybe you have a meditation cushion. Maybe you want to
curl up in your bed. If you have a notebook, if you are a journaler, if you like fun colored pens, time to grab those. And I think dreaming and taking stock of your life.
And that's really what we're doing when we're goal setting, right?
We are like making these dreams into reality.
We want to do this when we're excited about it.
So whatever excites you, that's what needs to happen for this exercise.
So get yourself in a place that
inspires you and that you feel comfortable and like the highest version of yourself.
All right. Number one, I need you to start with two truths. I want you to write down at the top
of your page or type at the top of your page a mantra I follow and remind myself of often. A goal without a plan is just a
wish. Take a second to really write that down. Let it sort of settle onto you. A goal without a plan
is just a wish. Yes, you can set your goals and have all the intention in the world of seeing them come
to fruition. We all do that, right? But if you do not have a plan for your goals, it will not matter
one bit how much you want it. If you do not have a plan to actually execute your goal,
it won't happen. It never will happen. It doesn't even have a chance of happening.
All right, next up, I want you to write directly under that.
Nothing changes in life unless I change it. Nothing changes in life unless I change it.
Especially when it comes to money, we've been told our whole lives that we should just know
how to handle it, right? We should know what to do with it when we get it. And if we don't,
we are somehow less than or unworthy of it. And if you've already started reading my book, we talk about this a lot,
right? We talk about this feeling of you should just know how to money. And unfortunately,
there's no that was easy button. There's no staples easy button for money. And there's no
money fairy that comes and handles our finances for us. You can have all the resolution in the world to pay off your debt or to ask for a raise
or to start a business.
But if you don't have a plan to get there, and if you don't change anything about your
life, you will be stuck in this holding pattern of wishing.
Now, this can be a really scary realization that we are the ones responsible for our money,
right?
That all of this is us.
Holy shit, this is all me? Now, of course, each of us faces different struggles when it comes to
finance. We've talked about this. I mean, this is the whole thesis of the podcast, the thesis of the
book, right? If you're a woman, a person of color, a disabled person, a queer person, right? All of
your experiences are going to be nuanced and it's
not just about your personal choices, right? It's like 20% personal, 80% circumstantial.
There's always going to be outside factors. We're looking at that in Financial Feminist,
right? We're looking at that in this podcast and through the book.
But regardless of where you're starting or what you're up against,
the statement before is true. Things do not change unless you
change them. Of the things you can control, nothing will change unless you change it.
Now, it may be incremental. It will be incremental. It will not happen really fast.
And there will be times where you find yourself making these huge strides,
and then there's going to be other times where you can't get out of bed. And that's okay. Progress over perfection. What matters is that you keep
moving and that you change the things that you can and want to change. Okay. Three things to
remember when actually setting goals. Now that we've got this framework of a goal without a plan
is just a wish, that
nothing changes unless we change it, it's time to actually talk about how to set these goals in a
way in which you'll follow through on them. Do you remember back in school when you learned how
to do reports and your teachers were like, you need to answer who, when, why, what, how questions?
It is the same with goal setting. You're making the picture of your goals incredibly clear
when you have to answer these questions first. So let's dive into that a little bit more.
First, I need you to get specific, like really specific. One of the ways you're hampering your
progress with your goals is by not getting incredibly specific about what you want.
It is not enough to just be like, I want to get better with money, right? Or like, I want to save money even. That's
not specific enough. Or I want to eat better. You need specific language because we don't know what
better looks like to you. Better cannot be measured. If you're like, I want to get better
with money and you save a dollar next year, maybe that was your goal. Cool. But that is not measurable. If you do two seconds better on your
money, then you will be like, cool, I guess I did it. Better is not measurable. You need specific
language. So instead of saying, I want to save money, you might say, I will save $5,000 this year. Or instead of,
I want to eat better, I'm going to cook at home five nights a week. These are so much more specific.
And you're going to know immediately if you're on or off track. They are measurable. You've either
done it or you haven't, right? There's no gray area. Better, I'm going to get
better at something. I'm going to do something with no specific time or number, right? That's
very gray. Here are a couple of finance specific goals to help you get started. I'm going to max
out my Roth IRA this year. I'm going to save X amount of dollars in a high-yield savings
account. I'm going to pay off and keep off all my credit card debt this year. I'm going to pay
off my debt and I'm not going to go back into it. I'm going to pay $5,000 towards my student loans
in the next six months. I'm going to save $100 a month. These are specific and timely, which leads me to my next point. We give a time limit
in all of those examples, whether it's by the end of the year or by the end of a certain month.
Putting a time limit on your goals is, again, helping you keep out of that gray area.
And the good news, even if you don't make your time perfectly, right? For me, it was 100K at 25.
My dad asked, like, what happens if you don't hit it? Well, cool. I still had like 75 or 80K, which is what I told
him. It's like, what if you don't make your goal at 25? And I'm like, well, I still have
more than I had before. You're still working toward it, right? What if it takes 14 months
to pay off your debt instead of 12? You still have paid off some of your debt, right? And probably more
debt had you not set the goal. So the timeliness is to just give you some sort of parameters.
And it's also easier to calculate. If you say, okay, I want to save $10,000 this year,
then you're going to take $10,000 divided by 12. And that's the amount of money you need to be
saving every month, right? Or you could do it per week, $10,000 divided by 52, right? That's the amount of money you need
to be saving every week. We're keeping out of the gray area. The most important part of goal
setting and the thing everybody misses. Finally, you need to get clear on your why. I'm not just
talking about like, I want to do it
because I want to pay off my debt. That's like super vague. I need you to dig deep, deep down
and find your why for whatever goal you set for yourself. Why do you want to pay down debt?
What helped you build your credit and open new financial opportunities?
Do you want to save for that vacation you've always wanted to take?
Do you want to just have a healthier mindset around finances?
Do you not want the stress of owing somebody money?
I really mean it.
Like, this sounds fluffy, but this, from a psychology perspective, is the make or break
for goal setting.
This is where people either make your goals and hit them or they
don't because you have to give your brain a reason to care. My 100k goal was, yes, I wanted to see
$100,000 in my bank account and oh boy was that thrilling, but that was not enough. My 100k was
the permission slip I needed to quit my job. The $100K was really a safety net, some sort of nest
egg that I felt comfortable with so that I could end up quitting my job to run her first $100K
full-time. And I really waxed poetic with that. What did it feel like to not have to wake up
every day and go to work for somebody
else? To sit in my car on my commute, to be in a desk chair for eight hours, regardless of whether
I had finished my work in four, to make somebody I didn't respect rich, to have to navigate office
politics, to know that I was under somebody's thumb all the time. It felt really good to not have to do any
of those things. And we talked about this with Ramit Sethi in a previous episode that we'll link
down below. And he also talks about it in my book, Financial Feminist. You have to get really clear
on why you want this thing. Saving $1,000 this year doesn't motivate you. But if you're saving
$1,000 to go to Italy
and eat real authentic pasta for the first time, I think that's fucking motivation.
Right? Or if it's, okay, I want to max out my Roth IRA this year.
Why? Do you want to take care of grandma you? Grandparent you? Do you want to make sure that
Nana you can have Savion Blanc with lunch, which is again my real life
retirement plan, taking her much younger Pilates instructor named Luca out to lunch and drinking
a bunch of wine, that's the plan. And if 28-year-old me doesn't save some money and invest some money,
65-year-old me can't do that. Give yourself a reason to care. Get as specific and emotionally
connected to your why as possible.
More examples. Maybe you want to save for a down payment so you can buy a home and you can settle
in your favorite city. Maybe you want to save up $10,000 for your emergency funds so you can
finally quit your toxic job. Whatever the reason, it should be the motivating factor in your goal.
It is so easy to think that just the goal is enough without the why. But when you don't have
the mission behind the goal, it is so easy to just give up. Without your mission, when the first week
of frustration comes along, because it will, right? After you've paid off debt for X amount of time,
let's say it's six months, month seven is going to hit really hard. And you're going to be like, why the fuck am I continuing to do this? I don't want to do this
anymore. Maybe it's like week two of January when you're like, I had a lot of new you, new year,
new you energy, and now I just don't have it anymore. The why, the mission is going to keep
you focused. It's going to be too easy to just scrap the whole plan if you don't have a why connected to your goals. It's going to keep you motivated. And again,
progress over perfection. It doesn't have to be perfect. There's going to be times where you can't
save money. There's going to be times where you can't contribute to your Roth IRA. There's going
to be times when you can't pay down your debt. We're not giving up, though. We are focused on our mission and on our why.
Okay, let's talk about how we actually make this happen. I'm not the first to tell you to make a
dream board, and I'm not going to be the last. So here it goes. Make a dream board. Whatever the
physical manifestation of your goals looks like, you got to pin those suckers to like a cork board or create a vision board. We do it in Canva every
year as a team. So take all the skills you learned cutting out those magazine photos of Harry Styles
or Justin Timberlake or JTT or bisexual queer icon Christy Carlson Romano. Shout out. Whoever.
Put them to work, right? We've been practicing for this for a long time.
Write yourself a check for your savings goals. Print out your credit card statements and write in a zero balance. Put photos of your dream vacation, your dream wedding, your card paid
off, your dream house, whatever it takes. I'm a good like post-it note on my mirror and around
my house, girly. Literal reminders of my whys and my pick-me-ups to get through tough days.
And with my business, we write down every goal. We write down our sales goals, our team member
goals, any big news outlets I want to have cover my story. I even write out like dream guests for
our podcasts. Finally, my favorite tip. We've already started talking about this a little bit,
but work backward. Work backwards. So let's
say you're hoping to pay off $10,000 of debt this year, right? You need to set aside... Hold on. I'm
going to do the quick math. Yes, you can keep this. You don't have to be good with math, y'all. This
is almost a theater major. $10,000 divided by 12. It's roughly $833.333. So let's call it $830. You need to put $830 aside every
month, right? The formula for this is simple. Divide your goal by how many months or pay periods
until the goal, and then factor how much per paycheck or per month you need to set aside.
Perfect time to ask yourself, wow, is the goal I set actually realistic?
If not, you need to adjust the goal. If it is too ambitious,
if you can't put aside $833 a month, then $10,000 this year is probably not a good goal for you.
Something I like to do when setting a goal is ask if it feels sticky, which means that it should
feel a little uncertain. My $100K goal was not like a walk in the park by any means,
but I could do it, right? It was like slightly outside of what I was comfortable saying.
The math makes sense, but you're on the edge of it, right? We don't want to set goals we have no way to achieve, but we also don't want to set goals that are too easy. And I see this with so
many women. My personal definition of goals is I should be a little scared. I should be a little terrified that I can't do it. It's not, for me at least,
it's not a goal unless it terrifies me a little bit. Because then it's just like,
yeah, I could do it in my sleep. It's fine. That's not a goal. A goal is the thing you're
reaching toward, not the thing that already feels comfortable. Oh, sometimes I shock myself. I kind
of want to repeat that. A goal is something you're reaching toward, not something that already
feels comfortable. I'm on my therapist's soapbox today. Final step, I need you to automate.
We spend almost an entire chapter of Financial Feminist talking about automation.
Automating your savings goals or your debt payments means that you're not going to give
yourself the chance to fall behind.
You set it and forget it.
Most major banks let you automate your payments.
We have the bank account we recommend linked below.
You can also set them up so that money comes out of your account as soon as you're paid so you'll never miss it.
So to get started, list out all of your major bills, all of your debts, and then list out
your savings counts.
This will take a little bit of time, but go through each and set up automatic payments.
You won't have to worry about missed payments.
And especially with savings, you won't even miss it because you're not going to notice
it left.
It's not going to come with a side of guilt, right?
You're not going to have that moment where you get to the end of the month and you're
like, fuck, I have no more money to save, right?
You've done it first.
You've paid yourself first.
Okay, so right now, if I've done
my job correctly, you are probably feeling energized and like you could lift a fucking
car and that's maybe just because I had a Starbucks. Yes, I'm drinking iced coffee in
December, but there's going to come a day, multiple days, periods of time, I don't know,
an entire year where you feel like shit. It's going to happen. When your budget feels
tight or your goal is too far away or you're like, oh my God, I don't want to keep sending
Sally Mae money. I'm so fucking over it. One, we have an entire chapter of Financial Feminist
about how to stay consistent. But really the big thing is consistency, returning to your why,
progress over perfection, and trusting the plan you created for
yourself. So one of the things you can do to stay organized and make sure you're progressing towards
your goals is using some tools that you actually want to use to keep your goals throughout the
year. So one of the things we have at Her First 100K is a mixture of like free and paid resources.
We'll have all of the links down below for all of these resources in the show notes
but a great starter resource you've heard me say it is one the podcast you're listening to but also
our book financial feminist we also have several free courses and workshops about a variety of
different topics about making more money about performing well in a job and review about managing
your money in a thoughtful way again all of this in the show notes.
And if you can't afford a copy of my book, whether that's physical book, audiobook, ebook,
most of your libraries, probably any local library in a major city will hopefully have a copy of
Financial Feminist. So if that is not in your budget right now, no worries. Head to your local
library. Okay. Goal setting is personal. It is so much more than just
wishing or wanting or perfection. It is tangible, actionable, and one of the best ways you can
actively make a difference in your finances. So again, if you're that person where you're like,
2023, this is my time. I'm going to get my financial shit together. The fact that you're
already here and that you're already here
and that you were admitting maybe to yourself that something needs to change with your money is huge.
We at Her First 100K, we here at the Financial Feminist Podcast and with my book are here to
guide you every step of the way. We are so excited to guide you through your financial journey in
2023. We have so many incredible resources already
produced that you haven't even seen yet and so many things on deck. And we hope that 2023 is a
year of not only goal setting and progress and all of those good things, but also rest and ease and
joy and just like a year of a nice warm blanket after a long day.
Thank you for being here as always. Thank you for being Financial Feminists.
And I'll see you next week and throughout the rest of this year.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields,
marketing and administration by Karina Patel, Olivia Konenig, Sharice Wade, Alina Hilzer, Paulina Isaac, Sophia Cohen, Valerie Oresko,
Jack Koenig, and Ana Alexandra. Research by Ariel Johnson. Audio engineering by Austin Fields.
Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton. Photography by Sarah Wolf. And theme music by Jonah Cohen
Sound. A huge thanks to the
entire Her First 100K team and community for supporting the show. For more information about
Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, episode show notes, and our upcoming book,
also titled Financial Feminist, visit herfirst100k.com.