GLOSSARY

financial planning

Financial planning serves as the foundation of every long-term money decision clients make. It brings together their financial situation, goals, and the steps needed to move toward a more secure future. Financial advisors rely on financial planning to understand where clients stand today and what strategies can help them stay on track.

What is financial planning?

Financial planning is the process of putting together a financial plan that supports the goals of an earner. A financial plan outlines current circumstances and short-term and long-term objectives. It covers everyday decisions such as managing cash flow and reducing debt, as well as long-range needs like retirement, tax planning, and estate planning.

A financial plan is meant to stay in place for many years, but it isn't static. As a person's family life, income, or priorities change, you revisit and adjust the plan, so it continues to meet their needs. This is why annual reviews are essential.

Core elements of a financial plan

A strong financial plan brings together several parts of a client's financial life. Each element supports long-term stability and helps guide clients through different stages and decisions.

  • Emergency savings: Cash reserve that covers three to six months of essential expenses. This creates a buffer during unexpected events and keeps long-term goals on track
  • Debt reduction: Managing and reducing debt is another key step. When clients cut down high-cost obligations and control spending, they free up more room for saving and long-term investment management
  • Risk management: A plan also looks at potential financial risks and preparing for accidents, health issues, or loss of income by reviewing insurance needs. This risk assessment can include home, health, disability, liability, and life insurance
  • Investing and retirement planning: Investment decisions sit at the heart of financial planning. You guide clients as they contribute to workplace plans, open IRAs, or build taxable accounts
  • Tax strategy: Tax optimization affects how far a client's money can go. Strategies may include deductions, credits, and tax-efficient investing. These decisions help manage tax liabilities and support long-term goals
  • Legacy and estate considerations: Estate planning allows clients to protect heirs and express their wishes clearly. Wills, beneficiary designations, and other legacy goals should be part of the plan
  • Monitoring and adjustments: A financial plan is always evolving. It must be reviewed regularly, adjusted for strategies, and made sure each part continues to support long-term goals

What are the four main types of financial planning?

Financial planning is extensive but often covers four main areas:

  • Retirement planning: Focuses on helping clients save and invest when they no longer earn active income. It includes evaluating workplace retirement plans, IRAs, contribution levels, and future income needs
  • Tax planning: Looks at ways to reduce a client's tax burden legally and efficiently. It may involve using tax deductions, credits, or tax loss harvesting
  • Investment planning: Investment planning ties client goals to clear investment strategies. It covers asset allocation, risk tolerance, and how each account supports long-term objectives
  • Estate planning: Prepares for the smooth transfer of assets to heirs and beneficiaries

What does a good financial plan look like?

A good financial plan brings together the most important parts of a client's financial life and organizes them into a clear, customized roadmap. It reflects personal priorities, spending habits, family needs, and long-term goals.

A strong plan includes a well-funded emergency reserve, a retirement strategy that fits the client's timeline, the right insurance coverage to manage risks, and a tax approach that supports long-term planning. Most importantly, a good plan is built to last but flexible enough to change.

At an individual level, financial planning often considers the 50-30-20 rule. Here's a simplified explanation of this approach:

Navigating regulatory changes in financial planning

Regulatory shifts can significantly influence how to build long-term strategies. New policies are bound to happen with every administration. This makes it important to stay alert to changes affecting taxes, healthcare, and retirement planning.

Tax reform and income planning

Proposed tax reforms remain a major focus. Plans to extend the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, restore the state and local tax deduction, and eliminate federal taxes on Social Security, tips, and overtime pay may enhance short-term cash flow for many clients.

Concerns about rising federal deficits raise questions about future tax increases. In the near term, accelerating income or revisiting tax strategies may help clients take advantage of current lower rates while they last.

Corporate taxes, tariffs, and business considerations

The administration's intention to reduce the corporate tax rate below 20 percent aims to increase US competitiveness. However, this comes alongside potential tariffs on many countries.

While some industries may benefit, others could experience higher costs that impact pricing and growth. Business owners may need to adjust expansion plans, cash flow expectations, or investment decisions based on how these changes unfold.

Here's a look at how tariffs work and how they can impact the individual:

Estate and gift tax stability

Estate and gift tax policies may remain favorable for wealthy families. With the lifetime exemption approaching $14 million per person, maintaining or increasing this level provides continued stability for clients with existing estate plans.

Potential changes in healthcare and HSAs

Healthcare policy may also see shifts. Changes to the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid expansion, and Health Savings Accounts could affect how clients plan for medical costs. Any changes in healthcare structure or costs can alter household budgets and increase the importance of building strong retirement savings.

Retirement savings strategies under shifting tax rates

If tax cuts continue temporarily, but future rates rise, clients may find more value in Roth-focused strategies. Contributing to Roth IRAs and Roth 401(k)s or converting traditional retirement accounts to Roth accounts, could help reduce future tax burdens.

With regulations continuously developing, flexibility remains essential. The best path forward is adapting strategies as details become clearer and revisiting the plan regularly to stay ahead of regulatory changes.

When to create or update a financial plan?

A new job, a raise, or a sudden drop in income can all influence a client's ability to save, invest, or manage expenses. Life events such as marriage, the birth of children, or divorce may also change financial objectives and require a fresh look at retirement planning, insurance, or savings habits. Health challenges can also affect income and spending.

Any of these events could be a good reason to update a financial plan. Creating one though can be done at any stage of a person's life.

How to futureproof your financial planning practice

Futureproofing means building systems, skills, and strategies that help you stay resilient no matter how markets, regulations, or client expectations change. The goal is to stay adaptable while continuing to deliver clear, reliable guidance that clients can trust.

Start with strong client relationships built on ongoing communication. When clients understand your process and feel supported, they remain engaged even during periods of uncertainty. Regular check-ins, clear explanations of planning decisions, and proactive outreach all strengthen the foundation of your practice.

Next, make continuous learning part of your routine. Tax laws, retirement rules, and industry standards shift over time, and staying informed helps adjust your advice quickly. Technology also plays a major role in futureproofing. Tools that streamline cash flow analysis, organize documents, or track investment strategies make it easier to work efficiently and support more clients.

Tech tools every advisor needs for smarter financial planning

The right technology can simplify your workflow, strengthen client relationships, and give you more time to focus on planning itself. Here are the essential tools worth prioritizing in practice.

Customer relationship management (CRM) systems

A strong CRM keeps all client information in one organized place. You can track conversations, automate reminders, and build secure dashboards for portfolio review. These systems also support compliance by keeping records clear and accessible.

Financial planning software

Planning tools help run projections, model goals, and prepare customized reports. Many platforms include features for risk management, retirement planning, tax analysis, and estate considerations. With these tools, you can build more detailed plans and update them quickly as client circumstances change.

Video conferencing and virtual meeting tools

Virtual meetings are now a normal part of financial planning. Modern platforms offer secure screen sharing, document exchange, and integrated messaging.

Email and marketing automation

Advisors who want to stay connected with clients without spending hours drafting emails benefit from automated marketing tools. They help build sequences, schedule updates, and organize outreach to prospects.

Scheduling platforms

Scheduling software eliminates the back-and-forth of booking meetings. You set your available hours and clients select a time that fits. Many programs also allow automatic reminders, cancellation rules, or integrations with your CRM.

Bringing your financial practice full circle

Financial planning gives clients a clear path for managing money through different stages of life. A well-structured plan connects everyday choices to long-term priorities. It also ties together essential areas such as investment management, insurance, taxes, and retirement planning so clients can make informed decisions.

When a plan is reviewed regularly and adjusted as life changes, it becomes a reliable guide that helps clients stay focused and confident. This steady approach to financial planning supports long-term stability and gives clients a stronger sense of control over their financial future.

The latest financial planning news from InvestmentNews

Displaying 5060 results
RIA NEWS DEC 20, 2017
Interest in donor-advised funds surges in response to tax changes

Clients still have time to set up accounts before year-end, but some contribution deadlines have passed.

CFP Board modifies details of revised standards but maintains strengthened fiduciary duty

Under second proposal, CFP Board tweaks pre-engagement client disclosure, clarifies rules for non-financial-planning advice.

FINTECH DEC 20, 2017
Quovo enables customers to add personal finance management tools

Live balance sheets and budgeting are among the tools customers will be able to add to client portals.

RIA NEWS DEC 19, 2017
House passes GOP tax bill

The sweeping overhaul delivers a deep, lasting cut for corporations and temporary benefits for most individuals.

2017 Innovator: Richard Wagner
2017 Innovator: Richard Wagner

Founder, Nazrudin Project

Tax bill may up capital gains taxes, disrupt adviser strategies

The so-called FIFO provision could also lead to yet-unrealized planning opportunities for advisers.

FINTECH DEC 13, 2017
TIAA-owned robo MyVest automates middle-office tasks

Daily reconciliation tool is added to platform for trading, performance, reporting and billing.

New adviser credential hones accumulation skills

The American College of Financial Services seeks to help advisers up their value-add to clients.

Largest fee-only RIAs by region, based on assets under management
RIA NEWS DEC 09, 2017
Largest fee-only RIAs by region, based on assets under management

<i>InvestmentNews</i> Research sorted through Form ADVs to rank the top independent firms in the Northeast, Midwest, South and West.

FINTECH DEC 07, 2017
The Latest In Financial Advisor #FinTech

This month's edition kicks off with the big news that Lincoln Financial has decided to build its AdviceNext adviser workstation on Fidelity's Wealthscape.

RIA NEWS DEC 05, 2017
Wells Fargo adviser jumps to Kingsview

Peter Hiltz will open the first Cincinnati office for the Oregon-based RIA.

FINTECH DEC 05, 2017
Blockchain will change the advisory business—someday

Faster, safer and cheaper financial transactions will reduce the need for middle men.

Seven business strategies for advisers in 2018

Future success depends on the client experience, your value proposition and technology.

How to balance marketing and compliance

Consider the Advertising Rule when engaging with various forms of media.