Saturday, April 11, 2026

263. Financial Planning Is Really About Reducing Regret

 


When people hear the words financial planning, many immediately think of charts, projections, investment returns, retirement computations, or insurance coverage amounts. 

Those things matter, of course. They are part of the work. But over the years, I have come to believe that financial planning is really about something much more human than numbers.

It is about reducing regret.

  • Not eliminating all problems. 
  • Not creating a perfect life. 
  • Not predicting every crisis with precision. 


Real financial planning is about making sure that when life takes an unexpected turn, you do not have to say, “I should have prepared for this while I still could.”

That, to me, is where the real value of planning begins.

  • Most financial pain is not caused only by lack of money. Very often, it is made worse by lack of preparation. 
  • A family does not only suffer because a breadwinner dies too soon. They suffer even more because there was not enough protection in place. 
  • A person does not only struggle because he got sick. The burden becomes heavier because he delayed getting coverage while he was still insurable. 
  • Parents do not only worry because tuition is expensive. The regret comes from realizing they had many years to prepare, but never really started. 

In many cases, the financial wound is deepened by the painful thought that something could have been done earlier.

That is why I do not see financial planning as a mere product discussion. It is a regret-reduction process.


A good financial plan helps reduce the regret of not having emergency savings when income is interrupted. 

  • It reduces the regret of having no life insurance when dependents are left behind. 
  • It reduces the regret of entering retirement with too little liquidity and too much financial dependence on children. 
  • It reduces the regret of leaving behind confusion, unpaid obligations, and family conflict because important matters were never organized while there was still time.

We often think people delay planning because they are careless. That is not always true. 

  • Many delay because life is busy. 
  • Some delay because talking about risk feels uncomfortable. 
  • Others delay because they believe there will always be a better time later on, when income is higher, when business is steadier, when the children are older, when things are less hectic. But that “better time” has a way of moving further and further away. 


Then one day, life interrupts the plan.

That is when regret enters.

  • It is expensive emotionally because it carries guilt, worry, and self-blame. 
  • It is expensive financially because delayed decisions often lead to higher costs, fewer options, and more pressure. 
  • Someone who delays getting protection may later find that premiums have risen or insurability has changed. 
  • Someone who postpones saving may need to set aside far more later just to catch up. 
  • Someone who ignores debt discipline may spend years paying for choices that could have been managed earlier. 

Regret is not just painful. It can also be costly.

This is why proper financial planning should not begin with the question, “What product can I offer?” It should begin with the question, “What future regret are we trying to prevent?”

That question changes the conversation.

It makes the discussion more honest. More practical. More personal.

  • Instead of simply asking how much a person wants to invest, we ask what kind of financial pain he wants his family to be protected from. 
  • Instead of merely computing a target fund, we ask what unfinished responsibilities would become burdens if he were no longer around. 
  • Instead of focusing only on accumulation, we also look at vulnerability. 

Because in real life, people do not regret that they failed to maximize every return. They regret being unprepared when it mattered most.

And regret is expensive.

#acgadvice

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

262. The Real Value of a Proper Financial Needs Analysis

 


One of the costliest mistakes in financial advising is this: recommending a solution before fully understanding the risk.

Too many people buy insurance based on emotion, pressure, affordability alone, or whatever product happens to be presented well. 

But financial protection should never begin with a product. It should begin with a proper Financial Needs Analysis, or FNA. Because without it, a client can spend years paying for coverage and still leave his family financially exposed where it matters most.

That is the real value of a proper FNA. It helps a client identify the specific life risks he and his family face, measure the financial damage those risks can cause, and understand what kind of protection is truly needed. It replaces guesswork with clarity. It turns vague concern into a real plan.

At its simplest, FNA asks a serious question: If something happens to you, what happens to the people who depend on you? If your income stops, who pays for the house? Who keeps the children in school? Who covers daily living expenses? Who carries the burden of debt, hospitalization, or long-term care? Those are not abstract questions. 

Those are family questions. And they deserve real answers.

So how do you do a proper FNA in a simple and practical way?

Step 1: Understand the client’s real life situation.

Before you talk about products, understand the person. Is the client single or married? Does he have children? Does he support parents or siblings? Is there a housing loan, car loan, or business obligation? Is the family dependent on one income? Does he have stable earnings or irregular cash flow? These details shape the real financial risk.

Step 2: Identify the major life risks.

Simplify the discussion by focusing on the core risks: premature death, disability, critical illness, hospitalization, loss of income, retirement shortfall, and children’s education funding. Each one creates a different financial problem. Death removes income. Disability keeps expenses alive while income may stop. Illness can drain savings very quickly. Hospitalization can disrupt monthly cash flow.

Step 3: Estimate the financial impact.

This is where the client begins to see the real numbers. If he dies today, how much would the family need to replace income, pay off debts, and continue living with dignity? If he suffers a major illness, how much might treatment cost, and how long could income be interrupted? If he reaches retirement unprepared, how much shortfall will he face every month? This step makes the risk visible.

Step 4: Review what is already in place.

Look at existing insurance, HMO coverage, savings, investments, company benefits, and other available resources. Many clients assume they are already protected because they have something. But a proper FNA tests whether that existing protection is actually enough.

Step 5: Identify the gap.

Once the need is measured and current resources are reviewed, the shortfall becomes clear. That shortfall is where the recommendation should be built. This is what separates a professional recommendation from a random product presentation.

Step 6: Recommend solutions in the right order.

Not everything has to be solved immediately, but the biggest risks should be addressed first. For most families, protection should come before accumulation. Income replacement, medical protection, and debt protection are often more urgent than long-term wealth building. The solution must follow the need.

Step 7: Review the plan regularly.

Life changes. Income changes. Health changes. Debts change. Family responsibilities grow. A proper FNA is not a one-time exercise. It should be reviewed and updated as the client’s life evolves.


Now let us make this real.

Imagine a client named Marco. He is 40 years old, married, and has two children aged 9 and 12. He earns ₱90,000 a month. His wife stays home to take care of the family. They are paying for a house, the children are in private school, and Marco is the household’s main source of income. He has ₱500,000 in company-provided life insurance and ₱300,000 in savings.

On the surface, Marco may feel he is doing fine. He has a steady job, some savings, and some insurance. But a proper FNA tells a different story.

If Marco dies unexpectedly, the family does not only lose a husband and father. They lose the income that pays for tuition, groceries, utilities, transportation, and housing amortization. The ₱500,000 insurance benefit may help briefly, but it may not be enough to replace years of lost income or carry the family through major obligations. The ₱300,000 savings may disappear quickly once regular expenses continue without his income.

Now consider another scenario. Marco survives but suffers a stroke or critical illness that prevents him from working. In that case, the financial problem may become even more painful. The family could face both reduced income and higher medical expenses at the same time. Without proper planning, years of hard work can be financially undone by a single health event.

Because of a proper FNA, the advisor may discover that Marco needs additional life insurance for income replacement, critical illness coverage to protect savings, and a structured plan for future education funding.

Now the recommendation makes sense. It is no longer a sales pitch. It is a response to a real family risk.

A proper FNA does more than identify numbers. It identifies vulnerabilities. It helps the client see where his family may be financially exposed. It helps him make decisions based on reality, not guesswork. And it allows the advisor to do what a true professional is supposed to do: diagnose first, then prescribe.

In the end, people do not just need policies. They need protection that matches the life they are actually living.

All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice