Written by: Barry Glassman | Glassman Wealth Services
Recent college graduates are embarking on their chosen careers, but the vast majority has never had a personal finance class. Getting a regular paycheck after living frugally during their college years can be a heady experience that can quickly lead to overspending and more debt.
Here’s a great opportunity for parents and grandparents to give more than much-needed-money to their college graduates. Along with the cash, I recommend that you include one or more of the following financial gifts. The lessons taught here will set your grad on a course for greater financial success and could change their future.
The Gift of Investing:
One of the best ways to encourage investing is to give your grad money with strings attached – they have to invest it. I like Acorns.com , a well-designed app that makes investing easy and automatic. Your grad can use your gift to get started with their Acorn.com account, then choose to invest this money into any of 5 different diversified ETF portfolios ranging from conservative to aggressive. From there, they can continue to invest their spare change rounded up from their credit or debit card purchases. There’s a fee of $1 per month for balances under $5,000. For roughly the cost of one lunch out, they can be on their way to a life of saving and investing.
I also like the idea of opening a brokerage account for your grad and funding it with an initial amount that they can invest to buy stock in companies that interest them. Being personally involved will encourage them to save more and invest more, and hopefully, want to learn more.
The Gift of Financial Planning:
Nothing beats having a personal coach for learning the tips and habits to succeed at whatever you want to accomplish. The same is true of personal finance. Why not start your grad off with a personal investment coach from the Garrett Planning Network . I’ve been a fan of the Garret Planning Network for a long time because they offer personal financial planning and investment advice at a reasonable cost. Buy your grad a gift certificate and they can choose from a network of fee-only investment advisors to get them started on the right track to save, invest and plan for their financial future.
Pass along Millennials and Money: The 5 Best Ways to Cut Debt and Save More which is full of fantastic tips and links to helpful resources for easy ways to track spending, how to save more and where to find good financial advice.
The Gift of Saving:
Set up a savings account with the money that you’re giving your grad and continue to encourage them to find ways to save. That’s the idea behind Digit.co , a relatively new online service that helps anyone to save. It’s different from other scheduled savings programs typically offered by banks because it analyzes a person’s income and spending habits and then determines when they have money that they won’t miss. It sets aside those small amounts into an FDIC insured savings account. They have a no-overdraft guarantee and your grad can request that money be transferred back into their checking account at any time. In order to offer their service for free, Digit.co keeps any interest that’s earned. Considering that most savings accounts offer almost no interest, this is a good deal, at least for now. This article by Digital Trends does a great job explaining how Digit.co works.
The Gift of Creating Wealth:
To become really good at handling money, getting out of college debt and getting on the road to becoming wealthy, give your grad one or more of my favorite financial books along with that cash:
I Will Teach You To Be Rich by Ramit Sethi.
This book is hugely popular with millennials and anyone who wants to learn more about personal finance without the boring parts. Sethi’s easy-to read and approachable style includes chapters like how to “Open high interest, low hassle accounts and negotiate like an Indian,” or “How to save hundreds per month (and still buy what you love.)”
The Millionaire Next Door by Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko
This book is a great guide to the habits that build wealth. Based on the principal that wealthy people didn’t become wealthy by acting that way, Stanley and Danko lay out the seven simple rules to follow to become wealthy. It’s a must read for anyone just starting out and earning their first real paycheck because it teaches the basics of personal finance and helps them to develop good money habits right from the start.
You’re So Money: Live Rich Even When You’re Not by Farnoosh Torabi
Weaning off of their benevolent benefactors (parents, that’ you) and learning to live on an entry-level income, may come as a big shock to your grad’s preferred lifestyle. But if they don’t learn to live within their means, especially when just starting out, they may quickly rack up even more debt on those new credit cards.
Torabi, a savvy financial reporter and twenty-something herself, gives grads sensible advice to help them successfully adjust to their new disposable income level, and still enjoy some of the finer things in life.
Why Didn’t They Teach Me This in School?: 99 Personal Money Management Principles to Live By by Cary Siegal
The author originally wrote this book to pass on good money management skills to his five children. Since most high schools and colleges do not teach students even the basics of money management, this book features eight important lessons focusing on 99 principles that will quickly and memorably enhance any individual's money management acumen. I like this book because it’s easy to understand and the principles are ready to use.