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3 financial steps to help women ‘live on their terms’: advisor


Financial Advisor on women and investing: It's important to feel empowered

When it comes to managing money, women face unique challenges.

Women tend to live longer than men, which means they need their money to last for a longer period of time, according to Kamila Elliott, a certified financial planner and co-founder and CEO of Collective Wealth Partners in Atlanta.

Many women also tend to take time out of the workforce to care for children, parents or significant others, noted Elliott, a member of the CNBC Financial Advisor Council. Being out of the workforce for any period of time can impact women’s financial security and retirement, she said.

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Working with a financial advisor can help women plan through those challenging times.

“I think it’s important for women to feel empowered, and part of feeling empowered is having the financial resources and having financial stability,” Elliott said.

Elliott, who served as the first Black person to chair the CFP Board of Standards, said the industry is working on educating women starting at a younger age about “how fun finance and budgeting and investments can be.”

Still, women of any age can get ahead financially by pursuing several strategies, Elliott said.

1. Negotiate your pay

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2. Make investing a priority

It’s important for women to feel empowered, and part of feeling empowered is having the financial resources and having financial stability.

Kamila Elliott

CEO of Collective Wealth Partners

Today’s market volatility can be an opportunity particularly for those who are 10 to 30 years from retirement, since they have the time to ride out those ups and downs, she said.

As average market returns bounce back, that can result in meaningful progress over time, Elliott noted.

3. Establish a ‘financial freedom account’

To feel empowered, women need financial resources and financial stability. That means having an emergency fund is “critical,” Elliott said, with three to six months of your monthly operating expenses in a liquid savings account.

Beyond that, Elliott works with clients to also create a “financial freedom account,” which can help provide a financial cushion to make changes when they feel stuck in a relationship, job or living situation.

“It gives them freedom to live on their terms, do what they want to do and empowers them to make right decisions for them and their family,” Elliott said.

 

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