Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Making Your 401(k) Great

By Mark Folgmann

This is the 12th and last in a series of articles on 401ks. We have spent the past 6 months attempting to educate both the employers and employees about their retirement plans. These plans have the potential of becoming great and funding our retirements but we must spend time educating ourselves and understanding how to keep our 401(k) current. I have found that there are many outstanding resources that can help us do that and most of us can be highly informed with as little as 8 - 10 hours of concentrated study. Just imagine, we spend somewhere around 80,000 hrs working so that we can retire and most don’t have the time for 10 hours of preparation on how to assure retirement becomes a reality. I see more and more people who will never be able to retire and that is a real sad situation.

For employees that are two excellent books available at your local bookstore. The first is “The Smartest 401(k) Book You’ll Ever Read” by Daniel Solin. This is a really easy read broken down into 4-5 page chapters on key points that affect your plan. Dan also does an excellent job of covering how your behavior can destroy your retirement plan. The second book I would recommend is “Stop the Retirement Rip-Off, How to Avoid Hidden Fees and Keep More of Your Money” by David Loeper. David will teach you how to uncover all you plan fees and what to do if your fees are too high. These 2 books will put you in a position to make great decisions about your 401(k) and I would add “The Successful Investor Today” by Larry Swedroe who will show you how to experience a successful outcome with regard to your investment choices within your plan. For employers I would recommend “Fixing the 401(k) by Josh Itzoe. This book focuses on the problems of the plan sponsor and will lead you to a great plan.

We will be continuing this article next time with information that you need to make informed financial decisions and empower you to deal with the financial service industry. Remember Wall Street is not your friend and it’s main objective is to make profits off your money.

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