Understanding Employee Financial Wellness
What is employee financial wellness, really? Is it a 401(k) open enrollment meeting? A powerpoint about asset allocation? It’s all about changing behavior.
Listen to us On
About the Episode
What is employee financial wellness, really? Is it a 401(k) open enrollment meeting? A PowerPointt about asset allocation? It’s all about changing behavior.
Your employee’s behaviors will bring them closer to financial success, or take them further away.
George talks about how and why to position your people for long-term financial success.
Ready to get your finances together? Check out our DIY Financial Plan Course:
https://george-grombacher.aweb.page/DIY
Get your copy of George’s newest book, How to Get Good at Money: The Keys to Financial Peace of Mind and Prosperity
Get your copy of George’s first book, Be Your Own CFO: A Businesslike Approach to Your Personal Finances
Find the free Goals, Values, and Get Out of Debt courses at
https://moneyalignmentacademy.com/ondemand-courses/
Get our monthly updates here:
https://george-grombacher.aweb.page/
Thanks, as always for listening! If you got some value and enjoyed the show, please leave us a review here:
https://ratethispodcast.com/lifebloodpodcast
You can learn more about us at LifeBlood.Live, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, YouTube and Facebook or you’d like to be a guest on the show, contact us at [email protected].
Stay up to date by getting our monthly updates.
Want to say “Thanks!” You can buy us a cup of coffee
George Grombacher
Episode Transcript
I work in employee financial sickness. That’s right financial sickness. When I see financial wellness everywhere, it just, it hit me, somebody is sick, they need to get a virus or bacteria out of their system. And then the wellness part that comes a little bit later, a little bit later on. In America, we’re in the midst of this financial sickness epidemic, tempting to think that it’s the result of what happened during COVID. But think we’ve been sick for a long time in reality. There’s a lot of ways to solve this problem and help individuals, families and communities who are struggling because so many of us are, you can listen to Dave Ramsey’s Daily Show, talking about people overcoming debt, he helps people to get to the root of the problem. He doesn’t bother with surface level symptoms. So I love Dave so much. One of my favorite quotes is from Henry David Thoreau. He says that there are 1000 hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root. Now, Dave, and I, that’s right. I’m telling you, I do similar work to Dave Ramsey. We’re striking at the root of financial sickness, you know, who isn’t those who have simply taken the words financial in sickness and put them on the same, vapid, useless financial education seminars that haven’t ever helped anyone ever. So if you’re paying attention, the same phenomenon is taking place within ESG. Investing. It’s called greenwashing. And that’s simply you want, you’re sort of playing upon the desires of people to be investing in a good way. But you’re not really changing the product at all. If you ever really curious about an ESG or impact investment, start looking inside of it and seeing what they really are investing in. The favorite is when banks talk about financial ones, because it seems almost contradictory. There’s this great scene in the movie, The Social Network, where the Mark Zuckerberg character gets fed up during a deposition and he says to his accusers, if you were the inventors of Facebook, you would have invented Facebook, to banks and many other financial companies, I say this, if you were capable of helping people to become financially successful, then you would have been helping people to become financially successful to harsh try this one on, you know, drug dealers will hook new customers by giving them small amounts of drugs for the first time for free. Once that new client is hooked and addicted, what if that drug dealer then opened a rehab clinic to help that customer get clean? How’s that any different from a bank giving credit cards to people and getting them in debt, then offering them financial wellness to help them get out? Essentially the same thing? Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of people out there doing good work in personal finance and helping people to become financially successful. My point is this. There are also a lot of pretenders out there as well. So if you’re not sure if what you’re getting is solid financial wellness programming, or just the same old blah with a fancy name, just digging a little bit deeper, what information is being presented? And is it actually addressing the financial sickness epidemic? It’s talking about the importance of budgeting, but not actually providing the tools to budget. It’s falling short. It’s talking about the value of living debt free but not talking about how to actually make that happen. It’s fallen short, if all it is is talking about risk tolerance, asset allocation, mutual fund choices and contribution options. It’s falling egregiously, egregiously short. All that stuff’s important, but it’s not financial wellness, it’s financial information. Financial information is free on the internet, people are drowning in it. Not sure if your employees are struggling, check out the metrics of your 401k retirement plan. Are people contributing the proper amount to stop working at normal retirement age? Or are they going to come short? When you’re sick? What do you do? You stop doing things you stop going to work? Stop staying up late, you stop eating crappy food, you stop drinking, doing things which are bad for you, you stop engaging in the behaviors that may have gotten you sick in the first place. Then what do you do? You start doing healthy things, start sleeping more eating better, start drinking more water, you take medicine, there is a cure for financial sickness, but like losing weight, getting in shape, be physically healthy, doesn’t come in a pill requires consistent effort won’t be easy. And you know that because nothing worthwhile is ever easy. The medicine, cures financial sickness isn’t dissimilar to what I’ve just been talking about. It’s being courageous enough to recognize that there’s a problem. It’s being courageous enough to stop engaging in damaging behaviors like overspending and rolling over credit card balances from month to month. And it’s being courageous enough to start engaging in healthy behaviors, like monitoring, cash flow, budgeting, putting a plan together to eliminate debt. I want everyone to enjoy financial prosperity. That will never happen until you first achieve financial security. That should be the state At purpose of financial wellness, everybody that is within your organization is perfectly capable of becoming financially successful. And I would go so far as to say that they are worthy of it and even deserving of being financially successful, but they’re not entitled to it just like you and I aren’t entitled to it. And it does require work requires effort, I think that you, as an employer have a unique opportunity. Because you have this existing culture, you have structure to be able to now provide real and authentic and impactful financial literacy and financial wellness, to your employees to get on that path to financial security, and then to continue on to financial prosperity. So not easy, but I think it’s worthwhile. I think it’s really important work to be doing. And as an employer, I think it’s also there’s a business case for it. Obviously, if your employees are struggling financially, they’re not going to be as locked in or engaged in their work. And we want employees to be happy and healthy in every sense. And we want them to be contributing at the highest level that they possibly can be. So remember, do your part, doing your best
More Episodes
Creating Your Wellness Checklist: Steps to a Better Life
Creating a wellness checklist can help you bridge the gap between the life you have and the life you want. I’m going to talk about how to create a wellness checklist, as well as help you fit it into your busy life and make it sustainable. Why bother with...
What States Don’t Tax Retirement Income and How Do I Create More Tax Free Income
There are seven states with no income tax, meaning these seven states don’t tax retirement income AlaskaFloridaNevadaSouth DakotaTexasWashingtonWyoming Why is this important? Because, depending on the type of account(s) you're using to accumulate money for your...
How Much Money Should I Save Before Buying a House and How Do I Do It?
How much money should you save before buying a house? A down payment of 20% and six months worth of what your expenses will be once you own the home. Here’s what I’ll cover in the remainder of this post Why you should save that muchThe cost of making a bad...
Rental Property Loans: What You Need to Know to Position Yourself for Success
Rental properties can be a great way to diversify your income and your long-term financial situation. Understanding rental property loans and how to qualify will position you for success as you set out on your passive income journey. No doubt you have...
How to Become Debt Free Using Goals Based Budgeting
Debt has become an insidious part of many of our lives. I’m going to share with you a process for becoming debt free using goals-based-budgeting so you can start living the life you truly want. There are many reasons why people fall into debt. There are many...
How to Get Good with Money: 7 Steps to Financial Prosperity
I’m excited you’re interested in how to get good with money and I’m confident I can help you get where you want to go. This article will go through 7 steps to help you achieve financial prosperity. It’s not enough to know about money. It’s not enough to...
Goal Setting for your Future Self: Why it’s a Good Idea and How to Do it
To develop empathy for another, we’re told to walk a mile in their shoes. But how do we do this for ourselves? It’s hard for us to imagine our future-selves. To think of ourselves as getting older and one day dying. It’s for this reason we have a difficult time with...
Should We Have a Family Trust? Primary Benefits, Highlights and Questions to Ask
Looking back over the first 20 years of my career as a financial advisor and meeting with thousands of people, very few strategies or financial products were thought of as “must haves.” Wills and trusts are the closest thing to it, meaning whenever I asked if...
Personal Responsibility: How To Get More In Your Life
I recently had the pleasure of having Jamie Lerner on the LifeBlood podcast to talk about personal responsibility and how we can get more of it in our lives. You can find her episode here. Jamie shared some of the wisdom she’s learned over her career as a...
Join the show.
Interested in being on the show? Tell me a little bit more about you and what you’d like to talk about!