Thursday, May 24, 2012

Rands and sense

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon
Ian_Kilbride_optReaching financial maturity

The tears, oh those terrible tears and tantrums of separation! What a hole it leaves in people’s lives – and that black hole of despair is most noticeably felt at the bank!

Yes, whether it’s goodbye hubby, employee, company or financial adviser, there is all too often a price to pay. Often, the damage is exacerbated by the innocent party insisting on fighting the good fight, with the misguided belief that a good, clean scuffle will ensure seeing the innocents emerge exonerated and better off.

Wrong! Time and time again the people who know how the system works are proved right and yet most of the time we choose to ignore them. “Trust me, I am a lawyer” may seem an oxymoron, but often it does unfortunately apply: you may not like the advice, but often you should take it.

I am someone who has experienced that you should frequently take the first deal offered, as all too often, it is gong to be the best. Even if it hurts, by taking it you can avoid being embroiled in human nonsense for too long, blindly hoping that you will do better later.

A good mate, and even smarter divorce lawyer, told me once to pay and have done with it. “It’s only money, old son!”

But no, old clever clogs here knew best and wasted a year, suffered endless cheap legal tactics and eventually paid out the original amount my pal told me to pay in the first place, plus the unnecessary legal costs, of course.

The next time I follow Rob Stewart’s advice on marriage: “Never again,” he said, “now I just go out, find a woman I don’t like and buy her a big house!”

Business issues are often the same as family tiffs, protracted disputes are simply a waste of time, so pay over the odds and get away from who or whatever is holding you back. This could be a partner, director, employee, service provider etc. Cut hard and clean, pay and move on.

Staff members who are bringing down your business through their negativity are destroying thousands of rands of goodwill a day – get them out sharpish and even pay more than a potential legal payout. That way, they don’t waste your or your staff’s valuable time, or get a chance to destroy the company’s reputation.

Cut and cut deep, that’s the old surgeon’s adage, and it applies to your financial adviser as well. If you are not completely convinced, or have even 1% of doubt, then end the relationship. You must feel 100% confident in his or her previous and current advice – if not, then get as far away as you possibly can.

In addition, don’t believe all the twaddle about ‘sticking with’ the old products you were sold.

Find an adviser you can trust, go through your entire position and portfolio together. Get all the facts. And if moving your money will cost you a couple of percent today to get out of an expensive or inappropriate product, then do so.

If the move saves you the same amount over the next year or two, then think of the cost saving over the next five to 20 years. The value of that decision will be considerable and the upside will be in your pocket!

So in summary, from a man who has seen and experienced more separations than Everton has lost away games, take the pain and take it early. Because whether you’re a wife, husband, company owner, business manager, or merely one of us ordinary folk looking for great advice, the toughest decision to swallow is often the best one to make.

Three years from now that mountain will seem more like a molehill and the financial pain will be long since forgotten, as will probably the name of the person who caused it. ▲

Ian Kilbride

For more articles,
see www.iankilbride.com
Comments (0)
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

Newer news items:
Older news items:

Move
-

Recent Articles

Top Headline

Football watch

Football watch

Pirates do it again Benni McCarthy for Orlando Pirates and Didier Drogba for Chelsea dominated the  highlight packages of the past week’s football. Both secured a league trophy for their respective teams with match-winning performances.

Read More...

Rugby watch

Rugby watch

SA teams dominate the Super 15 log The DHL Stormers are back at the summit of the Vodacom Super Rugby log thanks to another dedicated defensive effort against the Waratahs. With the Bulls and the Sharks, after a bonus-point win over the Free State Cheetahs, three South African teams are now amongst the top six in the Super 15 competition....

Read More...

Europe

Europe

The socio-political spinoff of economic difficulty Most of the attention in Europe since the election shocks in France and Greece has been focused on whether France and Germany can keep a solid working relationship going in dealing with the continent's protracted financial crisis. However, deeper analysis suggests that the European...

Read More...

Local Politics

Local Politics

The broader picture behind the DA and Cosatu clash With 75%, or three million, of South Africans aged between 18 and 34 unemployed, last week’s clash between the Democratic Alliance (DA) and the South African Congress of Trade Unions (Cosatu) is but the tip of the iceberg of a complex problem. Much more is at stake than just the...

Read More...

Worth a read

Worth a read

Apartheid’s Endgame Endgame is a book about South Africa's recent political history that saw the end of apartheid and the pre-dawn of democracy. It also has a lot to say about the now and the hopes and the fears for the country's future.

Read More...
Leadership magazine is South Africa's number one award winning business magazine having won the Tabbie Gold Award for Best Single Issue in the world (TABPI), PICA Awards for Magazine of the Year, Best Publication, Editor of the Year, Cover Design

The Leadership Bullentin


Archive