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The Pet Fund – Donor Resources

The Pet Fund would like to recommend the following resources for donors and pet owners. Links to financial services are listed below, and we encourage you to find out more about these organizations and their available programs.

The following articles are provided by Ross Levin of Accredited Investors, Inc.

Accredited Investors, Inc. is nationally acclaimed for its delivery of comprehensive financial planning. Started in 1986, Accredited Investors has built its practice by focusing individually on their clients. They believe the purpose of financial planning is to improve the quality of your life. Accredited Investors, Inc. will work with you to help define and reach your financial and life objectives.

Minneapolis Star Tribune
September 17, 2006
CHOOSING A FINANCIAL PATH


Wise spending decisions require a frame of reference and, often, some new ways of thinking......

While all of us are plotting the course of our kids' lives to get them into the best colleges so they can get the best jobs so they can find the best partners and raise the best children in the best communities, we lose sight of the big picture. We don't want our kids to have lives like ours, we want them to have lives like theirs. And maybe that means not sending them to the "best" schools, but sending them to schools that are best for them -- schools where the students have shared values and similar interests. Often in my business, we see that the things people work the hardest for are things that they ultimately end up not wanting......

While this pattern describes any number of scenarios, it aptly depicts how our financial planning lives can turn cruel. We think that once we reach a certain level, we can turn this thing off -- we'll spend less, work less, find a new job that we think will make us happier. But we keep over-reaching, losing a little control and making it more and more difficult to stop.

Or maybe we deprive ourselves of something that we can easily afford because we are so afraid to spend the money. We have built a vast fortune that is far too precious to spend or give away. It gets harder each day. We can't make a decision. And we can't make a change.

At the tail end of one of our regular meetings, a longtime client talked about a certain car that he wanted to buy. He'd brought up the subject countless times over the years. He heard that while this car is expensive to buy, if you keep it long enough, it turns out to be extremely inexpensive to own. But he has never bought it. He has the money. He really values quality things. He would love it every time he closed himself inside. It makes sense for him to buy it. He is in his 60s and he will drive this car for 20 years. Buy the car.

We get to decide what we want. We get to decide if more is better. But we need to make these choices from our own sense of ourselves. We shouldn't choose them based on greed or envy. And we need to decide when what we have is enough.

The hard part is that we usually don't have a frame of reference. If we are fear-based, we don't spend or give because we are worried that we don't (or won't) have enough.

To develop a reference point, it's time to turn your thinking upside down. The best way to appreciate all that you have is by giving some of it away. If you haven't done much of this before, you can start small by finding a charity that is meaningful to you or a cause that is important to you.

Take a look at how you are making your choices. Are they really based on reality?

Spend your life wisely.


To contact Accredited Investors, Inc. click here.


Minneapolis Star Tribune
November 20, 2005
MANAGING ACCOUNTS


My wife and I took a long walk one day while our girls were at basketball tryouts. We were talking about the things that are most important to us and whether the time we are spending on them matched those priorities. As we talked about spending time, it hit me: I want to be a compulsive spender. I want to spend everything I have fully, completely, exhaustively.

I realized that when we are born, we have a deposit of hours made into our life's "bank" accounts. We don't get a receipt, so we never really know how much time we have. Some of those hours can be spent on your job or your kids or the television, but ultimately, they are all spent. Every last one.

That being the case, don't you think the most important part of your financial plan should focus on how you can earn the greatest return on this life account? Here is how you may want to think going about this.

Who and where are you? The first step in any financial plan is an understanding of who you are and where you want to go. The rest of the planning relationship is developing strategies and ideas and then executing them in order for you to meet these goals.

A well-crafted financial plan is really a life plan. Since your money is simply something to help you actualize your vision, then all financial planning needs to tie into it. Making money is not a purpose; it is a tool to help you realize your vision. Clarifying this purpose is the best way to set your direction. In Stanford Business School Professor Michael Ray's book, "The Highest Goal,'' he writes: "You achieve true prosperity by having a full, rich feeling of self-worth." Do you know your highest goal?

Diversify. Anyone who has read my column in the past knows that I believe you should own large stocks, small stocks, international stocks, growth stocks and value stocks. You have a much better opportunity to generate consistent returns over time. But don't mindlessly diversify or fearfully put the same amount into each category. Diversify into the things and in the amounts that give you the best chance of meeting your long-term spending objectives.

The same holds true in your life account. Diversify among the many things that matter to you. All of us place importance on different things and at different magnitudes. But as you think about the categories of your life account, make sure that they will help you meet your long-term life objectives. Your family, your friends, your work, your health, your spirituality, your community, yourself, all represent important investments at different stages.

Rebalance. Rebalancing means that you are taking away from the areas that have too much money because they have done extremely well, and give some to the areas that have underperformed. This essentially helps you buy low and sell high.

Rebalancing is critical for your life account as well. Don't look at life balance on a day-to-day basis. Your teenagers at various times may require a little more attention than your friendships. There may be short periods of time when your job requires most of your focus. Try to look at things on a quarterly basis to see where you need to recalibrate.

Review regularly. Your financial plan is never on autopilot. You need to look at its various components regularly to be sure that your insurance deductibles are correct, that you are raising cash for short-term needs, or that you lock in the long-term mortgage. And when something doesn't seem right, you want to trust your instincts and ask questions.

Pay attention to your life account as well. Sometimes we want our withdrawals to be used in front of the television, but be sure that this is a choice we are making, not a way to avoid other things that matter. Ray says that there are "three ways that people deal with fear: move away from it, fight it or move toward it." He contends that only through moving toward fear can you learn from where it comes and ultimately overcome it.

Enjoy all that you have. No matter what you have in that investment account, or how small your apartment is, or how old that car is, it's yours. And there is something to be said for being grateful for all that we have rather than coveting that which is not ours. In our financial planning practice, we encourage clients to celebrate what has worked for them while we continue to work with the areas that need attention.

As for your life account, you may not have used all of your withdrawals exactly as you had hoped. You may not have had as much deposited as you expected. But when you actively manage your life account, you have a better chance of realizing appreciation both on and with your life's hours. Spend all that you have in your life account and you will live richly.

To contact Accredited Investors, Inc. click here.



To donate to The Pet Fund, click here.

You may also donate to The Pet Fund online by clicking on the link for www.justgive.org.  We are also registered with www.guidestar.org.


 

 

 

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