Some of us try to dodge the planning thing in crafty ways. You really can't fob this off by saying you might get hit by a bus.
That mythical bus that's coming down the road to rob you of your future is running late, actually... you may as well plan your destination and get on it instead!
Secondly, if you didn't get the memo, lottery tickets do not count as a plan. There are winners every week, but a one-in-38-million chance of winning Powerball is less likely than standing in a paddock and waiting to be struck by lightning. If the lottery win happens, great; if it doesn't, you need a plan.
Finally, we are not talking about taking out a loan to pay for a $3,000, 60-page, bespoke financial plan, either. Let's keep the Google map model in mind for simplicity.
There are just three elements, after all: the blue dot where we are now, the red pins showing where we might want to go, and the squiggly blue lines that show ways to get there.
That's the core of any plan: our current position, our goals, and what we're doing to reach them. (Some protection along the way, like insurance, is essential, too.) Some of us are good with goals, or better at tracking where we're at now. But it takes all these to get you from A to B.
So next week, for Money Week, which elements of your plan will you focus on? Even if it's just on funding 30 years of chocolate, it will be a worthwhile step in the right direction.
Get Sorted is written by Sorted's resident blogger, Tom Hartmann. Check out the guides and tools from Sorted – brought to you by the Commission for Financial Capability –
at sorted.org.nz.