Saving for retirement is something far too few people think about when they are young. Less than half of all Americans, 45 percent to be more precise, have not yet started saving for retirement and that statistic also includes about 40 percent of baby boomers who are either at or near retirement age.
However, by not making these plans, you can be putting your future in jeopardy. What are the steps we must take to get on the right path to achieving our retirement goals?
Some people find the concept of saving or investing in their financial future to be daunting, but it doesn’t have to be.
Financial expert and CEO of EF Hutton Chris Daniels has some brilliant tips to help get us on our way. He has a set of Retirement 101 tips that can help people overcome challenges, how to update investment strategies, how smart spending can help and how new technologies like Meggalife can help you achieve your goal.
Chris Daniels, EF Hutton CEO spoke with Michelle Tompkins for TheCelebrityCafe.com about common mistakes people make when saving or not saving for retirement, how you can fix the problem in your 30s, 40s and even 50s, what new technologies are available to make saving for retirement easier than ever before and more valuable financial tips.
See the full interview here:
Learn more about successfully saving for retirement and what Meggalife can do to help you here.
Michelle Tompkins http://www.mediamichelle917.com Michelle Tompkins is an award-winning media, PR and crisis communications professional with more than ten years experience with coverage in virtually every traditional and new media outlet. She is currently a communications and media strategist and writer, as well as the author of College Prowler: Guidebook for Columbia University. She served as the Media Relations Manager for the Girl Scouts of the USA where she managed all media and talking points, created social media strategy, trained executives and donors and served as the organization’s primary spokesperson, participating in daily interviews with local, regional, and national media outlets. She managed the media for the Let Me Know internet safety and Cyberbullying prevention campaign with Microsoft, as well as Girl Scouts’ centennial Year of the Girl To Get Her There celebration in 2012, which yielded more than 800 million earned media impressions. In addition to her extensive media experience, Michelle worked as a talent agent in Los Angeles, California, as well contracting as a digital content developer and her writing has appeared in newspapers and online. She is passionate about television, theater, classic movies, all things food and in-home entertaining. While she has lived and worked in NYC for more than a decade, she is from suburban Sacramento and gets back there often to watch the San Francisco Giants on TV with her family.