Financial Planning Approach — Goals, Time Horizon, Review
Financial planning is the systematic process of defining an individual's or family's financial goals, assessing their current financial position, calculating th...
Financial Planning Approach — Goals, Time Horizon, Review
Financial planning is the systematic process of defining an individual's or family's financial goals, assessing their current financial position, calculating the gap between present resources and future requirements, and creating an actionable investment plan to bridge that gap within defined time horizons. The financial planning process follows a structured seven-step framework: (1) Define goals with specific amounts and timelines, (2) Assess current financial position (income, expenses, assets, liabilities, insurance), (3) Calculate the savings and investment gap, (4) Allocate investable surplus across goals by priority, (5) Select appropriate mutual fund schemes for each goal, (6) Implement through SIP, lumpsum, or combination, and (7) Review and rebalance annually. This goal-based approach ensures every rupee invested has a purpose and a strategy.
The clients who succeed are not the ones who pick the best-performing fund — they are the ones who follow a disciplined financial planning process. Goal-based investing is now mainstream and represents the standard recommendation for retail investors. The fund is just a vehicle; the plan is the road map. The seven-step framework for financial planning works as follows: Step 1 — Define Goals with Precision: Not "save for retirement" but "accumulate ₹3 crores by age 60, which is 22 years away, to sustain ₹1.5 lakhs/month expenses for 25 years in retirement." The more precise the goal, the more precise the solution. Every client should list their goals in a table: Goal Name, Amount Required (today's value), Inflation Rate, Future Value Needed, Time Horizon, and Priority (Essential/Important/Aspirational). Step 2 — Assess Current Financial Position: What is the monthly income and expenses? What are existing investments and their current value? What are the liabilities (home loan, car loan, personal loan EMIs)? Is there adequate insurance (term life = 10-15x annual income, health insurance = ₹10-25 lakhs family floater)? Is there an emergency fund (6 months expenses in liquid assets)? Many new investors skip insurance and emergency fund to maximize mutual fund investment — this is building a house without a foundation. Step 3 — Calculate the Savings Gap: Total monthly income minus total monthly expenses minus all EMIs = Available monthly surplus. This is the maximum investable amount. Often, this number is smaller than expected, and an honest conversation about either increasing income, reducing expenses, or adjusting goals becomes necessary. Step 4 — Allocate Across Goals by Priority: Essential goals (emergency fund, insurance, children's education, retirement) get funded first. Important goals (house purchase, child's marriage) get funded next. Aspirational goals (luxury car, world tour, vacation home) get funded last. If the surplus is not sufficient for all goals, the aspirational goals wait. Step 5 — Select Appropriate Schemes: This is where scheme selection skills come in. Each goal's time horizon should be matched to the right fund category. Short-term goals (1-3 years) go to liquid, ultra-short, or short duration funds. Medium-term goals (3-7 years) go to conservative hybrid, balanced advantage, or dynamic bond funds. Long-term goals (7+ years) go to equity — flexi cap, mid cap, or multi-asset funds. SIP-based investing for goals is now the standard recommendation for retail investors. Step 6 — Implement: SIPs for regular monthly investment, lumpsum for bonus/windfall deployment (through STP to manage timing risk), and combination approaches for clients with both regular and irregular income. Step 7 — Review and Rebalance Annually: This is where most distributors fall short. Setting up SIPs is not the end — it is the beginning. Annual reviews should check: Are goals on track? Has the client's financial situation changed? Is the allocation still appropriate? Should SIP amounts increase with salary hikes? Cash flow planning is the unsung hero of financial planning. A client earning ₹1.5 lakhs/month may have ₹50,000 in EMIs, ₹30,000 in insurance premiums in certain months, and school fees every quarter. Mapping out the full year cash flow determines the actual sustainable SIP amount — not the amount that looks good on paper but causes liquidity stress.
A Practical Example
Consider the case of the Khanna family — Vikram (40, corporate manager, ₹18 LPA) and Neha (38, freelance graphic designer, ₹6 LPA). Two children: Aarush (10) and Myra (7). Home loan EMI: ₹42,000/month. Car loan EMI: ₹12,000/month (2 years remaining).
Step 3 — Savings Gap:
Income ₹2,00,000 - Expenses ₹85,000 - EMIs ₹54,000 - Insurance ₹1,500/month = Surplus ₹59,500/month.
Total: ₹59,500/month — fully allocated.
Step 5-6: SIPs are implemented across 6 targeted funds with clear goal-tagging.
Step 7: Annual review in April. Car loan ends in 2 years — the ₹12,000 is redirected to the retirement goal. Salary hikes should increase the retirement SIP by inflation (6-8%) annually.
This is comprehensive financial planning — not just selling a SIP.
What Makes This Important
Frequently Asked Questions
This is the reality for most Indian families. Prioritize ruthlessly: (1) Emergency fund first — non-negotiable. (2) Adequate insurance — term life and health. (3) Essential goals — children's education, retirement. (4) Important goals — house, marriage. (5) Aspirational goals — vacations, luxury purchases. If the surplus covers only goals 1-3, that is perfectly fine. As income grows, add goals 4-5. Also explore ways to increase the surplus: negotiate salary raises, develop secondary income, reduce discretionary spending. Never recommend over-commitment that causes SIP defaults.
🧠 Quick Quiz
4 questions to check your understanding
