Should You Hire a Money Coach?

The pros and cons of working with a coach to help get on top of your finances

October 5, 2011 RSS Feed Print

People looking for guidance in their lives are increasingly turning to coaches: life coaches, business coaches, social media coaches—and now, money coaches.

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Money coaches say they fill an important role by taking a big-picture approach to finances and focusing on clients' goals and challenges instead of specific investment or 401(k) questions. Unlike certified financial planners or investment advisors, the field of money coaching is not regulated. Anyone can call themselves a money coach, and although a variety of coaching certifications exist, many coaches say they're meaningless. At $150 an hour and up, hiring a coach isn't for everyone, and people with specific money questions might be better off with a certified financial professional.

Tea Austin, 34, a criminal defense attorney in Los Angeles, decided to work with coach Christine Hassler after feeling stuck in his career and worried about money. After graduating from law school in 2008, just as law firms started laying off employees, he struggled to achieve his dream of working for one of the district attorneys in Southern California. "I hit a wall personally and professionally at the beginning of 2010 … I felt immobile," says Austin. That's when he turned to Hassler.

In their sessions, Austin laid out his daunting financial challenges, including a mortgage payment for a house he used to live in, student loan debt, rent in Los Angeles, malpractice insurance, and other bills. Instead of focusing on interest rates and bill management as a financial planner might have, Hassler asked Austin to consider underlying issues, including how he makes decisions about his life.

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"Christine helped me realize that I'd become a people pleaser, a habit I had adopted years ago in other facets of my life…. I had become more concerned with my clients' financial positions than I was with my own," says Austin. As a result, he often told clients that they could pay him later, or in the case of friends and family, not at all. As a result, he wasn't getting paid for some of his work. During one coaching session, Hassler had Austin call a client and ask for a payment on the spot. "Christine taught me how to set boundaries with my clients, something I had never done before, nor did I think I could do," says Austin. As a result, he's doubled his income.

That's just the kind of holistic support that Hassler, who's based in Los Angeles and has a master's degree in psychology, says coaches provide. "When I work with people in their 20s, so much of what I'm doing is teaching them how to parent themselves … I'm teaching them not only psychological issues, but we're also dealing with practical issues like making payments on time, here's what an IRA is, do you have a savings account with interest," says Hassler, author of 20-Something, 20-Everything.

When her clients feel overwhelmed and paralyzed, she helps break down what they need to do into smaller steps "so the overwhelmed feeling goes away," she adds. She also helps them explore their relationship with money to confront any problematic patterns or fears. "Fears around money stop people from living their life," says Hassler.

In other words, while certified financial planners and accountants zero in on financial issues from budgeting to investing, coaches look at the big picture. "If you need specific money advice, then I'll send someone to a financial planner … . Choose a coach when you recognize there are patterns. If it's always been hard for you to earn money, if you have a problem with spending, if the whole thing is overwhelming to you and even talking to a financial planner is intimidating," she says.

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Excellent posting.

Steven Chagrin, VP, Money Chimp Coaching Institute of CA 12:22AM October 17, 2011

Excellent posting. As you noted, often it's not about the money -- it's about how money causes us to behave in relationships in ways that are not always in our best interests.

Perhaps your readers should know about The Money Coaching Institute, a leader in the field of coaching and coach training on the interior aspects of money and how our beliefs create patterns of behavior and can keep us from living a more purposeful and prosperous life.

With Certified Money Coaches[SM] around the world, those who use the Institute's Money Coaching Core Process are helping those they work with to identify patterns that are not serving them and shift them using new strategies.

This therapeutically-informed coaching model is unique in its approach in that four initial sessions provide a basis for understanding our personal history with money and how we are modeling or resisting behaviors of those who were influential in our lives. This shows up in how we are present and dealing with money issues today, and offers insight into what might be resisting in our subconscious.

The Institute trains those in the field of human potential, coaching, behavioral sciences, and financial planning, as well as others seeking to add a sub-specialty to their related practice.

Steven Shagrin, VP, Money Coaching Institute of CA 7:16PM October 10, 2011

When I was discussing my latest book, The Secret Language of Money, with an internationally known publisher, he said, “You know, Dave, I don’t know how to tell my money story to myself in order to know what to change.”

Even though we talk about money regularly, think about it daily, his simple statement acknowledges that we may not know how to understanding our relationship with money, or to assess what needs to change. It’s challenging because so much of money meanings are unspoken, emotional, even unconscious.

I work as a Money Coach and train Coaches, Financial Professionals, and Wealth Managers as New Money Story Mentors® to understand their clients’ relationships with money and change their money stories. It is a powerful, effective integration of psychology, neuroscience, and quantum physics with strategic coaching. www.NewMoneyStoryMentor.com

David Krueger MD

Executive Mentor Coach

CEO, MentorPath

www.MentorPath.com

David Krueger MD of TX 8:28AM October 06, 2011

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