The (personal) financial cost of doing a startup

23 01 2008

There are many ways to start a company.

The great thing about doing a financial services startup is that you learn so much more about personal finance and best practices.  Boulevard R has been very fortuante to have a couple of great independent financial advisors informing the calculation process.  Another benefit is that through interacting with users and researching the pain in planning for retirement, you get a much better understanding of the issues consumers find challenging and where they would like assistance.

The personal downside of doing a personal finance startup (at least a downside based on how we’re funding the venture) is that now I understand the real opportunity cost of my lost income, since we’re paying ourselves so little.   Since my background is in consumer rights, not personal finance, many of the retirement planning issues we’re addressing are relatively new to me (fortunately we have a great team to create the backend financial model and run tests on them to verify their accuracy).  Saving for retirement and the impact of different financial decisions can be quite complex, but from a calculation standpoint, I’ve really come to appreciate the value of the fundamentals, like how you want to front-load the planning effort when you’re younger to make best use of compound interest.

I wish I could both salt some money away for retirement, as well as make sure Boulevard R stays alive, but right now it’s one or the other.  I guess the success of Boulevard R is my retirement plan.

So instead of having a secure job that pays well and is mildly interesting, I get to do something that I know will ultimately help millions of Americans and address the most pressing personal financial issue of our time.  Low pay and no benefits aren’t a bad trade-off for creative license and getting to do something you’re passionate about.

I’d be really interested in finding out how the startup and small business community perceive the sacrifices they have to make when starting a venture.

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By Mariette

It’s National Save for Retirement Week! Who knew? In an effort to promote the idea that saving for retirement is important for everyone, regardless of income, the Senate and the House have declared this National Save for Retirement Week. So in doing our bit to promote this idea I want to look at one of the biggest stumbling blocks that people have to planning their finances in general and saving for retirement in particular, feeling too intimidated or overwhelmed at the idea of learning something new.
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I’m My Own Knight in Shining Armor

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By Mariette

(Every Monday, Mariette will share what she’s learning about retirement. Enjoy!)

I’d never thought about saving for retirement before, it just wasn’t on my radar. I also figured the chances are that I won’t retire - that was my retirement vision, I would just work until the end and since I’m an artist it didn’t seem too onerous a task. I woke up when I was diagnosed with Uterine Cancer last year, I’m 39. My prognosis is excellent, the chances that I will die from this are very slim, less then 10%, but it has certainly made me re-evaluate my life and my choices. Fortunately I had health insurance.

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