Girl Talk, Money Talk II
Financially Fit and Fabulous in your 40s and 50s
by
Book Details
About the Book
Now is the time to get a handle on your money. Soon, retirement will be knocking on your door, and you don't want to be the last one to the party. Children leave the nest, and parents need caring for. Divorce and terminal illness are unfortunate realities. Jobs and bonuses come and go. Do you know where you stand with your finances today? Will you be financially secure if tragedy strikes and you are left alone? And do you know the three big money mistakes to avoid in your forties and fifties?
Together we'll walk through how to balance spending and saving your money, and the big opportunities and obstacles you'll face in your forties and fifties. From getting a major raise at work, quitting your job, steering through a financial crisis, divorce and remarriage, or finding yourself a young widow, you need to get yourself and your money prepared now. Money can't buy happiness, but it can make your life easier.
This practical, real-life guide for women will help you navigate money issues in your forties and fifties and help bring you more confidence and wisdom. It's your life. Smart money moves will help you live it better.
About the Author
Lisa Brown is a partner in a wealth management firm located in Atlanta, Georgia, specializing in high-net-worth clients. Although Brown’s clients are affluent, her own upbringing was far more modest. Raised by two schoolteachers in a rural farming town in upstate New York, Brown learned at the age of twelve how hard work translated into money, rising at six o’clock in the morning during her summer breaks to pick strawberries on a farm for twenty-five cents per quart. This perspective laid the foundation for the appreciation she has for money today. Brown’s childhood experience is at the opposite end of the financial spectrum from her professional experience. Over the years, she has been alarmed and frustrated by the number of single women approaching her for financial advice who shared the same unsettling characteristic: a lack of self-confidence when it came to making money decisions. These women have relied on their fathers, husbands, or partners to handle money matters throughout their lives, taking a back seat to this critical part of their world, and then suddenly found themselves on their own. Scared. Lisa has taken two decades of experience in the financial services business to teach real-life money lessons to women in her Girl Talk, Money Talk book series. Her motivation is to educate women at an earlier age to take control of their finances, be prepared, and make wise decisions with their money that will have a profound effect on their entire lives. Brown’s financial advice has been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, CNBC.com, and Yahoo! Finance, and she is a regular columnist for Kiplinger’s wealth-creation website. In 2015, Brown was named one of the ten young advisers under the age of forty to watch by Financial Advisor magazine. She lives in the suburbs of Atlanta with her husband, three children, and Corgi.