Most people think financial planning means buying a mutual fund or taking a term insurance policy. A few smart ones think it means making a spreadsheet with goals and numbers.
Both are wrong. Or at least, incomplete.
I have spent 25 years sitting across from senior executives, business owners, and professionals. And the most common pattern I see is this: people confuse financial products with financial planning. They buy things. They do not build a plan.
That difference costs them – sometimes quietly, sometimes catastrophically.
⚡ Quick Answer
Financial planning is a 6-step process: Know your current situation, define your life goals, analyse the gap, build a written plan, implement it with the right products, and review it regularly. The plan comes first. The products come last. Most Indians do it in reverse.
What is Financial Planning, Really?
Aamir Khan had a famous line in 3 Idiots. When asked to define a machine in simple language, he said: “A machine is anything that reduces human effort.” No jargon. No textbook definition. Just truth.
In the same spirit: financial planning is the process of connecting your money to your life.
It answers three questions. Where are you today? Where do you want to go? How will you get there?
Notice what is not in that definition – no mention of stocks, mutual funds, insurance, or tax. Those are instruments. Financial planning is the map. Instruments are the vehicle. You do not buy a car before deciding where you want to go.
“In 25 years of practice, I have never seen a client regret making a financial plan. I have seen hundreds regret not having one.”
– Hemant Beniwal, CFP, CTEP | Founder, RetireWise
The 6-Step Financial Planning Process
The CFP Board and FPSB India define financial planning as a six-step process. This is not a formality. Every step exists for a reason. Skip one and the plan breaks.
Understand Your Current Financial Situation
This means taking stock of everything – income, expenses, assets, liabilities, existing investments, insurance, and tax situation. Most people skip this step and jump straight to “where should I invest.” That is like a doctor prescribing medicine without examining the patient first.
Identify Your Life Goals
Not investment goals. Life goals. A daughter’s education in 2031. Retirement at 58 with a monthly income of Rs 2 lakh. A second home in the hills. Each goal has a cost, a timeline, and a priority. A plan without specific goals is just a savings account with ambition.
Analyse the Gap
Where you are versus where you want to be. This is the most honest – and often the most uncomfortable – step. Inflation eats into the value of money. A retirement corpus that feels adequate today may be completely inadequate in 15 years. This step forces you to confront the real numbers.
Build a Written Financial Plan
A real financial plan is a written document – not a mental note, not a rough idea, not a phone call with your agent. It covers asset allocation, investment strategy, insurance coverage, tax efficiency, and withdrawal planning. If it is not written down, it is not a plan. It is a wish.
Implement the Plan
Now – and only now – do products enter the picture. Mutual funds for wealth creation. Term insurance to protect income. NPS or PPF for retirement. Health insurance for medical emergencies. The product is chosen because it serves the plan. Not the other way around.
Review and Revise Regularly
Life changes. Income grows. Families expand. Priorities shift. Goals get funded or dropped. A plan that is never reviewed slowly becomes irrelevant. At minimum, review your financial plan once a year and immediately after any major life event – job change, marriage, birth of a child, inheritance.
Is your retirement plan just a collection of products?
At RetireWise, we build a written retirement plan built around your life – your corpus, your withdrawal strategy, and your family.
The 8 Areas of Financial Planning
A complete financial plan covers all eight areas of your financial life. Think of it like a house. You cannot build a strong house if three walls are solid and one is crumbling.
Investment Planning
Investments should be chosen based on your goals, timeline, and risk capacity – not based on what your colleague is doing or what an agent is recommending. Long horizon means higher equity allocation. Short horizon means lower equity. Simple principle. Rarely followed.
✅ Tip
Invest in objectives, not products. A mutual fund is a vehicle. Retirement is the destination. Decide the destination first.
Retirement Planning
This is the most underestimated area of financial planning in India. People think taking an EPFO account or a pension plan is “retirement planning.” It is not. Your working years and retirement years are now roughly equal in length – 25 to 30 years each. You need a corpus that survives inflation for three decades. That requires serious planning, not just a pension policy.
Retirement planning has two phases: accumulation (building the corpus) and distribution (drawing from it without running out). Most advisors only focus on the first. I focus on both.
Child Future Planning
Education costs in India are rising at 10-12% per year. A professional course that costs Rs 15 lakh today will cost Rs 40 lakh in 10 years. The earlier you start, the smaller the monthly investment needed. The later you start, the more painful the catch-up.
Tax Planning
A fine is a tax for doing something wrong. A tax is a fine for doing something right. Tax planning does not mean stuffing all your money into Section 80C at the end of March. It means structuring your investments, income, and withdrawals throughout the year so you retain more of what you earn – legally and efficiently.
Risk Management and Insurance
You have worked hard for 20 years to build your financial foundation. One hospitalisation, one accident, one untimely death can erase it in months. Adequate term insurance, health insurance, and critical illness cover are not optional items on the list. They are the foundation everything else rests on.
🚫 Common Mistake
Most senior executives are significantly underinsured. A term cover of 10-15 times your annual income is the starting point – not the ceiling. Run the numbers before assuming you are covered.
Budget and Cash Flow Planning
An analysis of your monthly cash flow often reveals funds you did not know existed. Most high earners are surprised to discover how much leaks through lifestyle expenses, EMIs, and subscriptions. Small leaks sink large ships.
Estate Planning
A will is not only for the wealthy or the elderly. If you have assets, dependents, or opinions about what should happen to your money after you are gone, you need a will. Proper estate planning also avoids unnecessary legal costs and family disputes.
Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Planning
This is the area most financial advisors ignore completely. How you withdraw your corpus in retirement is as important as how you built it. The wrong withdrawal strategy can cost you crores in unnecessary tax over 20 years. At RetireWise, this is our specialty.
Why Most Indians Get Financial Planning Wrong
There are two ways to deal with your finances:
Without a plan: You accumulate money over the years, and at some point you decide what to do with it. You react to events – a bonus, a tip from a friend, a sales call from an agent.
With a plan: You decide in advance what your life should look like at 60. Then you work backwards to figure out what decisions you need to make today.
The first approach produces a collection of financial products. The second produces a financial life.
The problem in India is that the financial services industry profits from selling products. There is no financial incentive for most “advisors” to sit down and think about your life before recommending a fund. SEBI-registered investment advisers (RIAs) operate differently – they charge a fee for advice, not a commission from products. That alignment of interest matters.
Financial planning is not a Numbers Game. It is a Mind Game. The numbers are easy. The discipline to stick to a plan when markets fall – that is the hard part.
Does Your Financial Planner Have the Right Credentials?
In India, anyone can print “Financial Planner” on a business card. There is no legal requirement to have any training or qualification to call yourself a financial planner.
The CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER (CFP) designation is the global standard. It is awarded by the Financial Planning Standards Board (FPSB) and regulated in India by FPSB India. A CFP has completed rigorous education, passed comprehensive exams, and committed to a code of ethics.
When selecting a financial advisor, look for SEBI registration as an Investment Adviser (RIA) combined with a CFP designation. The RIA registration means they are legally accountable. The CFP means they have the knowledge to back it up.
Before you hire a financial advisor, read: 5 Important Questions to Ask Your Financial Advisor
Ready to build a real financial plan?
The RetireWise Retirement Blueprint is a written plan built around your retirement goals, your corpus, and your withdrawal strategy. SEBI Registered. Fee-only.
No one plans to fail. But every year, I meet senior executives who did not plan – and are now paying the price quietly, in the gap between the retirement they imagined and the one they can afford.
The best time to build a financial plan was 10 years ago. The second best time is today.
💬 Your Turn
At what step of the 6-step process are you right now – and which step have you been skipping? Tell me in the comments below.



