Defining My Goals

So I’ve taken this challenge to become a Millionaire but I’ve realized that my goal is not well defined. What exactly makes someone a Millionaire? What’s going to make me a Millionaire?

I looked it up on Wikipedia, and I stopped at about the 4th line because I stumbled across a major typo in their definition. Hopefully you guys can enjoy the laugh before the mistake gets noticed: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millionaire

Anywho. How do I define my Millionaire status?

After some research, I’ve decided to call myself a Millionaire when I achieve $1 million in net assets, not including my primary residence or fixed assets like cars and diamond earrings. So there. It’s final. I need $1 million in total assets-not including my primary residence. It’s a little harder to achieve, but we make goals to have something to strive for.

Speaking of Hard to Achieve

To see if I’m on track I checked out that MyPlan Snapshot Fidelity site that I seen advertised online and TV.

www.fidelity.com/myplan
(turn off volume to avoid annoying man speaking)

They ask you a few questions and then show you this chart to see if you are on track to have enough for retirement. The narrator’s voice gets annoying real fast, so I recommend shutting off the volume. When the results came up, I was surprised. It looks like I’m on the right track IF the stock market performs average over the next 40 years. The surprising thing is that the site says I need over $2 million to retire! WTF!

My Goal: $2,224,000 (as defined by Fidelity’s site)

This entry was posted in New, Personal Growth, Retirement. Bookmark the permalink.

6 Responses to Defining My Goals

  1. 1mil says:

    Great article. Why do you need $2 million dollars? I really need to fix the “related posts” lol!

  2. 1mil says:

    You made that edit on Wikipedia didn’t you! lol.

  3. Foro Juan says:

    I didn’t do that. They changed it already!

  4. 1mil says:

    Oh Boo. they’re no fun.

  5. Foro Juan says:

    Update:

    According to my American Funds retirement calculator (the quick version) I should only need $1,477,969 to retire. What a relief. Now I can get some sleep.

  6. Pingback: American Funds Growth And Income

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>