Steven "Shags" Shagrin

Shags

Director of Financial Education

The Story of Shags      
    
To quote Bill Cosby, "I started out as a child."      
    
A true Baby Boomer, I grew up in Youngstown, Ohio, then attended college in Florida before returning to Ohio for law school. After my formal education ended, I worked for a year with a regional accounting firm in Akron, Ohio, before moving back to Youngstown to work in the brokerage industry in a partnership with my father, who had been a veteran in that field since the      
mid-1960's.  Over the next twenty years, I continued my professional education and earned four certifications and designations related to financial, retirement and life planning.     
    
In the spring of 2002, I decided to leave the brokerage business to help a long-time friend begin a private money management firm in Cleveland, applying an income-focused investment strategy which had proven itself to be profitable in the early-1970's to mid-1980's as the market emerged from a very challenging time. While the revised investment strategy proved itself to work, it was still "selling", which was something that I was looking to move away from at the time.  So, in March of 2003, I took the bold step of starting my own business to do what nobody else in my area was doing: "financial planning done well" by focusing exclusively on the client's life perspective and not tying the result of the planning to something I have to sell to them.     
    
I've been very fortunate to be in the right places at the right times -- most of the time, anyway! In the mid-1980's, I had the great fortune of discovering a wonderful group called the International Society for Life & Retirement Planning (ISRLP), joining their board and serving as their last president before uniting with the Association for Financial Counseling and Planning Education (AFCPE).   Through my association with ISRLP and AFCPE, I've met many wonderful, talented and dedicated people who have come to shape my philosophy and approach.  These folks and I collaborated many times over the years and several of them went n to develop practice tools and workshops which I license to use with clients in my current practice. It also gave me the opportunity to "give back" to my chosen profession, sharing my organizational skills, passion, vision and enthusiasm for the benefit of the myriad organizations I've chosen to serve. As we say at Rotary International, "he profits most who serves best."     
    
Though the "Life Planning" movement is beginning to catch fire both within the financial planning professional associations as well as within the grassroots and mainstream financial press, it's been a focus of my interest and professional development since my earliest days with ISRLP. I've been a student of some of the best over the years -- George Kinder, Dick Wagner, Carol Anderson, Connie Kilmark, Deborah Price, Michael Stein, Betsy Kyte Newman, and Mitch Anthony, just to name a few. Many of these people ended up meeting each other through me, which is a very inspiring and fulfilling thought upon which to reflect.  So while my name isn't mainstream (yet) in this emerging and evolving movement called life planning, my reputation within the myriad facets of the movement is well known.
    
With the freedom and opportunity that comes from running one's own business, the potential opportunities are endless, and I look forward to what is yet to come with great anticipation and excitement. Each workshop and engagement gives me the opportunity for sharing and for growth, helping to make a real difference in the lives of the people who choose to work with me.     
    
I'm dedicated to life-long learning, and seek opportunities to hone my existing skills, acquire and develop new skills, and apply what I've learned with clients as well as share what I've learned with other financial service professionals, both through continuing education presentations and through coaching and training relationships.


 

The Importance of Financial Education

The following is an excerpt of remarks by Mr. Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve System, at the Greater Washington Jump$tart Coalition financial education event.  While they are directed at youth, I believe the message applies to anyone of any age.  To read Mr. Bernanke's comments in their entirety, please see http://www.riskcenter.com/story.php?id=14614


"As you think about your future, don't forget the importance of financial literacy. Although financial matters are probably not at the front of your minds today, the day will come when you will be responsible for managing your own or your family's budget or when you will find that you need to save to get the things you want – a college education, a new car, or even your own home. To achieve these personal goals and to build financial security, you will need to understand the fundamentals of budgeting, banking, saving, and investment. It is also essential that you know how to use – properly and responsibly – the many types of credit that will be at your disposal, such as credit cards. Later this morning, my colleagues from the Federal Reserve will be talking with you about how to manage your credit. Because credit has become such an integral part of our economy, and because there are so many sources and forms of credit available, much more financial sophistication is required today than when I attended high school. As a parent of two young adults myself, I believe that helping young people become financially literate is critical for their future economic well-being and should be a high priority for educators."

Financial Education Workshops and Courses

We have discovered that most of the feelings people harbor come from a place of deep insecurity because we were never properly educated about the world of money. We are in fact, for the most part, financially illiterate. This has nothing to do with aptitude or intelligence. It has only to do with the failure of our education system to properly educate and empower its citizens about finances.

Our hope and intention is to someday make financial education as important as math or English, since it is both a language and a practical life skill. In the game of life, it is important to understand the language of money and to be financially aware and literate. The financial industry has it's own sophisticated language, concepts, and meanings, most of which the majority of us do not fully comprehend.

 Shags

The Basics of Financial Education Workshop

In one very informative day you will learn the basics of financial education and will take with you a workbook to help you move forward with knowledge and confidence as you navigate the consumer and investment world. Shags is a very entertaining and engaging speaker, using humor to emphasis important key points. Hey -- if you can't have a sense of humor when it comes to money, what else is there?!?

The Topics of the Basics of Financial Education Workshop include:

  • The Mystique of Money
  • Taking Control of Your Financial Destiny
  • The Basics of Investments
  • The Basics of Personal Income Tax
  • The Basics of Risk Management
  • The Basics of Estate Planning
  • Interviewing, Selecting and Working With a Financial Advisor

Next Live Class: Saturday, July 25th from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Pleasant Hill in the East Bay.  Register ONLINE at the link below. $79 per person, includes workbook. There is a lunch break, and lunch is on your own. Special rates for those with workbooks.

http://www.eventbrite.com/event/149731852

 

 

More on the Importance of Financial Education and Literacy

Financial speak is it's own language and requires it's own particular course of study, not unlike French for example, which you might want to learn if you were going to be spending time in France. Since all inhabit the money world in some part of our lives, it would be good if we knew the language and how to navigate our way around.

Our financial education courses will help you to learn the language of money, and how to apply financial concepts and tools in your daily life. The financial education courses will empower you to gain the knowledge and understanding needed to comfortably make wise and informed financial decisions. We will help you to become financially free and independent so that you may safely live your dreams.

What is financial education? In financial terms, it is the ability to speak, read and write about money and financial concepts. This would include understanding the history of money, how it works, how to manifest it, how to invest it and most importantly, comprehend the language, terms and concepts of money. For example, when learning a foreign language we begin by learning basic vocabulary words and simple language structure.

When we're learning, we use a lot of words that we don't fully understand their true meaning or translation. We simply guess, gesture, and do the best we can to communicate. Financial education is the same way. Many of us attempt to use the basic financial language we have "learned" and apply it to our experience without fully understanding it's meaning or how the language or concept really works. Financially speaking, we often "guess" at what decision to make (i.e. what IRA is best, or which mutual fund to pick) and hope for the best. We eventually develop habits and patterns around money, which we are not even aware of. As a result, we often unconsciously make financial decisions that sabotage intended efforts.

We all have the capacity to become financially literate. We can all become good with money and make healthy and wise choices from a place of knowledge and power, rather than fear and shame. Our mission is to help people live purposeful and prosperous lives through awareness, education and empowerment.

Our Coordinator of Financial Education Programs is Steven "Shags" Shagrin. Shags brings over a quarter-century of professional experience in financial services and is the author of Managing My Life: Managing My Money, a workbook designed around financial education. Shags offers live presentations, both in person in all-day workshops and through a web-based series of sessions called "Webinars."

We are please to offer our financial education courses privately to groups of 15 or more. Call Shags at (925) 949-3938 for more information or send him an e-mail at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
 

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