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Money

3 Things Music Can Teach You About Money

Written by Jaimie Blackman
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While you may not think of turning to a musician for financial advice, music can teach us some interesting lessons about managing our finances.

As a life-long guitar player, I also play the financial calculator as a financial advisor/planner.  Though anyone would agree that being a musician and being a financial adviser are completely different career paths, I have come to the realization that the two are not that different after all.

In fact, the habits that I have developed over the years as a guitarist have helped me enormously as a financial adviser, especially when interacting with my clients. There are three parallels I have found between learning to play an instrument and learning to successfully manage your finances:

Organization is a key factor in music and money

Think about a child banging on some kitchen pots or a jackhammer in the street. The erratic sounds can hardly be classified as music, because what distinguishes music from any other sound is organization. When someone decides to learn an instrument, they start by learning different scales, arpeggios, and chords. This system of organization enables them to transform haphazard noise into a unique and coherent piece of rhythm and melody.

In the same way, successfully managing our finances must start with organization. Otherwise, without a good system in place, our financial life may look like haphazard decisions made based on fickle emotions rather than thoughtful planning. There are many various choices to be made when organizing your financial life, just as a musician has literally billions of patterns and combinations he could use to organize sound into music.

Tip to start organizing your finances: A simple way to start is to group your finances into smaller and more manageable units in the same way music is organized into scales, chords and arpeggios. For example, a group called Cash may consist of your cash flow, designed to track monthly cash surplus or cash deficit numbers. Giving could include your monthly charitable gifts. Time may include time based goals which may need funding such as a child going to college, or replacing your kitchen.

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Your music taste will dictate how you play, just as your personal values will dictate how you use your money

The musical preference of the musician will dictate the decisions that she makes while playing. For example, a flamenco guitarist and a rock guitarist use the same instrument to play, but their different musical tastes will determine which notes they use and which notes they leave out, their strumming technique, and the movement of their fingers along the fingerboard.

Similarly, a person’s financial decisions should reflect their personal values. A healthy financial life emerges when all of our financial decisions are in harmony with our personal values. For example, if you prioritize giving, you will be certain that your resources are set up in a way to share your wealth with family and perhaps get involved in philanthropic projects. While someone who prioritizes Risk above all may wish to maximize insurance coverage.

Tip to start aligning your money with your values: Start by making a list of the things that you value most. Kind of like a “gratitude” list. Now take a good look at your financial life. Are your spending, saving, investing and making choices based on what matters most to you? Are there past decisions that you regret? Are there decisions that you keep putting off? What are the consequences if you take no action?

You can’t eliminate the financial aspect of risk, but it can be transferred to ease the blow

The best part of learning to play an instrument is getting to share the music with others. Yet there are inherent risks that come with playing for an audience. For example, during a guitar performance a string might pop, the guitar may go out of tune, or in a moment of panic the musician may forget the right chord to play. All these things are unplanned situations that will negatively impact the performance, but they shouldn’t make the musician fearful of playing. The musician cannot eliminate the risks, but they can mitigate them by placing an extra guitar on the stage, getting a digital tuner, or making sure they have a copy of the music handy.

Featured photo credit: Strum/Lucas Boesche via unsplash.com

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