Thinking about what the future may bring, and preparing clients for it.
"The future is often oversold and underimagined."- Chris Luebkeman, engineer
Some one-liners just make me think. They contain
that uncertain combination of delightful wisdom and infective mind warp
that keeps it bubbling into my imagination during idle moments.
"Oversold?" "Underimagined? Hmmm.
Since financial planning is nothing if not in the
"future" business, the phrase tugs with puzzlement and demands to
inquiry. It addresses that ironic divide where the futures we think we
want flail longingly from the futures we will most likely get.
This one came courtesy of my wife, Gail, the
architect, via Colorado AIA's annual gathering. Mr. Luebkeman is an
engineer with Arup Foresight and Innovation in Great Britain with a
view toward the histories and promises of the building professions. His
research into past projections by engineers and architects shows
remarkably consistent tendencies for them to systematically and
collectively underestimate the breadth and depth of what was to be.
Realities surpassed their visions by much more than a nose. In his
speech, Mr. Luebkeman was illustrating the paucity of our collective
ability to imagine what will be, even as we so enthusiastically promote
what seems so obvious to us now that we even build businesses around
it. And this for people who design with the future in mind.
Examples? We all know that Tom Watson predicted that
the world could potentially use four computers. And have you seen
1954's pictures of the 2004 personal computer? They dreamed of
room-consuming computers with less power than the 4.3 pound beauty
currently sitting on my lap.
To bring it home to financial services, for example, could we have imagined this headline 20 years ago?
"BROKEN PROMISES"Front page headline, Rocky Mountain
News, December 25, 2004, referring to the U.S. Pension systems.
Merry Christmas.
All this set me thinking about my favorite profession.
Let's look at the words. By definition, "oversold" would seem to mean
generating belief notwithstanding the absence of compelling proof of
relevance or utility. Synonyms might include "persuade," "influence,"
"convince" and "sway."
"Underimagined" implies a failure to anticipate,
predict or expect. This includes the tangible "bads" and "goods" that
will actually transpire, including full ranges of both coincidences and
unintended consequences. It all falls within that huge container known
as "FutureThink," anticipating that which is yet to be.
It is simply not in the nature of life for any of us
to actually know what the future will bring. We can just attempt wild
guesses. To do this, we can look at history, follow trends, get a sense
of the world around us, grasp our own essences personally and
professionally, come to grips with the human condition and proceed to
develop some educated thoughts. Along with it, we can also grasp the
shortcomings of our planning's possibilities with such instegrity that
folks are able to absorb our inherent uncertainties without panic. Life
is uncertain, Monte Carlo notwithstanding. Clients ought to be able to
absorb that we are just doing the best imagining available to us.
That's something. But what?
Fact is, it does our clients no good to romanticize
or demonize what might be coming down the pike. (Overselling) Neither
does buoyant optimism or pusillanimous pessimism benefit them overmuch.
(Underimagining.) Yet, through these extremes, grasping the possibles
and their necessary preparations would seem to be of intrinsic value to
all of us. Where is the balance? The insights?
For me, it speaks to the essence of what this
profession might/ought to be, except in contrast. When working with
people, their money and their choices, it seems to me that the
preferred route would be to undersell and overimagine. "Ms. Client,
this is what ought to happen with all of these assumptions-except for
all that could go wrong between here and there, including, but not
necessarily limited to..."
As planners, it seems to me that significant parts
of our work are always wild guesses commingled with our best efforts to
anticipate what these might be. After all, our clients are asking us to
help them make critical decisions that will affect their lives way
beyond their own imaginings of the future. People get sick, die,
divorce, lose jobs and change their minds and circumstances. All sorts
of things interfere in the name of real life that don't necessarily
find their way into long-term cash flow analyses.
What might this mean to us from a planning perspective?
Let's think. If we "oversell," especially to the
positive, we could end up with some mighty unhappy folks. As my old
colleague, Eileen Sharkey, says, "We don't want our clients being 85
years of age, out of money and knowing where we live." On the other
hand, regrets are bad. Paths not taken because money fears diverted
hopes and dreams are prime sources of regret.
If we underimagine, none of us will be as prepared
as we might have been, or have had the opportunity to perceive the full
ranges of options and possibilities. Consequently, we might have failed
to take the very risks that would enable prosperity and joy. Paradox.
That's life.
Let's look at some big ones. For most of us, the
huge unknown is our health. Can we help our clients imagine what that
might look like? How personal can we get?
Then there are the huge social issues. What sorts of
wars will be fought, personally and culturally? What cultural trends
are likely to emerge and how will they affect the common wealth? What
will be the nature of the demands society will place upon us? Will we
get our parents' retirements? What will nature bring upon us? Can we
anticipate tsunamis-geological, political, monetary or otherwise?
What would an equivalent mean to our clients? Of
course, as we spiral into the unknown, questions and their implications
increase geometrically.
Obviously, since we are dealing with the future
here, definite answers are highly unlikely. Yet we have inklings, don't
we?
For one thing, it means we need to fully understand
the ranges of the possible and the natures of our presuppositions re
the future. What wisdom and perspectives do we bring into the room?
What do we simply assume without question? World order? That the
economy is viable? That natural disasters occur elsewhere? That society
will be generally orderly? That money as we have come to know it is a
natural force? Can we grasp the subjective forces at work within our
clients and the social systems in which they participate? And so on,
through various iterations. This list is just the literal tip of the
proverbial ice berg. How can we prepare?
Next, we can look around, read, listen and move
through our world and get some ideas. What have we seen that was
previously "oversold" or "underimagined?" Maybe we can look backwards
at trends, growth, consumption patterns, world traumas and the like to
get a sense of our planet's volatility.
Oversold? The intrinsic worth of big houses and
bigger cars? Do McMansions and urban tanks really provide more value or
just give us more to clean? The values of college degrees
notwithstanding deficiencies in actual learning or social utility? The
essentiality of upward mobility for happiness within lives well-lived?
"Stuff" in general? The efficacies of fertilizers, economic
interventions and gold? Top-down management systems? Miscellaneous
alarms? The efficacy of Social Security? The government's abilities to
legislate good works? The joys of money freed from William Jennings
Bryan's famed "cross of gold."
Underimagined? The impacts of social legislation?
Damn those unintended consequences. AIDS? Who could have known it would
destroy continents and dreams?Population and overcrowding? Rush hour is
just the tip. Advances in weaponry? Yikes!Do you feel more secure?
Environmental degradation? Life spans? How do we plan for 40 years of
life on unearned income? The implications of mass media? Whew!No
mysteries. Also, no privacy. Social engineering? What about those
unintended consequences? The consequences of bad manners? Who could
have known they would so negatively affect our hearts? The resilience
of the human spirit? My goodness.
These are just parts of my very own personal
oversold/underimagined lists. There is obviously more, but their
completion just might put me across the line on various post-modern
political correctness tests.
Maybe we can just take a look around and grasp what
seems to be losing vitality. What is breaking as we twiddle our thumbs?
School systems? Retirement vehicles? Social service programs? Families?
What does it have to do with us?
Perhaps plenty.
As I see it, financial planners are among the very
few actually working to connect people to their personal futures in any
meaningful, fundamental, objective manner. This is a large part of what
makes our work so vital and our practitioners so special. Virtually no
other professional advisor shares our common practice of working with
people in concepts of decades, even centuries, along with the here and
now. We ask people to imagine what it might be like to be 80. We ask
them to think about what their family will be like in 50 years, as well
as encouraging their genuine contemplation as to who it is they want to
become during those 50 years. No one else does this. It is a unique
aspect of our profession.
Who else? The government? The future is never more
than four years away. Doctors? Maybe some of them, not most. Teachers?
Possibly, but there are way too few of them working with adults to
carry this weight of the future. Preachers? Again, maybe, but they tend
to focus on our near futures or eternity. Too bad, because most of our
lives will be lived somewhere in between those spaces.
Yes, my friends and colleagues, financial planners
are unique in our work with individuals in attempting to reconcile
personal, here-and-now choices with uncertain futures. Sometimes I
don't know whether to laugh with joy or cry with despair at these
implications. I just know they are there.
It's tough to be in an authentic profession these days.
Accordingly, I suggest we need to look at our
assumptions and predictions. What might we be "over [selling]" or
"under [imagining]?" Obviously, future-oriented financial products
require assumptions. What are they? Perhaps less obviously, it includes
money itself, as well as the efficacies of the social orders impacted
by such money. Since we sell these in anticipation of future benefits,
don't we need to ask simple questions like, "What could go wrong?"
How about the "rules" of the game? They are
certainly mutable, especially law. Or so-called pillars like Social
Security or anticipated pension plans? These are all under fire even as
we speak. How should we continue to "sell" them?
"Underimagin[ing]?" Well, again, what could go
wrong? And what might we be able to do about it? What will life be like
in 40 years? What about expanded life spans? What if the dollar
collapses?
And what could go right? Are complementary
currencies viable? Could the Middle East democratize? How do we play?
And how might we better grasp what the future will actually bring? How
can we expand our global understandings? Our insights into individuals
and cultures? Our appreciation of history? It also seems to me that we
have a lot to learn from related discipline ... and they from us.
The future. "Oversold." "Underimag-ined." Yet our responsibility.
Richard B. Wagner, JD, CFP, is the
principal of WorthLiving LLC, based in Denver. He is the 2003 recipient
of the Financial Planning Association's P. Kemp Fain Jr. Award, which
recognizes a member who has made outstanding contributions to the
profession.