Lessons Taught By A Millennial Life Coach

By Brenda Young


If you ask many members of the Baby Boomer or Generation X generation about the Millennials, you might get an answer about how lazy and incompetent these twenty and thirty-somethings are. Their elders think of them as entitled, lazy, and capable of part-time employment at best. Instead of work, these younger members of society excel better at playing video games all day or spending too much time on social media. As cruel as that broad assumption might sound, it does have the smallest element of truth to it. Studies have shown Millennials are behind other generations when it comes to navigating the adult world around them. To learn what they need to know and to forge independent lives for themselves, many of them are relying on a Millennial life coach to guide them.

These types of coaches teach a variety of lessons to people in this age category. Among them, money management is typically labeled as one of the most important. People today in their 20s and early 30s many times report being unable to balance a checkbook, pay their bills on time, or save money for the future. Many of them are living paycheck to paycheck and feel controlled by their finances rather than the other way around.

Likewise, they find out the finer points of balancing checkbooks for accounts to which they may pay little attention. They may not realize they get cash back rewards, for example. They also might not realize they accrue interest on deposits they make in their banks every month. They figure out when to pay rent from their paychecks and what paychecks to use to pay for other bills like their gas and electricity each month.

Coaches also teach pupils to save money to put in a savings account or toward retirement. For some people in this generation, they have never heard of the rule of saving 10 percent of their income each time they get paid. They spend all of their money instead of putting some up in case of emergencies or for later uses like retirement.

One of the tasks they may have to accomplish during their coaching involves opening a retirement savings account. This could be a 401k, Roth IRA, or another tax-exempt account. They then are instructed to put ten percent of whatever they earn each pay period into that account. They are told the money will come in useful for emergencies like car repairs, medical expenses, or retirement later.

People of the generation are also relatively ignorant about investing. They figure investing is for people who make large sums of money or wealthy individuals who come from old money families. The idea of opening an investment account frightens some of them because of how difficult it seems.

In fact, websites exist where you can open your own account for mere dollars down. Once these accounts are open, you have the leeway to trade and buy stocks at your leisure. You also get access to commodities, bonds, and CDs once you accrue enough money.

A life coach can help Millennials learn the basics of navigating adult life. They teach people basic lessons like saving money, paying rent, and investing. These lessons help people become independent and no longer afraid of venturing out on their own into the adult world.




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