What We’ve Been Reading: The Psychology of Money
As a team, we are always looking for ways to continue our learning and development. Providing us fresh insights and perspectives to share with our clients. Last month, a number of our planners travelled to London to attend the Adviser 3.0 Conference, an event focused on sharing best practice, changing financial trends and the future of financial advice.
One of the standout sessions for us was a talk by Morgan Housel. His perspective on money was thoughtful, practical and surprisingly different from the traditional conversations around investing. Many of his themes struck a cord and felt well aligned to the principles Beechwood has developed over many years of advising clients.
After the session, several of us immediately picked up a copy of his book, and we can honestly say it has sparked some great conversations within the team.
So, what is The Psychology of Money about?
One of the main ideas in the book is that managing money isn’t just about intelligence, technical knowledge or finding the perfect investment strategy. It’s often more about behaviour. Morgan explores how our experiences, emotions, habits and personal beliefs shape the financial decisions we make.
Some of the themes that really stood out to us were:
- Building wealth and keeping wealth are different skills
Earning money is important, but using it productively, preserving it and making thoughtful long-term decisions can matter even more. Lifestyle inflation can been a huge drag even for high earners or successful business people. - Time is one of the most powerful financial tools
Small, consistent decisions over many years often have more impact than trying to make perfect decisions at exactly the right time. - Managing expectations and maintaining emotional discipline
These are essential tools to long term success during periods of market volatility.
- Everyone’s financial story is different
We all make decisions based on our own experiences, goals and priorities. Which is why financial advice should never be one-size-fits-all. - Doing well financially doesn’t always mean doing the mathematically ‘best’ thing
The best plan is the one that suits your circumstances and objectives, and that you can stick with comfortably and confidently over time. - True wealth often comes from financial independence, flexibility and security rather than outward displays of success.
Many people associate wealth with visible signs of success — expensive cars, large houses, luxury holidays or designer goods. However, if purchased unwisely, these items can erode, not build wealth.
Why this resonated with us as financial advisers
Reading this book reminded us that good financial planning is not only about the numbers, good tax planning and achieving strong investment returns. As advisers, our role is not simply to create financial plans. It is about understanding what matters to our clients, help them make confident decisions, and create plans that work in real life, not just on paper. Every client has different goals, values and concerns, and often the biggest factor in long-term financial success is having a plan that feels achievable and sustainable.
Books like this reinforce something we believe strongly at Beechwood: financial planning should always be personal.
A little something different…
We enjoyed this book so much that we thought it would be nice to share it.
We’re giving away a copy of The Psychology of Money to the first 10 clients who respond to this blog.
If you’d like a copy, simply get in touch and we’ll arrange one for you.
And if you do read it, we’d genuinely love to hear what you think and whether you enjoyed it as much as we did.
We’re giving away a copy of The Psychology of Money to the first 10 clients who respond to this blog.
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