March 15, 2026
By the time we get to spring, most people I talk to aren’t in bad shape financially—but things feel a little… scattered. A retirement account from a previous employer that hasn’t been looked at in a while. A few subscriptions quietly renewing each month. A budget that made sense in January but hasn’t really been revisited since. That’s why I like this time of year. Spring gives you a natural opportunity to tighten things up—not by overhauling your entire plan, but by bringing everything back into focus.
Most financial stress doesn’t come from making bad decisions—it comes from not having a clear view of what’s going on. When we sit down with clients, one of the first things we often uncover is how spread out everything has become over time.
It’s not unusual to see:
So the first step is simple: get everything in one place—at least visually.
That means listing out your:
You don’t need a complicated system. You just need clarity. And once people have that, you can almost see the relief. Because now decisions become easier.
One of the biggest disconnects I see isn’t in the numbers—it’s in the goals behind them. People set financial goals at one point in time… and then life moves on.
For many of the individuals and families we work with:
What made sense even a year ago may not fully reflect where you are today.
So instead of asking, “Am I on track?”
A better question might be:
“Am I still aiming at the right target?”
Sometimes the answer is yes.
Sometimes it just needs a slight adjustment.
Most people expect this part to feel limiting. In reality, it’s usually the opposite. When we go through a budget refresh with clients, we’re not looking to cut everything—we’re looking to realign it.
And almost every time, we find things like:
When those get cleaned up, something interesting happens: People don’t feel restricted—they feel back in control. That’s the difference between a budget that feels like a chore and one that actually supports your life.
This time of year often brings a few financial opportunities—tax refunds, bonuses, even raises. The challenge isn’t receiving that money. It’s what happens next. Without a plan, it tends to get absorbed into everyday spending. With a plan, it becomes a tool.
One approach we often recommend is simple:
That balance helps you move forward without feeling like everything has to be all or nothing.
This is the part most people skip—and the part that can quietly cause the biggest issues over time.
A quick review can uncover:
I can’t tell you how often we’ve seen beneficiary designations that don’t match someone’s current wishes. It’s a small detail—until it matters.
At the end of all this, there’s one question that matters more than anything else:
“Does my financial life reflect what matters most to me right now?”
Not what mattered five years ago. Not what someone else says it should look like. Right now. Because when your finances are aligned with your priorities, everything starts to feel simpler—and more intentional.
A spring financial refresh isn’t about doing everything differently.
In most cases, it’s about:
And once that happens, progress tends to follow naturally.
This is exactly the kind of work we do every day at Great Lakes Benefits & Wealth Management—helping people simplify, organize, and move forward with clarity.
If things feel a little scattered, or you just want to make sure everything is aligned:
Sometimes a focused 30-minute conversation can uncover things you didn’t even realize were holding you back.