Living dangerously? That’s exactly what millions of retirees are doing every day. How? By draining their existing savings account to meet living expenses or draining their nestegg to buy a home. It seems the norm for many senior Americans. Live on cash, don’t incur debt and keep your home free and clear. The issue with such thinking is that it leaves these individuals vulnerable to financial disaster.
Continue readingLess than $30,000?
If you ever question the future market potential of the reverse mortgage, wonder no longer. A recent New York Times Editorial titled “Our ridiculous approach to retirement” paints a sobering reality. The vast majority of Americans have saved less than…
Continue readingRetirement Readiness Quotient: 12 Questions
Gene Cohen, M.D., Ph.D., has developed a 12-point questionnaire to help people determine their Retirement Readiness Quotient. You may wish to share it with your reverse mortgage prospects. This tool could also be part of a presentation…
Continue readingIndependence Day
It’s almost Independence Day…but as we grow older, and as the need for assistance increases with age, independence again becomes a questionable commodity.
Continue readingDecision Tree: One Home, So Many Options
Many seniors don’t realize that when choosing a reverse mortgage, they’re at the start of a decision tree resembling a Chinese menu of options — though with a much longer lasting outcome!
Continue reading“Graduating” Into Your Own Home
Life can seem like one long stepping stone towards graduation: Fortunately, for elders who want to remain in their own homes as long as possible another kind of graduation exists, thanks to the reverse mortgage. It’s a rite of passage that is often overlooked; the decision to age in place….
Continue readingIs 62 too young for a reverse mortgage?
People’s behavior makes sense if you think about it in terms of their goals, needs, and motives. That’s the case when it comes to the trend toward younger reverse mortgage borrowers. But senior advocates and others see it differently…
Continue readingThe Technology Connection
The idea that seniors are technophobes is disproved daily by the popularity of computer classes…
Continue readingStaying Connected: The Travel Connection
There’s a humorous country song about a man who leaves his wife in their mature years, and how, in response, “she let herself go”
Continue readingGeneration “U”: Unretired & Inspired
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Generation “U”: Unretired & Inspired…
and Reverse Mortgage-Ready!
Seniors Staying In The Workforce Longer
Workplace expert Lynn Taylor, who coined the term “Gen U” for Generation Unretired, believes today’s seniors and soon-to-be seniors represent a sea change for both business and the reverse mortgage industry. She says, “With the growing number of people seeking greater financial security to address longer life spans, Gen U will be highly receptive to financial incentives such as reverse mortgage, which will allow them to continue to thrive.”
The author of the workplace conflict resolution book, Tame Your Terrible Office Tyrant (TOT): How to Manage Childish Boss Behavior and Thrive in Your Job notes that Gen U will make up almost all the growth of the U.S. labor market over the next seven years. According to AARP, eight out of 10 of the 80 million Baby Boomers will work part- or full-time rather than retire.
“Gen U’s contributions reside not only in their skills sets garnered over many years, which can be passed onto Gen X, Gen Y, and Baby Boomers. They’ve also learned a thing or two about people skills -something often lost in today’s frenzied, high-tech workplace,” observes Taylor, who has watched this evolution from within corporate America and as a consultant over the past three decades.
Henry Alford, author of How to Live: A Search for Wisdom from Old People, concurs with her assessment. “In general, the more technological a culture, the less the wisdom of elders is valued; in a world in which megabytes and artificial intelligence are the coin of the realm, skills like passing on traditions and providing cultural context are perceived to have diminished worth.”
But Taylor believes we err if we cast off the older generation.
“Because Gen U has the maturity of experience, they are often more adept at ‘humanizing the workplace.’ They’ve seen sandbox politics come and go and have witnessed that nice guys really don’t finish last. They are often the ‘anti-TOT’. That’s not to say that all of them make great bosses. But they can be a major asset to a more interpersonal, motivational workforce.”
Unretired Reverse Mortgage Prospects
This is also why a reverse mortgage may be key to helping Gen U workers thrive: remaining in the workforce, or reinventing themselves for an entirely new encore career, “presents an opportunity to re-apply their knowledge, pay off expenses, ‘give back,’ and feel a renewed sense of purpose,” says Taylor. While a sense of community can be created in a yoga class or golf game, for many mature workers, building something that directly impacts the livelihoods of others can be even more rewarding, she notes.
“This Gen-U-ine shift will become a win-win-win for companies, the reverse mortgage industry, and the unretired in the months and years ahead.”