Niels Bohr, the Grandfather of quantum physics once said: “Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future!”
It’s not about being right today, it’s about being less wrong tomorrow.
Airline pilots know this. For years, every time I met one, I would ask two questions. The first was, “Do you prepare a flight plan for every single flight?” And every pilot I asked answered “Yes.” The second was, “How often does the flight go exactly as you planned?” To which they always answered “Never.”
This should come as no surprise. The flight always differs from the plan because life is unpredictable, and no matter how hard we try, we never have all the information we need about the future before we start.
Think about what we are trying to do when we create a financial plan that might span 30 years or more. We have to guess about rates of return, inflation, taxes, goals, a date of death, and on and on. There is no way to get that 100% right.
In fact, the only thing we know for sure about any good financial plan the moment we finish designing it is that it's wrong. We just don't know exactly how, yet.
So instead of being worried about getting everything right, we do the best we can to create a plan, and then we accept the reality that financial plans are worthless without the ongoing process of planning.
It’s the course corrections over time that allow us to narrow the potential range of outcomes and reach our goal. Real Financial Planning is a process, not an event.
Predictions are ludicrous.
Forecasting is for the weather