Learning Center

Straightforward money topics explained in plain English. No jargon, no sales pitch -- just the basics you can actually use.

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Financial Wellness

What Is a Financial Wellness Program (and Why Should Your Organization Care)

What financial wellness programs include, why 70% of employers now offer them, and what separates the programs that work from the ones that do not.

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Is Plaid Safe -- And Do You Actually Need to Link Your Bank to Build a Financial Plan

Plaid is technically secure, but the better question is whether bank linking is necessary for financial planning. For forward-looking planning, it is not.

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What Financial Planning Actually Looks Like When You Do It Yourself

Financial planning sounds complicated, but the core of it is three steps done in sequence. Here is what it actually looks like when you build your own plan from scratch.

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How Financial Stress Affects Employee Productivity (and What It Costs Your Organization)

56% of financially stressed employees lose 3+ hours per week to money worries at work. Here is what the data says it costs and what actually helps.

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The Real Cost of Employee Turnover (and What Financial Wellness Has to Do With It)

SHRM estimates replacing one mid-level employee costs $30,000 to $120,000. A $3-5/month planning tool that prevents even one departure pays for itself many times over.

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Financial Wellness vs Financial Literacy -- Why the Distinction Matters for Your Organization

Most organizations treat financial literacy and financial wellness as the same thing. They are not. One teaches people what a 401(k) is. The other helps them figure out if they are on track to retire.

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Teacher Retention Strategies That Go Beyond Pay Raises

Schools losing experienced teachers face a problem that salary increases alone cannot solve. Here is what the research says actually works.

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Employee Financial Wellness Programs: What Works and What Does Not

Not all financial wellness programs deliver results. The ones that work share a few traits that the ones gathering dust do not.

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How Financial Wellness Programs Help Credit Unions Retain Members

Credit union members have more options than ever. Financial wellness programs that go beyond basic banking give members a reason to stay that has nothing to do with rates.

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Employee Retention Benefits: What Actually Keeps People From Leaving

Everyone offers health insurance. The organizations with the lowest turnover offer something more. Here is what the data says about which benefits actually retain employees.

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Low-Cost Employee Benefits That Actually Matter to Small Business Teams

Most articles about low-cost benefits suggest pizza parties and casual Fridays. Here are the benefits that employees actually value and what they cost.

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Practical Ways to Reduce Employee Turnover on Any Budget

Salary increases are expensive and temporary. The strategies that actually reduce turnover address why people leave, which is often not about the money.

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Retirement

Plan your retirement with projections built for you

How Much Money Do You Actually Need to Retire

There is no single magic number. What you need depends on when you want to retire, how much you plan to spend, what income you will have, and how long your money needs to last.

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What Happens to Your 401(k) When You Leave a Job

When you leave a job, your 401(k) does not just follow you automatically. Here are your options and what each one actually costs.

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Best Simple Retirement Calculators for 2026

Not all retirement calculators are created equal. Here is a no-nonsense look at the best simple retirement calculators available in 2026 and what to consider before picking one.

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401(k), IRA, Roth -- What Is the Difference?

The alphabet soup of retirement accounts is confusing. Here is what each one does, how they are taxed, and when each one makes sense.

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How to Retire at 55: A Realistic Planning Guide

Retiring at 55 is possible but requires clearing a few hurdles that people who work until 65 never have to think about. Here is what to plan for and how to know if you are ready.

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How Much Do You Need to Retire at 55?

There is no single number that works for everyone. The amount you need to retire at 55 depends on your spending, your healthcare plan, when you claim Social Security, and how long your money needs to last.

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Understanding Employer Matches and Vesting

Your employer match is free money, but only if you understand vesting. Here is how matches work and when you actually own them.

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How to Think About Social Security

Social Security is not going away, but the choices you make about when to claim it can mean tens of thousands of dollars in difference.

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Retirement Planning Tools: What to Look for Before You Pick One

With dozens of retirement planning tools available, it is hard to know which one is right for you. Here is a practical guide to the features that actually matter.

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What Is a Retirement Visualizer and Why Does It Matter?

A retirement calculator gives you a number. A retirement visualizer gives you a picture. Here is why the picture is more useful for making real decisions.

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The Three Numbers That Actually Tell You If You Are Ready to Retire

Most retirement advice focuses on one number: your savings balance. But readiness actually depends on three numbers that work together -- and most people have never looked at all three.

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The Retirement Number Everyone Gets Wrong

The financial industry has convinced everyone to chase a savings target. But your retirement number does not come from a benchmark -- it comes from your own spending.

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Gen X Was the 401(k) Experiment -- Here Is What That Actually Means for Your Retirement

Gen X entered the workforce as pensions disappeared and 401(k) plans took over. Now, with retirement 10-15 years away, the results of that experiment are becoming clear.

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