Dear Reader,
Most financial decisions in India don’t feel like decisions at all.
We start saving because it’s expected.
We choose “safe” options because they feel responsible.
We postpone planning because there’s always time or so it seems.
We choose “safe” options because they feel responsible.
We postpone planning because there’s always time or so it seems.
Years pass quietly. Salaries change. Responsibilities grow.
And one day, we realise something important:
And one day, we realise something important:
We were busy making money, but never stopped to plan how it should work for us.
At The Economic Times, we see this across income levels and age groups.
People aren’t careless with money; they're simply following habits, not strategies. Financial confidence often remains missing.
People aren’t careless with money; they're simply following habits, not strategies. Financial confidence often remains missing.
Why? Because financial freedom isn’t built by saving alone. It’s built by understanding purpose, time, and priorities and aligning money to them. A rupee saved at 25 behaves very differently from a rupee saved at 45. What feels safe today may quietly fall short tomorrow.
To help you bridge this gap, we are hosting a Free Financial Freedom Awareness Workshop this sunday. It is designed to help you move from reactive habits to intentional strategy.
Session Details
- Date: 8th February 2026 (Sunday)
- Time: 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM IST
- Platform: Online
The Perspective Shift: This workshop helps you stop looking at money as a collection of products and start seeing it as a strategic tool for your future:
- Life-Stage Evolution: How your needs shift as you grow.
- The Inflation Trap: Solving for the most underestimated risk to wealth.
- The Growth-Safety Balance: How to think about time and risk together.
- Decision Frameworks: Simple tools for intentional, long-term wealth.
This isn’t about chasing returns. It’s about building a financial approach that stays relevant as life changes, because the most expensive financial mistake isn’t losing money, it’s not planning early enough.
Warm Regards,
The Economic Times
The Economic Times