In October 2019, I started the CFP® certification process and finished last month. I wanted to walk through my experience in case it’s useful for others.
CFP® certification is a four-step process. It involves the “4 E’s”: education, exam, experience, and ethics. The bulk of this post will cover the first two. For more in-depth info, I recommend the CFP Board site.
Education
The education requirement includes a bachelor’s degree and completing the certification coursework. The coursework is seven courses in total: financial planning, insurance planning, income tax, retirement needs, investments, estate planning, and a comprehensive case analysis. With the right credentials, you can bypass the first six and only take the last course. I wasn’t so lucky.
The CFP Board makes it easy to search for colleges that offer the courses. I originally went with an in-person classroom format. The main reason is that I’ve been out of “school mode” for quite a while and thought it would be a better learning environment. I took the introductory course through Northwestern University. Continue Reading…

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The last time we saw numbers anywhere close to that was March 2020 and, prior to that, the 2008 financial crisis (there’s no guarantee it reaches those heights). The point stands that a portion of the market has been hit hard over the past year.
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