I first met Susan Hayes just over two years’ ago, when she
was a guest speaker for the network I was running at the time. To say Susan provides a hefty intravenous
shot of positivity through everything she does, is an understatement. However, as we all know, positivity is a
vastly abused and misunderstood word these days – so it’s important to
contextualise Susan’s version of it.
It’s an attitude of reality tempered by change and possibility – of
newness and active engagement in making a difference in ones’ own economy. In essence, Susan – the Positive Economist –
is just the sort of person a lot of us should and could do with listening to a
lot more right now.
So, when I received my copy of “The Savvy Woman’s Guide to
Financial Freedom” around Christmas time, I was delighted to muse through its
pages and learn more about the behemoth so many of us struggle to attain:
financial freedom.
The reality of personal finance is: we all have different
objectives [as with every element of our lives] and this is something Susan
clarifies right at the outset. Hankering
after what you think is financial
freedom is worthless if you don’t know
what your financial ‘temperature’ is.
Tackling the blockages, personal obstacles and individual fears is your
next key step and from there – it’s a straightforward case of identifying the
best strategy for you, the individual, to attain your personal financial
freedom goals.
Ultimately, Susan’s clear, focused and straightforward
methodology is the winning foundation for this book. Whilst you can just as easily come across
Susan in the Sunday Business Post or on Vincent Browne discussing current
economic issues, she is equally at home equipping women with the techniques
necessary to decide what their financial aims are, and how they best go about
achieving them.
Working in a related discipline to Susan, in enterprise and
economic development, I am a major advocate of strategy – in delivering
projects, objectives and outcomes - and the same rationale can be taken in
achieving personal goals. “The Savvy
Women’s Guide…” offers its readers a real opportunity to take their financial
temperature, understand their goals and values, manage their personal ‘limiting
beliefs’ and identify the best strategy for financial freedom.
When Susan appeared on TV3 shortly after the launch of the
book – she was asked why she had chosen to write the book just for women – her
answer was simple: that she knew their challenges best, and felt she could
offer them the help they needed to achieve their financial goals. I have to say, I think the opposite sex are
missing out… but also reckon this isn’t the last book Susan will write!
I’m very fond of a quote [which has a multiple of
variations] of Henry Ford’s – “whether you think that you can, or that you
cannot – you’re right”. This is true of
many decisions we make in life – to start or grow a business, learn a language…
or improve our financial outlook. If you
think you can’t, the chances are – you won’t.
If you think you can – you’ll identify a way in which you can. If
financial freedom is a goal of yours? Get this book.







