Scott Wardell, an Eden Prairie-based wealth adviser and certified financial planner, explores how the Great Recession has changed retirement strategies in his book, "Retiring in Turbulent Times."
The book profiles nine people — from a suburbanite whose real estate investments were slammed in the financial meltdown to a schoolteacher and her husband whose frugal financial management has enabled them to pursue international travel and other retirement goals.
The book examines how those profiled avoided or recovered from financial train wrecks to retire comfortably, said Wardell, who wrote the book with journalist Brian Lambert.
The personal stories focus on rethinking retirement strategies in the wake of the recession and amid what Wardell terms accelerating market, economic and political uncertainty.
Such turbulence undermines people's confidence in retirement planning, Wardell said. But not having a plan is one of the biggest mistakes people make.
Wardell has a master's degree in retirement planning from the Colorado-based College for Financial Planning and more than 35 years of experience in the financial services industry.
He and his wife, Barb, own and operate Montgomery Orchard near Montgomery.
Q: Why did you write this book?
A: I wanted to show how people can retire with a little bit of adaptation and creativity, and that it isn't all about how much they had saved for retirement. Also all the books I had read on retirement were way too technical. I thought it would be great to have interesting stories to read to help people understand their retirement dilemmas.