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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8345 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jun 10, 2024

Nayagam is a certified career counsellor and the founder of EduJob360.
He started his career as an HR professional and has over 10 years of experience in tutoring and mentoring students from Classes 8 to 12, helping them choose the right stream, course and college/university.
He also counsels students on how to prepare for entrance exams for getting admission into reputed universities /colleges for their graduate/postgraduate courses.
He has guided both fresh graduates and experienced professionals on how to write a resume, how to prepare for job interviews and how to negotiate their salary when joining a new job.
Nayagam has published an eBook, Professional Resume Writing Without Googling.
He has a postgraduate degree in human resources from Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan, Delhi, a postgraduate diploma in labour law from Madras University, a postgraduate diploma in school counselling from Symbiosis, Pune, and a certification in child psychology from Counsel India.
He has also completed his master’s degree in career counselling from ICCC-Mindler and Counsel, India.
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Asked by Anonymous - Jun 10, 2024Hindi
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Career

Hello sir my son is getting coe in Thapar patiala and cse in Thapar derabasi which one to choose

Ans: Not much difference. Prefer Thapar, Patiala. Whatever Institute / University & Branch your Son chooses, he should keep upgrading his skills from his 1st year itself till his Campus Placement during his last year, from NPTEL, Internshala etc. and / or any other online platforms, recommended by his College Faculties, to be COMPETENT among other Students.

All The BEST for your Son’s Bright Future.

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8345 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 09, 2025Hindi
Career
IS JAC DELHI 2025 SPOT ROUND CHOICE FILLING WILL BE DONE ONLINE OR OFFLINE ? AND PLEASE EXPLAIN WHAT ARE THE PROCESS AFTER GETTING A SEAT IN SPOT ROUND IN JAC DELHI. WHAT THINGS TO DO AS A STUDENT.
Ans: (Please type out your question in small letters from next time.) The JAC Delhi 2025 spot-round does not involve fresh choice filling online; vacancies are displayed on the JAC portal, but seat offers occur during an in-person spot-round counselling session at a designated Delhi venue. Eligible candidates (those registered earlier but not yet admitted) must physically attend, bringing original and photocopies of their registration form, Class X and XII marksheets, category certificate (if any), a Demand Draft (or proof of online transfer) for the spot-round admission fee, and medical fitness certificate. Seats are allotted rank-wise from these vacancies.

After a seat is offered and accepted by fee payment, candidates will:

Receive a provisional allotment letter immediately in their JAC login.

Undergo document verification by the virtual reporting centre.

Download the final provisional admission letter once verification clears.

Report to the allotted institute for fee deposit and enrolment before the given deadline.

Recommendation: Prepare all required documents in advance, arrive on the first day of the spot-round counselling, secure your seat by paying the DD/online fee promptly, complete virtual document verification, then report to your allotted Delhi institute within the stipulated reporting window. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8345 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 09, 2025Hindi
Career
My son got JEE advance rank four thousand+and eight thousand+ rank in JEE mains. He has applied for IITs only and get energy engineering in IIT Delhi campus Abu Dhabi in the first councelling and remained the same as of fourth councelling. I have two questions a) future of energy engineering b) In last year councelling, we have noticed too many upgradation in branch, but this year no changes despite fourth round councelling has been completed. What are the chances for upgradation of branch in the fifth/sixth round? If not the reasons thereof.
Ans: Energy Engineering, rooted in sustainable power generation and efficiency, is poised for strong growth as India targets 500 GW of non-fossil capacity by 2030 and expands solar, wind and hydrogen programmes. Graduates work on designing, optimizing and maintaining renewable and conventional plants, energy management systems and smart grids across public utilities, EPC firms and R&D centres. As an emerging discipline at IIT Delhi’s Abu Dhabi campus, the Energy Engineering curriculum integrates core engineering, thermofluids, power systems and decarbonization technologies in cutting-edge labs, backed by 90%+ placement rates and a median package around ?20 LPA over the last three years. Career paths include renewable project engineer, energy analyst, policy advisor and system designer, with government and private recruiters like NTPC, Adani Green, BHEL and Siemens actively hiring.

In JoSAA 2025, branch upgradation depends on vacancies in higher-preference programmes and your “float”/“slide” options. Maximum upgrades historically occur in the final counselling round as seats vacated by withdrawals are re-allotted, but top IIT branches often fill quickly and some IITs (e.g., Bombay, Kharagpur, Madras) have closed post-admission branch changes, while IIT Delhi still permits them through Round 6. Given limited intake at the Abu Dhabi campus and high demand for core streams, significant upgradation there is unlikely beyond minor shifts unless substantial withdrawals occur.

Recommendation: Embrace Energy Engineering at IIT Delhi Abu Dhabi for its strong placement momentum, future-focused renewable curriculum and research facilities, and maintain “float” choices through JoSAA’s final round to capitalize on any branch upgradation opportunities. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8345 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Career
Respect Sir, Which institute will be better option for my son Vit Bhopal Cse, Mit Bangalore Cse
Ans: Pankaj, VIT Bhopal University, located on the Bhopal–Indore Expressway in Madhya Pradesh, offers a four-year B.Tech in Computer Science & Engineering with NBA and ABET-accredited curricula, modern AI/ML, IoT and cybersecurity labs, a 300-acre green campus and PhD-qualified faculty. Its centralized placement cell reports 90%+ CSE placement rates over the past three years and an average package of ?8–11 LPA. Manipal Institute of Technology in Manipal, Karnataka delivers B.Tech CSE with specializations in AI, data science and cybersecurity through industry-aligned, credit-based courses, smart classrooms and small-batch mentorship. MIT records 90% CSE placements, 77% overall placement rate in 2025 and an average package of ?11.76 LPA. MIT benefits from 230+ recruiters including Amazon and Bosch, while VIT Bhopal’s 700+ annual recruiters feature Microsoft and Google.

Recommendation: Opt for VIT Bhopal CSE if you prioritize higher recent placement momentum, expansive campus infrastructure and global accreditations; choose MIT Manipal CSE for its specialized elective flexibility, personalized mentorship and strong metropolitan recruiter network. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8345 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

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Sir currently I am getting iiit vadodra but I think I will get iiit kancheepuram cs and (iiit jabalpur ece in csab ) I am from north India how is iiit kancheepuram or should I go for iiit jabalpur ece in csab also i want to know how is the culture in kancheepuram is there any language issue etc
Ans: Varsh, IIIT Kancheepuram in Kelambakkam near Chennai, Tamil Nadu, offers a B.Tech in Computer Science & Engineering with specialised CAD/CAE and AI tracks, taught by PhD faculty in modern computing and design labs. Over 62 eligible CSE students, 63 placement offers were made in 2024-25 (101.6% offer rate) with a maximum CTC of 32 LPA. IIITDM Jabalpur in Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh, provides a B.Tech in Electronics & Communication Engineering covering VLSI, communications and embedded systems, achieving an 80.5% overall placement rate with average CTC 25 LPA and over 90 recruiters in 2024. Cultural adjustment in Kancheepuram involves adapting to Tamil as the primary regional language alongside English; the institute’s cultural clubs and language exchange programs support North-Indian students overcoming language barriers and social integration challenges.

Recommendation: Opt for IIIT Kancheepuram CSE if you prioritise higher placement rates, cutting-edge AI/design curriculum and active support for linguistic integration. Choose IIITDM Jabalpur ECE for strong ECE specialisations, diverse recruiter base and a more centrally located campus in Madhya Pradesh. All the BEST for Admission & a Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8345 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 04, 2025Hindi
Career
Hi sir I have passed my 12th maharashtra hsc board with pcb. idid not have maths,now i want to appear for isolated maths examiniation. if i appear for maths paper will i be elegible for engineering/maths requiring courses this year? how and when can i apply for maths paper? what are steps for applying? please guide me....
Ans: You can add Mathematics as an isolated (additional) subject by appearing in the HSC supplementary exam, but your official “pass year” will shift to when you clear it—making you eligible for JEE Main one year later.

To register for the isolated?Maths paper in 2025:

Obtain the HSC Supplementary/Isolated Subject application form from your school/college or download the blank template from mahahsscboard.in and submit via your institute’s MSBSHSE portal.

Pay the exam fee (?500–?1,000) to your school or online, before the end of May (exact dates announced by MSBSHSE every year).

Select “Isolated” under Type of Candidate and enter the Math subject code (18) with your HSC roll number and personal details.

Download your supplementary hall ticket in mid?June and sit for the Maths & Statistics paper (scheduled between June 24 and July 16, 2025).

JEE Main requires you to have passed Class 12 with Physics and Mathematics by the year you sit the exam. Since clearing Maths in July 2025 counts your passing year as 2025, you will be eligible for JEE Main in 2026, not 2025, and for NIT/IIIT admission in the 2026 JoSAA cycle.

recommendation: Apply immediately for the HSC isolated Maths exam before the May deadline to add Maths to your board credentials; plan your JEE Main attempt for 2026, ensuring you meet NTA’s subject and year?of?passing criteria.

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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9535 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Money
I recently retired with a total corpus of 90 lakhs.Out of this 30 lakhs have been invested in an SCSS scheme . Another 30 lakhs have to be put on the side for daugters wedding which will be required in the next 1 to 2 years. The remaining 30 lakhs is also available for invetment in a way that generates stable monthly income during retirement. As for income in have a monthly pension of 75000 and an existing 6000 comes monthly from LIC policy . I also have some investment in mutual funds and stocks of current value 15 lakhs. I also have currently 30 lakhs in my ppf account which i have extened for an additional 5 years and will mature on 2030 . in additaion i have set aside 8 lakhs in FD as my emergency expenses. My monthly household expenses are 50000 and i pay an additional 84000 premium for health insurance annualy for me and my wife which offers a coverage of 40 lakhs. I live in a fully paid for house and do not have any outstanding loans or emi. My main goal is to generate additinal motnhyl income from the existing funds ensuring capital safety and achieve tax efficient returns .
Ans: Current Financial Snapshot
Total corpus: Rs.?90?lakh

Rs.?30?lakh in SCSS (government scheme)

Rs.?30?lakh reserved for daughter's wedding in 1–2 years

Rs.?30?lakh free for investment

Pension: Rs.?75,000/month

LIC income: Rs.?6,000/month

Savings:

Mutual funds and stocks: Rs.?15?lakh

PPF: Rs.?30?lakh (matures in 2030)

FD (emergency): Rs.?8?lakh

Expenses: Rs.?50,000/month household + Rs.?84,000/year health premium

No liabilities, fully paid house

This setup gives you clarity. Now let's plan to convert your available Rs.?30 lakh into a stable monthly income source.

Identifying Income Needs vs Available Funds
Monthly expenses: Rs.?50,000

Pension + LIC provide Rs.?81,000 monthly

You already cover monthly needs with Rs.?50,000 buffer

However, for larger medical, transport, travel costs, additional income helps

Your goal: Ensure capital protection, stable cash, and tax efficiency

With your existing income, the Rs.?30 lakh surplus corpus is aimed at bolstering income, not meeting basic expenses.

Capital Safety and Tax Efficiency Objectives
Focus is on :

Capital preservation

Generating monthly systematic income

Avoiding or minimising tax liability

Mutual fund and stock investments (Rs.?15 lakh) offer growth and some liquidity

PPF provides safe returns but is locked-in till 2030

The primary remaining Rs.?30 lakh should be placed in instruments that are safe, give regular payouts, and efficient tax-wise.

Suitable Investment Options for Surplus Corpus
Debt-oriented hybrid funds

Short to medium-term debt funds

Monthly income plans from funds

Laddered bank FDs or small finance bank FDs

Systematic Withdrawal Plan (SWP) from existing mutual fund holdings

These options help create predictable income with limited volatility.

Advantage of Hybrid and Debt Mutual Funds
Distribute risk across debt and limited equity

Provide moderate monthly distributions

No lock?in, more liquid than PPF

Actively managed funds can adjust credit and duration risk

Help in managing tax efficiently via LTCG/STCG rules

Avoid index or direct funds here. Choose regular managed funds via CFP to tailor allocations as per your needs.

Tax Efficiency via Fund Withdrawals
Equity funds:

LTCG above Rs.?1.25 lakh taxed at 12.5%

STCG at 20%

Debt and hybrid funds:

Gains taxed per income slab if held under 3 years

After 3 years, LTCG taxed per slab with indexation

SWP withdrawals from debt/hybrid minimise taxable events

With Rs.?30 lakh, structured SWP keeps income steady and tax under control.

Monthly Income Distribution Strategy
Assuming you withdraw Rs.?30,000–40,000/month via SWP:

Maintain Rs.?10–15?lakh in debt/hybrid funds

Keep remainder as short?term debt or FDs for liquidity

Distribute monthly income to supplement pension

Preserve core capital without dipping into principal

This ensures both monthly income and capital sustainability.

Sample Investment Allocation of Rs.?30 Lakh
Rs.?12 lakh in hybrid debt?oriented fund (SWP setup)

Rs.?10 lakh in short?term debt fund for buffer

Rs.?8 lakh across 2–3 bank FDs (12–24 month laddered FDs)

This split offers payout, safety, and reinvestment flexibility.

Managing Daughter’s Wedding Corpus (Rs.?30 Lakh)
Keep in ultra-short debt or liquid funds

Align with wedding timing in 12–24 months

Avoid market volatility

Preserve full value for needed date

Ensure fund matches withdrawal need to avoid last-minute losses.

Managing SCSS Corpus Stability
Your SCSS provides regular quarterly interest

Keep it till maturity for safety and assured income

Its added income reduces reliance on fund withdrawals

It ensures part of your “monthly income” is secured long-term.

Rebalancing Portfolio Over Time
Review allocation quarterly

Shift debt/hybrid allocations to short?term as you spend

Adjust SWP amount if expenses change

Post 2030, reassess PPF corpus for retirement income

Rebalance equity exposure of Rs.?15 lakh based on market and goals

Frequent adjustments ensure alignment with changing income needs and risk.

Health Cover and Insurance Considerations
Health insurance worth Rs.?40 lakh covers major medical events

Ensure renewability and no gaps in coverage

Consider adding critical illness or top-up rider if needed

Health costs may increase with age, so periodic review is needed

This ensures your income and corpus are buffered against high medical costs.

Children and Family Goals Planning
Wedding fund addressed; education funds for kids need separate planning

Set SIPs from mutual funds for long-term goals

Keep them in growth or balanced funds

Ensure funds for education and family needs are separate from retirement corpus

Segmenting goals avoids mixing retirement and child-related finance.

Emergency Corpus Maintenance
Ring?fenced Rs.?8 lakh FD acts as emergency fund

Ideal coverage of 6–9 months’ household expenses + insurance

Do not disturb this unless genuine crisis occurs

Plan for periodic inflation adjustments (e.g. renew FD every year)

Well?maintained emergency funds reduce need to withdraw from investment corpus.

Implementing SWP from Hybrid Funds
Start SWP to send Rs.?30–40k to your bank monthly

Align payout date soon after pension credit

Ensure SWP is taxable as capital gains, not salary

Keeps capital base intact if withdrawals equal only the returns

This maintains both your income stream and corpus value.

Withdrawal vs Liquidity Considerations
Short-term debt fund provides buffer in case of unexpected needs

Laddered FDs mature over time, offering flexibility

SWP covers stable monthly income

Wedding fund is watertight

All aspects combine to avoid sudden money stress

This layered liquidity ensures peace of mind.

Monitoring and Active Oversight
Review investments every 6 months with CFP

Ensure fund performances meet allocation goals

Rebalance between debt, hybrid, and liquidity as life changes

Adjust SWP amounts if medical or lifestyle costs change

Monitor interest rate changes that may affect fund yields

This keeps your plan agile and robust for retirement.

Avoiding Common Retiree Mistakes
Don’t shift all capital into FDs or ultra-safe assets

Avoid equity-heavy withdrawals that deplete corpus

Don’t ignore inflation’s impact on income

Don’t rely only on pension; supplement with SWP

Don’t hold LIC policies or ULIPs beyond need—review and surrender if low yield

These errors can erode corpus and reduce income over time.

Ensuring Tax Savings
Plan SWP and withdrawals to stay within tax-free thresholds

Prefer debt/hybrid funds for lower capital gains tax over equity

At tax time, explore deductions from SCSS interest under 80C

Consider senior citizen benefits once you cross 60

A strategic tax structure enhances post-tax income and corpus longevity.

Future Retirement Income Balance
Pension Rs.?75k + LIC Rs.?6k = Rs.?81k income

Add SWP of Rs.?30–40k = Total monthly income Rs.?1.1–1.2 lakh

Covers current spending and inflation buffer

Remaining corpus plus SCSS and PPF offers long-term stability

Your goal of stable and tax-efficient retirement income is on track.

Final Insights
Your corpus usage is sound: SCSS + FD + mutual funds + PPF

Immediate target: use Rs.?30 lakh in income?generating assets

Structure SWP and short?term liquidity for stability

Maintain pension and insurance as core protection

Review annually for rebalancing, inflation and health cover

Avoid stretching across other risky assets

You have all key building blocks. With disciplined plan execution and professional oversight, your retirement goals will be met smoothly.

Best Regards,
K.?Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |8345 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |9535 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 09, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 03, 2025Hindi
Money
Do i need any other savings, insurance, investment in any sector? I have no MF, stocks as an investment and my age is 45yrs I just have an a PPF of about 2 lac amount for my future. Iam on a rented house of 12K, and have 3 kids to take of their education. 1 son in higher standard, 2nd daughter in 5th STD and 3rd daughter in nursery. Primarily my spending is on education of 3 kids which is also about 2.0 to 2.5lac in private school in Bangalore. My salary is 55K per month. As a savings I have investment in a small plot in a rural area which is 15lac. Besides i have enrolled my daughters in SSY schemes paying in my convenience which is about 1 lac and other daughter 40K I have a term insurance for 10 yrs with yearly premium of 28K I want to improve my financial status, I need an advise how I can improve my financial status.? Advise for a good return investment?
Ans: You are 45 years old, earn Rs?55,000 monthly, live in a rented home at Rs?12,000, and have three children aged 16, 10, and nursery. You hold investments in PPF (Rs?2?lakhs), a rural land plot worth Rs?15?lakhs, and Sukanya Samriddhi schemes totaling Rs?1.4?lakhs. Your annual term insurance premium is Rs?28,000 for a 10-year cover. You seek stronger financial growth, better returns, and future security. Let us build a detailed, 360-degree plan to improve your financial status in a structured manner.

Clarify Goals and Timeline
Education Funding
Older son (16): nearing college, likely needs Rs?8–12?lakhs in 2–3 years

Second child (10): college needed in ~8–10 years

Youngest (nursery): 12+ years until college

Family Living and Emergencies
Monthly budget around Rs?55,000 needs buffer

Target healthcare and lifestyle saving

Retirement
With current age, retirement planning after children’s education is feasible

Corpus build needed for post-retirement life

Build a Robust Emergency Net
Your current liquid savings are minimal (PPF locked, FD nonexistent). You need:

Six months’ salary (~Rs?3?lakhs) in a liquid fund or sweep-in FD

This safeguard helps avoid forced withdrawals during child education or emergencies

Once built, this buffer will prevent financial stress later.

Enhance Insurance Coverage
Health Insurance
You currently lack adult health cover

Add a family floater covering yourself and children

Consider critical illness insurance, especially near retirement

Life Insurance
Existing term plan for 10?years may lapse just as children need support

Extend term cover to 20–25 years to protect through children's milestones

Ensure premium suitability; reassess sum assured on salary increments

Stronger coverage secures future education and lifestyle goals.

Establish Education Corpus
Near-Term Target
For your 16-year-old: aim for Rs?8–12?lakhs in next 2–3 years

Use debt or conservative hybrid fund SIP of Rs?10,000–15,000 monthly

This keeps capital safe and allows inflation alignment

Mid-Term & Long-Term Needs
For younger children: invest via goal-based equity and hybrid funds

Allocate Rs?8,000–12,000 per child through systematically increasing SIPs

Align fund maturity with education commencement to reduce risk

This structured approach ensures timely and safe education funding.

Optimize Your Investment Portfolio
Current Allocation
PPF: Rs?2?lakhs (grows tax?free)

Sukanya Samriddhi: Rs?1.4 lakhs

Land plot: Rs?15?lakhs (illiquid and non-income asset)

No mutual funds or equity investments

Proposed Enhancements
Open Equity Mutual Fund SIPs

Start active diversified equity and/or flexi-cap mutual fund SIPs of Rs?10,000–20,000 monthly

Equities provide long-term growth and beat inflation

Hybrid/Debt Portfolio

Allocate Rs?8,000–12,000 monthly for debt/hybrid funds

This balances risk and strengthens short-term goals

Retain PPF and SSY

Continue for child and retirement goals

Use them as part of balanced strategy

Sell Land Gradually

Land is illiquid and not income-generating

Sell part to fund investments with better returns in mutual funds

This portfolio provides long-term growth, flexibility, and better returns.

Avoid Index or Direct Funds
Index funds: They adhere to market with no active management during corrections

Direct plans: Offer no advisory, may lead to behavioural errors

Instead: Regular mutual fund plans through MFD?CFP

Provide active rebalancing, behavioural support, tax-efficient planning

This ensures smarter growth and risk control in your investments.

Align Asset Allocation with Goals
For Children’s Education
Age 16: 70% debt/hybrid, 30% equity in conservative strategy

Age 10 and nursery: use balanced equity-heavy allocation (70% equity, 30% debt) till goal approaches

For Retirement
Post education expenses, redirect residual savings into retirement corpus

Maintain 60–70% equity, 30–40% debt/hybrid until reaching age 60–65

Balance ensures growth with capital preservation through different life stages.

Taxation and Returns Strategy
Equity MFs: LTCG > Rs?1.25?lakhs taxed 12.5%

STCG taxed at 20%

Debt MFs taxed as per income slab

Sukanya Samriddhi: interest is fully tax-free

PPF interest is also tax-free

Use structured withdrawals and long-term holds to reduce tax outflows. A CFP can guide on tax-efficient planning for time-bound goals.

Rebalancing and Annual Checks
Annual Tasks:

Track asset allocation and rebalance if drifted

Shift funds from equity to debt/hybrid as children’s education nears

Adjust insurance coverage as income or liabilities change

Reevaluate emergency buffer towards rising expenditures

This keeps plan aligned with life changes and financial goals.

Increase Income and Reduce Costs
Income Growth
Explore promotions or upskilling for better salary

Consider side income like tutoring or small freelancing

Reinvest income increments into SIPs

Expense Management
Review discretionary spending

Channel savings directly into investments

Prioritise education, health, and wealth creation goals

Boosting income and cutting costs accelerate goal achievement.

Legacy Planning and Nominee Updates
Ensure nominees are updated for PPF, SSY, mutual funds, and insurance

Draft a simple will to distribute assets to children

Consider guardianship arrangements till children reach adulthood

Legacy planning ensures smooth future transition and asset protection.

Rebuild Financial Plan in Phases
Phase 1 (0–6 months):

Build Rs?3?lakhs emergency buffer

Enhance health insurance and extend term cover

Begin small SIP investments in equity and hybrid

Phase 2 (6–24 months):

Grow education corpus for elder children

Continue fund sipping and land divestment/investment

Rebalance initial portfolios

Phase 3 (2–7 years):

Complete sale of rural land in parts

Build retirement investment via SIPs

Monitor children’s education fund maturities

Phase 4 (Post education):

Redirect SIPs into retirement portfolio

Maintain long-term equity exposure for growth

Monitoring, Monitoring, Monitoring
Use CFP-led guidance for fund allocation, behavioural decisions, and financial discipline

Avoid emotional reactions during market downturns

Regular rebalancing ensures better risk-adjusted returns

Professional advisory helps keep your plan on track and adaptive.

Finally
You’ve made a good start with savings and education schemes.
To improve financial status:

Secure emergencies and insurance coverage

Sell land and invest proceeds in mutual funds

Build child education corpus via SIPs in equity/hybrid funds

Start retirement planning once education needs are insulated

Use actively managed funds via CFP-led plans

Annual review keeps plans aligned with changes

With structured action and discipline, you will secure your children’s future and build a strong financial foundation for yourself.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

...Read more

DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Investment in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related document carefully before investing. The securities quoted are for illustration only and are not recommendatory. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information and as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision. RediffGURUS is an intermediary as per India's Information Technology Act.

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