Personal Finance
Money personalities
Financial Goals
SMART goals
100

True or False?

There is one universal "right" way to manage personal finances.

False

100

True or False: Money personalities are fixed labels that never change.

False
100

A specific monetary objective set to be achieved within a defined time frame.

Financial goals 

100

The 'S' in SMART stands for this — goals should be clear and well-defined.

Specific 

200

This term describes the management of an individual's financial decisions including budgeting, saving, spending, and planning for the future.

Personal finace

200

This personality's challenge is that high risks can lead to significant losses.

Investor 

200

Financial goals are important because they provide this — a sense of knowing what you are working toward.

Direction, purpose, and motivation 

200

The SMART criteria that means your goal should be realistic and attainable.

Achievable 

300

This is the term for the fundamental beliefs that shape and influence financial behaviors and decisions.

Financial Values

300

This personality type carefully manages spending, savings, and investing through thoughtful planning.

Balancer

300

This type of goal has a time frame of 1 to 5 years — like saving $10,000 for a car.

medium-term goal

300

'I will save $1,000 for a laptop by December by cutting $84/month from dining out.' Name TWO SMART criteria this goal satisfies.

Any two of: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound.

400

These are the first influences on an individual's financial values.

Family/Primary caregivers

400

This personality may experience "analysis paralysis" and struggle with indecision.

Balancer

400

This benefit of setting financial goals refers to making better choices about what to spend and save.

better decision-making (prioritizing spending and saving)

400

The key BENEFIT of using the SMART goal framework over a vague goal.

It turns vague wishes into clear, trackable plans with specific amounts, deadlines, and accountability.

500

According to the lesson, the concept of money is deeply personal and influenced by these four things.

Experiences, values, goals, and fears

500

Name the five primary money personalities.

Saver, Spender, Investor, Balancer, and Avoider

500

The first of the four steps to setting financial goals — before identifying, prioritizing, or making goals SMART.

assessing your financial situation (income, expenses, debts, assets)

500

These are the five letters in the SMART goals framework.

Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound