The Money Compass: your money, mapped in minutes
Most people are not short on financial advice. They are short on a plan with their name on it.
This is MoneySmith's answer to the oldest money problem there is: not having a plan. Watch the short reveal, then read what it hands you.
The quiz that does the listening
Everyone carries some version of the same sentence. I should really have a plan. The advice industry answers with noise: generic rules, courses, jargon that reads like it was written to impress other jargon. MoneySmith starts somewhere quieter. A short compass quiz, a handful of plain questions about what you earn, what you owe, and where you want to be, asked the way a good friend would ask them.
Then it builds. Your answers become a blueprint written around your numbers and your goals, not a template. Nothing to configure, nothing to study first. You answer, and the plan takes your shape.
A plan you can print and pin
The Money Compass arrives as a document, not another dashboard. Print it. Pin it above the desk. Paper has an authority a browser tab never earns. It does not refresh, it does not scroll away, and it does not let you pretend you have not read it.
Inside is the thing most people have never actually seen: their own situation, laid out in plain language. Where you stand today. Where you are headed. What to do this month, and what can wait until next year. Steps sized small enough to start tonight.
A compass does not tell you where to go. It tells you where you stand, and that was the missing piece all along.
A coach that picks up
Plans meet weather. Rent moves, work changes, a windfall lands, and suddenly the plan has a question it did not answer. That is what the coach is for. MoneySmith keeps an AI money coach on call, and it answers the way the plan was written: straight, and about you.
Ask it anything money touches. Can I afford this. What should this bonus do. Which debt goes first. The coach knows your compass, so its answers start from your numbers instead of somebody's averages. No lectures, no jargon, no judgment about the question you were embarrassed to ask.
Fair, by design
MoneySmith carries a fair, no-hassle refund window, which tells you something before you spend a dollar. Products built to trap you hide the exits. Products built to keep you leave them well lit.
The quiz takes minutes. The plan lands the same sitting. The distance between "I should have a plan" and holding one with your name on it is about the length of the clip above.