Shane: Hello. My name is Shane Hancock, and I am the Head of Member Products, Guidance and Advice at AustralianSuper. And welcome to our podcast, The moments that count. Before we start, it's important to note that the information discussed in this podcast is general only and doesn't take into account your needs or personal objectives. You should assess your own financial situation and needs.
Today, this podcast is being recorded at our head office on the land of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. I and AustralianSuper acknowledges the traditional custodians of country throughout Australia. We pay our respects to elders past and present, and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
AustralianSuper has the privilege of 3.4 million members trusting us with their retirement savings. Each of those members has their own story. And today we're going to hear one of those stories. I have the pleasure of being joined by Kathryn Niesche, a member of AustralianSuper. Welcome, Kathryn, and thanks for joining us.
Kathryn: Thank you. Great to be here.
Shane: So to kick off, Kathryn, this is a very broad question. Can you tell our listeners a little bit about yourself?
Kathryn: Last week, I turned 64.
Shane: Congratulations.
Kathryn: Thank you. Not long before that, my mum turned 101.
Shane: Wow.
Kathryn: She's living in residential aged care in Adelaide, which is where I grew up. I'm still working around three days a week in casual work that very thankfully allows me the flexibility of travelling to Adelaide when I want to or need to, to spend time with my mum. My partner and I have been together for 23 years.
We're not married and we don't have kids. We've always been very independent people. So we each have our own houses and finances. My house is in inner city Melbourne and my partner has a house down at Ocean Grove. So we're very lucky to have a city house and a beach house. We both have had very varied working lives, mostly in the performing arts and I have many interests and activities that still keep me involved, principally in circus, physical theatre and dance.
Just recently I paid off my mortgage after 20 years of slog and that was a real struggle, particularly during the GFC and there were lots of times when I was paying about three quarters of my weekly wage in my mortgage repayments. So I had to consider every dollar. At this stage of my life, I can't really say whether I'm semi-retired or semi-working, so somewhere in the middle.
Shane: Well, there's a lot in there. So firstly, 101.
Kathryn: Yeah.
Shane: So congratulations to your mum and I do think we had a conversation with you coming in to join us last year for our podcast, but you were heading to Adelaide for your mum's 100th birthday.
Kathryn: The 100th, yes.
Shane: And now she's kicked over 101. So that's unbelievable.
Kathryn: I'm hoping the longevity genes.
Shane: It's part of the genes. You've got a long retirement or semi-retirement ahead of you.
Kathryn: I know, I know. So that's, yeah, something to think about.
Shane: That is amazing. Well, we'll get into a few things, but before we get into your work history, because I'm really interested to hear about your performing arts career, you did make a comment in your introduction there about paying your mortgage off and the hard slog it was. But what was that feeling like when you actually paid that last payment?
Kathryn: I sort of, it was kind of disbelief really, because I'd been working away at it for so long. And then all of a sudden I kind of realised, oh my goodness, the end is in sight. Yeah, it's quite a thing. Particularly because I did it on my own and having had a crazy career of like short-term contracts and often no payment, because I would often do projects that interested me rather than paid.
Shane: What an achievement, and you should be really proud of what you've done there, because it's a significant thing that many, many people will struggle with. So well done. So, let's go back a little bit to your work career. So it was around 40, you transitioned to circus and physical theatre. What were you doing before then?
Kathryn: Well, after leaving school, I studied drama and modern dance at uni, and I started my performing career with smaller independent theatre companies. So, mainly working in theatre for young people and physical theatre. The longest contract I ever had during this time was five months, so there was no consistency of work and back then no super either really. Turned 40 and got together and bought a house with two other friends. Once we had the mortgage, I obviously needed to have more consistent weekly income.
So when I was offered a job teaching at the new National Institute of Circus Arts, I took it thinking that I would probably last about six months, so I couldn't imagine working anywhere for longer than that and then I would go back to performing. But then my financial circumstances changed due to having to buy the other two friends out and so I was facing some serious mortgage stress, so I kept going and somehow stayed teaching for 20 years.
Shane: A bit longer than six months, yeah?
Kathryn: Just a little bit, but I also really enjoyed teaching. I taught aerials, so that's trapeze and rope and aerial hoop and circus history, which was fascinating. And I feel very privileged to have been able to assist all these amazing young circus artists and see them graduate into professional performers. So 20 years went by very fast.
And towards the end of this time, there were several factors combined. So being offered less teaching hours, and then my hours in one subject were cut due to course restructuring, needing to reaccredit to do the same work that I had been doing.
And then COVID, of course, was a thing. So in combination, this was all just a bit more than I could manage from a mental health point of view. And it sort of all came to an end. Initially, it was very hard to process, but luckily just a few years earlier, I had started doing some extra work, some casual work with two other organisations.
So post COVID, I was able to increase my hours with those two jobs and that certainly saved me. So, currently I have three casual jobs and several active interests that all revolve around the performing arts. I work on stage door for Marriner Theatres, so the Regent and the Princess and the Comedy Theatres. And I also work on events at the State Library of Victoria. So we set up, we run, and then we pack up the events. I've gone back to performing as well.
Shane: The library and the theatres, you're working in some amazingly historic buildings in Melbourne.
Kathryn: I know, I can't believe my luck. And in such inspiring places that bring so much joy and interest to people's lives. So gosh, I'm very lucky.
Shane: Just going back a bit to the teaching career. So it sounds as though the regular income was something that attracted you to that, but then am I right to say that you got so much enjoyment and passion? It sounds as though even when you left, there was achievement, but also this level of leaving something behind that was so important to you?
Kathryn: Yeah, I think there was definitely sort of a grieving process of letting go. But after a while, when I started to switch my focus to going forward and realised that I had a whole lot more time and brain space to follow my own activities and have some me time, it was a very positive thing and I thought, "Oh, that was a wonderful part of my life...", but now I've moved into the next stage and that's very exciting.
Shane: It's such a common theme like you described it so well, it's a grieving process, you've invested so much of your time and effort into something and then you've got to let it go to an extent, but then the outcome that you've achieved in the meantime, as you describe it, is again, whatever you want to call it, semi-retirement, semi-working.
So when you were working full-time, did superannuation start to be part of your life, so your payments received, and when did you start thinking about super and how it works?
Kathryn: I didn't really think about it at all in my 20s, as it wasn't so much of a thing when I started my freelance work in the 1980s. But then I think the real trigger was when my father passed away, I was 33, and he passed away from cancer at only 68 years of age. I realised that I needed to be responsible for supporting myself for the rest of my life without having to rely on anyone else.
And since I had left my family home, I'd been living in numerous share households and had to move house often because, you know, the house got sold from underneath you or whatever. I was also living a very uncertain life of a freelance performer, so most importantly, I needed the security of having my own place as a base, and to have that sense of control over at least one aspect of my life would be really financially difficult for me to do on my own.
I needed to do it with others to get it to happen. So when I was 40, along with two friends who were a couple, we bought a big run-down weatherboard house and started to renovate it. Unfortunately, not long after that, the couple broke up and two of us bought the other person out.
Then two years later, the other person had met a new partner and also wanted out, so I had to dig deep again and buy that person out. Actually, it was just a bit of luck that I had a lotto windfall of $5,000, which actually made the difference between me being able to keep the house rather than sell it. Took me 15 years to renovate the house and pretty much the day I finished it, I put it on the market and sold it.
Shane: Isn't that always the way?
Kathryn: And then I bought a much smaller and thankfully a renovated house, yeah. My absolute priority was to pay off the mortgage as quickly as I could. I've been very focused on that. And yeah, I can't believe that after 25 years I've actually done it.
And as far as really starting to focus on a proactive approach to my super and savings for the future, over the years I've had several super funds from all my numerous casual jobs and short-term contracts. But I was very shocked when I saw how much of all the small amounts was eaten up in fees. So when I started my job at NICA, I got the consistent pay packet and I started with yet another fund. I rolled all of these little bits and bobs of the old accounts into the new fund.
And then I noticed that my partner who was with AustralianSuper seemed to be doing better with her money than me with my account. So I decided to also switch over to AustralianSuper and I'm very glad I did. I started salary sacrificing and took advantage of the co-contribution, and during that time I also attended a few of the retirement seminars that AustralianSuper ran over the years to try and start thinking about how it might all work, given that finance and financial matters are not really my comfort zone at all.
Since COVID, I must say I haven't actually given it a whole lot of thought because, you know, we've lost a couple of years there and just starting to get back on track, but now I have paid off my mortgage, I'll definitely be contributing more to my super and starting with my tax refund for this year, which always in the past I would have stuck straight into the mortgage.
Shane: Well, Kathryn, you just said that you're not very financial savvy, and I would like to debate that, because you just talked about how you worked hard to save for your home and pay your mortgage off, that you got a permanent super fund and then realised you had a lot of small funds and looked at the fees and consolidated them and moved them across, and then you salary sacrificed. And I think you used the co-contribution strategy as well. So, that's the stories that we try to tell our members to look at and you've done them all so well done.
Don't be so hard on yourself because I think you've ticked a lot of boxes and done it in a sensible way on your own. So, for our listeners, I'm sure they'd all say well done and a lot of people I think would love to have taken the proactive approach that you have and you've really driven yourself to be in the outcome that you're at now. So, you've talked a bit about semi-work slash semi-retirement.
Have you thought about when the semi-retirement becomes more than semi and funding the lifestyle that you want? So you've just talked about salary sacrificing super, but have you got a goal in mind or do you know what you're going to need in retirement and how you're going to fund that?
Kathryn: Yeah, I'd say I'm just starting to wrap my head around retirement and not in any rush at this stage. I don't know if I can ever see myself fully retiring while I'm still able to do what I am doing. I love my stage door and my library jobs. These jobs are casual so I can pretty much work as little or as much as I want so I'm very grateful for that.
I want to go back to performing again. So, starting to work towards other projects and I guess accumulating money hasn't been a huge priority for me. So, I have to admit that I only occasionally check my super balance, but I will definitely now be more proactive and access it more regularly. As far as how I might retire, I probably might not be looking at what would be classed as a comfortable retirement, but I think that modest is quite fine with me.
I have very minimal expenses. I'm not a big consumer. I don't have a car and I'm probably it's just by habit careful with money and both my parents grew up in the depression so I think being careful is in my DNA.
Shane: Well, hopefully you'll live into 101 as well.
Kathryn: Yeah, well, my mum used to tell stories of she had clothes made from curtains and shoes made from car tires.
Shane: Yeah, right.
Kathryn: So yeah, that's doing it tough.
Shane: It is, it is.
Kathryn: So, yeah over the years missed out on things holidays and activities that friends were doing because I was so fixated on the mortgage, so now I will be able to afford to go on holidays and be enjoying more activities and not focusing so much on the money side of it.
Shane: As we say, retirement is individual, and you were talking then about whether it's a comfortable or a modest retirement, but it seems to me that you're very focused on what makes you comfortable, so being comfortable and confident in retirement is core, and it sounds as though you have a pretty good understanding of what that might look like, travel being part of it.
Kathryn: Definitely.
Shane: Am I right to say that the work is not just about financial, there's some personal satisfaction you get out of it?
Kathryn: Absolutely, yeah. I was listening to one of the talks at the State Library once, and it was this successful start-up guy, entrepreneur, and something he said just really stuck with me, and he was talking about how he chose to become involved in new projects by asking himself three questions. Does it pay? Will I learn something? Is it fun?
And if the answer to two of them was yes, then that was enough for him to say yes to becoming involved. And I think what really struck me about that was the fact that for me, answering yes to, does it pay, is now a choice instead of a necessity. And that was like, oh my goodness, that feels so good and such a relief. Yeah, so I'm really looking forward to learning new things and having more fun.
Shane: Kathryn, I normally finish off with, have you got any tips for our listeners? But I reckon you've just nailed it with those three points. So thank you so much for joining us today. It's been great to meet you and hear your story and all the best for whatever comes next.
Kathryn: Thank you very much.
Shane: Thank you for joining us today. If you're an AustralianSuper member and would like to join us and share your story or have a question or topic you'd like us to cover, then click the link in our show notes to get in touch. If you enjoyed this podcast, subscribe and share with your friends and family. My name is Shane Hancock and I look forward to the next episode where we'll hear from another AustralianSuper member. See you next time.