Monthly Archives: January 2010

Money Crashers 2010 New Year Giveaway Bash

For those who don’t already know, Money Crashers is giving away over $7,900 in cash and amazing prices in the Money Crashers 2010 New Year Giveaway Bash. You can win cash, gift cards, books, iPods, and even a few Kindles! There’s so much cool stuff up there, so head over, sign up, and start earning entries!

The amount of the prizes keeps increasing as more people contribute, and yesterday I vowed to contribute a $50 Amazon gift card. There are tons of ways to earn entries, including following people on twitter, signing up for their newsletter, and commenting on posts. Read all the rules at the bottom of their post, then sign up and you could win!

There are so many prizes, cash giveaways, and books, it’s ridiculous and a lot of people are going to be very happy for an extremely small amount of work. To get 5 extra entries to my $50 gift card, all you have to do is follow me on twitter. Go read all about it and good luck!

How to Use a Windfall

Wednesday marks 6 months at my job and makes me eligible for the second half of my signing bonus. It’s nice to know that I am now a full employee and eligible for all of the benefits as everyone else. I’m actually not sure which I’m more excited about. But what should I do with the extra money? It’s not much, but it is enough that I can spend it in a variety of ways and get a lot out of it.

Decisions, Decisions, Decisions…

I can:

  • Stick it all in my emergency savings and build up the $5,000 fund about 2 months sooner than expected.
  • Buy a decent new HDTV for the apartment. Or clothing
  • Pay down some of my debt.
  • Invest it.

I am already on a regular investing plan and feel that bumping that up isn’t necessary. If I’m going to go that route, I might as well pay off some of my student loans. However, my student loans are at $23,000 and a small hit to that won’t make much difference in my life. Paying it off 5 months early doesn’t sound like much when that 5 months will happen many years from now.

I want to spend it in ways that I’ll notice, as a bonus to myself, but I don’t want to spend it all in one place and come away with nothing.

I’ve decided that I am going to use some of that money to buy some new clothes. I need a new pair of work pants and a few new shirts, which I will definitely enjoy wearing. I don’t need to dress too nicely, but I like the thought of looking clean and professional. 30% of the windfall will go towards clothing.

I also am interested in building up my emergency fund a little more. I would be very happy to know that every month, my funds can go towards other goals than simply protecting myself in case of an emergency. So I will be sticking the remaining 70% there and should be fully funded by April.

By using some of my windfall for clothing, I will be congratulating myself on a job well done while not going overboard and spending it all. I think it’s important to spend money on things that make us happy, and this gives me the clothes I want now and will likely reduce future clothing expenses in the coming months because I will already have what I’ve been looking for.

By putting the other 70% of my bonus in emergency savings, I’ll be that much closer to my goal and when I look at my accounts on Mint, I’ll be pleasantly surprised to see that the money is making a difference in my life.

If you had $1,000, $5,000, or $10,000 deposited in your bank account today, what would you do with it?

Impressing Your Friends Can Cost You

Chipped Tooth
In 6th grade, I tried hard to impress my friends. I would often do silly things and go to great lengths to get their approval. One time, I got on a treadmill and set the speed to maximum, only to slip, fall, smack my face on the treadmill, fly backwards, and create a hole in the wall with my foot.

It was a crazy ordeal that sent me to the hospital and left me with dimples from the treadmill on my chin for a few days, and more importantly, a chipped tooth. I’m not talking about a small chip either. My tooth was chopped in half and I looked ridiculous for a little while, but after a few days I had the tooth fixed, the dimples disappeared, and I came out the other end ok.

Now, 11 years later, I’m still paying for that mistake. Two years ago, I chipped it while wrestling with a friend, three months ago, I chipped it on a pretzel, and finally, on Monday, while I was eating cereal, I chipped it again. It’s extremely frustrating each time, and more than anything, I’d like to find a permanent solution so eating an apple without worrying about the consequences could be a serious possibility.

Nobody wins when we try to impress our friends. Having an accident is a worst-case scenario, but when talking about money, there can be plenty of consequences, too.

If we try and keep up with our friends and spend money, we won’t come out ahead. In fact, in trying to keep up, we may end up falling behind. If we spend a lot of money on a fancy new car every two years, we’re spending money to impress other people. The same goes with a big house we may not need, a snazzy new watch, and clothes above what we need. By spending a lot of money on these things instead of contributing more to retirement or other savings goals, you’ll keep up with your friends now, and you may even impress them, but what will the consequences be 20, 30, or 40 years down the road? I now have to worry about when the next time my tooth will break instead of being able to enjoy pizza crust worry-free, all because of a silly mistake I made 11 years ago. What will your mistakes cost you?

Don’t fall behind so that your friends will like you more. If they need you to have a fancy car and an iPhone to like you, do you really want to be friends with them? You can live very happily if you go without the “stuff” and focus on the activities you like and the people you love.

Creating Your Reality by Controlling Your Finances

This is a guest post by Chavah Kinloch, a WAHM (Work at Home Mom) of four young children – She’s an artist. You can regularly find Chavah at her blog, Creating My Reality, and you can follow her regularly by subscribing to her RSS feed.

As someone that enjoys budgeting and monitoring her finances, it’s easy to forget that the thought of taking control of your financial state can be rather intimidating. At this time of year many of us are setting new goals and I bet that almost everyone has at least one goal to somehow get more money this year.

You know what? It’s a great goal to have. Don’t just set it though, act on it. Make 2010, your year to master your finances, a reality.

It’s easy to ‘set’ the goal; the hard part is the follow through. I meet a lot of people that set goals and never come anywhere near to achieving them. It actually makes me hurt for them, I feel bad that they just opened their mouths and talked a whole lot of trash to me and now have to look me in the eye. I do remember what people have said, I’m just too polite to ever bring it up again. Each and every year I hear these same people, saying the same things and I’m yet to see any different results. Why?

1 – They fail to Plan

2 – They fail to Act

3 – They lacked Belief

Now no one, I believe, wants to be looked at in the way I just described. I know that and I know that it’s terrible of me to even admit those thoughts have crossed my mind. That’s the reality though. We don’t want to be just another person saying what we think people want to hear do we?

So here’s what we do.

Plan:

Set your goal. It could be to become debt free or it could be to double or even quadruple your current income. Only you know what your goal is.

Now you have to sit and think. What are we thinking about? We’re now thinking about and writing down a list of ways that we could potentially eliminate unnecessary expenses and create extra income. Sounds simple right? It is, so why isn’t everyone doing this step!

You also need to begin to record your incomings and outgoings. Go over your spending with a fine-tooth comb. Continue doing this EVERY WEEK until you’re comfortable that you know exactly where your money is going. Then use this information to create a new budget.

I won’t dive in deep with ‘how to budget’ in this post. I’ll just leave it at that. If you really want me to explain in detail what you should be budgeting for, just let me know and I’ll write a post about that.

Act:

So you’ve done the simple part of creating the list, now take your list and read it over. This is going to be your ‘how to’ guide. The ideas you’ve just written down are the secret to making your goal get reached. This is the hard part; you will probably need a bit of elbow grease and a whole lot of discipline to get through it. In order for you to reach this goal you’ve set you’re going to need to take necessary steps to reach it. A whole lot of talk will get you nowhere; it’s the action that takes it from being a goal to being your reality.

Believe:

This one may sound silly, especially in a post about personal finances but it’s probably the one that will have the biggest impact on you actually being able to reach your financial goal or not. You must have belief in your plan, belief in yourself to step out of the box and try something new, belief that you can be disciplined to follow through with the good ideas you’ve had and belief that if you do all of these things not only will you reach your goal, you’ll be setting yourself up for a whole lot more freedom by finding control over your financial state, forever.

Having a clear system set in place that includes a step by step overview, showing you going from point A to point B within the year is essential. By the end of the year you’ll be able to stand tall and proudly announce that you achieved the financial goals you set out to do for 2010. So when 2011 comes, it’s only onwards and upwards from there!