Monthly Archives: November 2010

How to Use Personal Finance to Make Friends

After leaving my umbrella on the metro on the way home one day, I was in need of both a change of clothes and a new umbrella. I took care of my clothes when I got home, but I don’t enjoy shelling out $20 for new umbrellas every few months.

Two days later, Kelly at The Centsible Life alerted me of an awesome deal going on at Gap, which ended yesterday. 30% off plus they donate 5% of the purchase to one of a few charities that you can choose from. Score! I could get that umbrella for $14 (It’s a sweet umbrella. Automatic open AND automatic close).

I headed to the store during my lunch break, picked out my umbrella, got laughed at by the cashiers who thought buying an umbrella on a beautiful day was silly, and made my way to the door. But since the coupons aren’t unique and therefore reusable, I knew I could either walk out the door and throw away the coupon or I could hand it off to someone else who would save a nice chunk of money without doing any work.

I turned around and found the closest person to me. There were two girls standing pretty close, so I offered the coupon. They were really happy to have the offer, but they were actually on their way out (why there were still standing there I’m not sure), so I had to find a new target.

I tried a new tactic. I found the person carrying the most items, thinking that I could save them the most amount of money, explained the situation, and happily handed off the coupon.

You should have seen this woman’s face. She was ecstatic. How often are you in the middle of shopping and get an offer to save $30 of more?

Now I know how to get people to like me: offer them a way to save money with nothing to lose. They’ll be amazed at your generosity, you’ll know that you didn’t really do any work to help them, and everyone will feel great about themselves.

Readers, how do you use personal finance to get people to like you? Should I try my newfound tactic to try and get girls too?

Cost of College – What about the Cost of Going Back?

The extended unemployment boom that now seems to be stalled at 9.6% nationwide has had disastrous consequences for millions of middle class Americans. It’s not so much that businesses are closing their doors; they are also boxing up the jobs and shipping them overseas. That’s not just manufacturing jobs; it’s IT jobs, accounting jobs, product development jobs in short, the skilled positions that many of us moved toward initially with a bachelor’s degree and a stack of resumes.

College is worth the cost for a high school graduate particularly if you prioritize paying it off fairly early on. There are also statistics that show a graduate degree to have a higher earnings value, on average, than a baccalaureate. All of those facts apply in what used to be the average job market, where there was a manufacturing base, where skilled workers included the journeyman ranks among the building trades, and where the IT sector was a booming, seemingly limitless economy all its own.

Yesterday’s average job market is gone. It has been replaced by a self-defeating economic structure where consumers are afraid to expand, businesses are afraid to expand, and banks are afraid to lend. All of that adds up to a situation that makes jobs hard to find for millions of us, career professionals and college graduates alike. That’s why there’s a boomlet in college
education driven by people who are returning to school to recalibrate their professional skills and credentials. For those of us who have been caught in the unemployment web, returning to school often means a new career in a new profession or a shot at a management role that might require a graduate degree for qualification.

How to evaluate this option? There are several factors in the equation. The first is to learn as much as possible about the job opportunities your additional degree might open up. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Outlook Handbook is as good an asset as you’ll find for determining the projected growth of the job you’re seeking as well as statistics on the fastest growing jobs. That will give you a general fix on what the market might be in your field; a search of some of the larger job databases will establish what opportunities are available for someone with your combination of experience and (projected) education.

If you can rough out an achievable career goal and a salary range, the next step is looking at the prospects for upgrading your collegiate credential. Every year there are more options for obtaining a masters degree through an accredited online colleges – and most of the new programs are coming from traditional universities who have introduced degree programs for mid-career professionals. These programs are generally designed for people who need to keep working and who have family obligations. If your state university has gotten into distance learning, the tuition will be about half what a private university charges. Some of the on-line professional schools match the lower tuition rates, but you need to check their status for accreditation.

And then there’s the intangible factor, which is very difficult to assign a value. Sometimes returning to school to hold onto a job or obtain a new one isn’t just a matter of getting back on track financially, it’s holding on to assets, lifestyle, family – all of which has value that doesn’t show up on a balance sheet.

While going to college can be very important, planning for it can be just as important. Save in a 529 plan or Roth IRA (college savings can be saved here, too!) and you’ll be a step ahead!

Bob Hartzell is an editor for Master Degree Online.com. Easily find and compare graduate program costs from any masters degree programs or colleges online.

Would You Take a Pay Cut for Happiness?

The following is a post by staff writer Crystal at Budgeting in the Fun Stuff. Her blog covers living expenses, saving for your future, and the fun stuff along the way.

I have been job hunting for the past few weeks to find something more enjoyable than my current cubicle position. The main problem seems to be that I enjoy jobs that don’t pay very well. Specifically, I’m looking at customer service positions that only seem to pay $10-$12 an hour, which would entail taking a significant pay cut.

A pay cut makes me cringe for two main reasons. First, a cut in salary would hamper the 35-45% we’ve been socking away for early retirement. Secondly, we would have to cut back on our monthly entertainment expenses. My husband is fine with both of those consequences as long as I find something that makes me happy, but I wonder how much I am willing to cut back on in order to wake up with a little less dread every day.

Since I have already crunched the numbers for a past post, I know my husband and I would be just fine even if we had to live on just his salary. We would have to give up almost all unnecessary spending, but we could pay all of our bills and wouldn’t have to eat Ramen every day, lol.

If I do take a position that pays $10 an hour, we wouldn’t even have to cut back quite that much. We would “simply” have to find a way to deal with the approximate $750 difference every month. Here’s some ideas I’ve come up with so far:

1) Find another part-time job. If it only pays $7.50, I’d just need to work an additional 100 hours a month. This sounds like a plausible option but I don’t know if I can regularly give up that much time with my family and friends.

2) Grow my blogs faster. I’ve brought in a little more than $4,200 in a total of 8 months via BFS. I need to concentrate on bringing in a consistent $1,000 or more a month. My husband thinks that using my blogs to supplement the difference is a perfect idea. I agree and am trying to grow all 3 of my blogs as fast as possible simply to hit my goal to blog full time by 2012.

3) Cut back on our expenses by $750 a month. This would be difficult since we currently “only” spend about $3,250 a month including our mortgage. We could pretty easily cut back $150 from our food budget but the other $600 would require some major thought and prioritization. Anyone got some special money saving ideas I don’t know about?

4) Cut back on our savings by $750 a month. We currently put away $1,000-$1,500 in additional cash on top of the monthly contributions we make towards his pension, my 401(k), and our Roth IRA. We could cut back on our fun money, vacation account, emergency account, and home and auto account if the need pops up.

Currently, I am trying very hard to enjoy my job more while I submit resumes so I don’t have to make any tough decisions. I’m truly hoping I can find something I really enjoy that wouldn’t cause me to take a pay cut at all. At a whopping $35,000 a year, it shouldn’t be so hard to find a new job to fit the bill…

How low would you go to find a job that is better for you? What could you cut back on if it meant waking up a little happier every day?

Do You Feel Bad When The Price Drops After You Purchase?

Is there anything worse than making a purchase and seeing the price drop immediately after?

In this sense, I’m usually the bearer of bad news. Don’t try bragging to me that you got a good price on your new technology. Did you hear about the best deal I ever got? Simply put, you won’t match me. But if you need help getting a discount, just let me know, I’m more than happy to help.

When my friend questioned my decision to dish out $200 to upgrade my iPhone, I told her I made a bunch of money selling the iPhone on Craigslist. Her response? “Of course you did.”

There are times that I want to shove it in your face. Don’t get overly excited because big trees fall hard.

But here’s my real question: if you’re happy with the price you got, why do you care what anyone else paid? If you’re happy with your deal, be happy with it. Don’t let me bring you down.

There are some great posts about this topic. I won’t try and match them. But what it boils down to is that there are two types of people, maximizers and satisficers. Maximizers are the type of people who must always get the best deal. Satisficers are happy with getting a pretty good deal. Guess who’s happier? Satisficers.

For maximizers knowing that they could have gotten it cheaper ruins it for them, even if they did pretty damn well.

In some ways, I’m a hardcore maximizer, even if I talk about the big picture. I love getting a great deal. On my last shopping trip, I got 18 bottles of pasta sauce and 18 boxes of pasta for $27. Usually the sauces are $2.50 apiece and the pasta is $1 each, so we saved $36, or a cool 57%. I can’t get enough of that! I’ve been tracking the price of an external hard drive for about 3 years now, and maybe this Black Friday will be the point I pull the trigger.

I try my best to be a satisficer, even if it doesn’t come naturally. I talk about big wins and I don’t clip coupons. I set larger than necessary budgets so I won’t be pressured into saving so much that it cramps my lifestyle. If I’m on the fence about a purchase, I go for it so the stress doesn’t eat me up, and I don’t micromanage my finances. I sweep excess savings into my bank account just once a month.

Hopefully I’ll teach you to be a satisficer.