From the monthly archives:

March 2009

I keep reading the argument that people have too much going on to worry about their money.  My response? If you worried about your money more, you wouldn’t be running around like a crazy person!

I just read a post by Ramit over at I Will Teach You To Be Rich and it struck a chord with me.  The post talks about the importance of automating transactions to do the right thing be default.  This is good, but what if you don’t have an extra $100 a month to move to a savings account? You need willpower and you need it now!

If you’re spending too much, too often on the wrong things, then personal finance is ABSOLUTELY about willpower. It’s about changing habits. If you’re automating a transaction to put money out of reach, that doesn’t change the habit. It just moves the location where you will go to get to your money when you want to spend it. For example, Ramit wrote:

If you think personal finance is about trying harder, ask yourself: How has that worked for you in the last month? The last year? Have you really saved more? Invested more?

With the problem we’re talking about though, trying harder is the wrong thing to attack here. If you’re trying anything, then you’ve got willpower. The point to attack is WHAT are you trying harder AT?

You need to change the desire to spend if you truly want to change the fact that you’re not saving. Willpower is required to make such a change. There’s no way around that. If you have willpower you’ll find a way to keep pushing. You’ll find another option out there. Maybe it’s a cheaper replacement for a necessity or cutting out something from your budget that you don’t actually need. That type of analysis will start the engine and willpower will provide the fuel.

One more general point – there’s a fine line between automating payments and “setting and forgetting”. If you want to stop losing money, start saving more, start making more, etc. You need to start PAYING ATTENTION to your finances. You need to learn how to manage money. Creating an automatic transfer doesn’t teach you anything. It just moves your money around when you’re not paying attention. If you don’t change your spending habits, you will find the money you have and you will spend it. Your habit will see to it that it tracks down what it needs. In this case, that’s your cash.

Change the habit and you will learn the importance of saving and investing.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

There’s a nice tips article up on BabyCenter.com with some helpful hints on cutting your grocery costs.  Food is one expense you can’t completely eliminate so it’s important to find ways to prevent over-spending. Here’s a section of the article that I really liked.  Remember your whole shopping experience is the store’s targeted marketing plan.  There are people at every company’s whose job it is to get your to spend more.  Fight back by understanding what their tactics are and how they work!

2. Understand how stores work
A basic understanding of merchandising can help you avoid overspending. These simple habits will go a long way toward keeping your budget in check:

•  Walk briskly toward what you came to buy and avoid distractions along the way. For example, have you ever noticed that the diapers and milk are often at the back of the store? You’re forced to walk past a lot of temptation to get to the items you need most often.

•  Products are displayed at the ends of the aisles in order to catch your eye. Think carefully about whether what you see there is really necessary — or a bargain — before you toss it in the cart. Many “featured” items are not bargains at all.

•  As you peruse the aisles, bend over to check the prices on the bottom shelves and compare them to the cost of the items at eye level.

•  Avoid buying the items displayed by the register. The magazines at the checkout stand cost much more per issue than they would if you had a subscription, and cookies in little packages cost more than a from a box. Almost everything near the register is there to inspire you to buy on impulse, not to save you money.

Tip: Make fewer trips to the store and you’ll find yourself with fewer chances to pick up a few extras you don’t really need.

Read the full article here.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...