Archive for the ‘Tips’n'Tricks’ category

Credit Rate Reduction: What Does it Mean to My Wallet?

March 19th, 2008

If you’re a newer reader you may not be familiar with the Credit Rate Reduction Rally.  One of the purposes behind the rally was to build a movement that is about optimizing interest rates for people paying off debt.  In my case doing this on one of our cards reduced the interest we’re paying per month (which also includes a lower balance from making payments) by $125.00 a month.  That would be like saving roughly $1,400.00 in one year’s time [calculated loosely with the assumption of a reducing balance with minimum payments].  Or three Nintendo Wii’s, several car payments, a very, very nice bottle of wine, a Mac Book with memory upgrade, or a nice donation to a charity.

Have you sat down and calculated how much money you might save by getting your interest rates reduced?  Be persistent, be consistent, and make them change your interest rate.  It could change your future!

The Moved Buffer Theory Budget

March 12th, 2008

Have you ever wished you had an extra $200.00 a month? I know I used to wish that. The moved buffer theory is the theory that you should be putting the buffer in your budget at the ‘top’ of the budget rather than in each category. A buffer is an excess amount of money that is put in place to deal with a greater demand on your finances than is normal. If you’re familiar with “emergency funds” then you might describe the buffer as a preventative emergency fund built into your plan. If you are like me then you originally set up your budget with the buffers into different categories so that each category could absorb fluctuations in the category.

Heavily Buffered Categories

Evaluate the chart above representing a traditionally buffered set of categories. Can you see that the categories with buffers are theoretically more likely to use the buffer? By giving yourself access to more money you are more likely to absorb the buffer. The problem is that you should have some buffer somewhere because in real life all of the numbers are not known ahead of time (unless you are super lucky). By setting yourself up with a ‘safe’ budget you are more likely to overspend potential savings (which is not the same as blowing out every budget category in overspending).

Instead, I would propose that you actually calculate a conservative amount for each budget category. What would you say to cutting each category by 20% and moving that buffer into its own category that goes untouched and your target for expenditure is reduced? That way if you over-spend in a category (or the water bill shows up and you find out you took showers that were too long, or watered the garden a wee more liberally than you had expected) you have a buffer category with funds for paying the water bill, but you don’t find yourself likely to spend a lot more in each category. The weakest link in your budget, the category that you’re overspending on, is dealt with, and you can review it for next month to see if it needs more funds, but you don’t just feed all of the categories excess money each month.

Lower Buffered Categories

There is little doubt that real life will happen, and the potential for surprises is great, but by taking out some of the waste where it didn’t appear to be in the first place, you may save yourself a lot more money in the long run. If you can save $50.00 a month in reduced buffer excess and put it into an investment fund, pay off debt, or possibly grow other areas of your life, its worth considering! I have begun to see a several hundred dollar a month buffer that I didn’t know existed because before I was spending it. Consider your choices as you budget. This method may not work for everyone, but for us, it has been a real relief.

Note: The Moved Buffer Theory Budget is based on the Theory of Constraints by Eliyahu M. Goldratt – only applied where I haven’t seen it applied yet. You might consider checking out Critical Chain, a book that applies the Theory of Constraints to business management.

Note to Self: Make a Note For Yourself

March 9th, 2008

Elephant: Creative Commons: http://flickr.com/photos/exfordy/123900378/I had a great post idea earlier today. Great to the point that I thought it would be my best article to date. Or not. It doesn’t matter because I wasn’t at a place where I could write it, and I failed to write it down! So now you can imagine that this post is brilliant. But its brilliance lies mostly in that as a manager of life (and finances), you need to be prepared to document ideas and be able to come back to them so that you don’t lose important things, or blog posts.

Magazine Subscription Scam

March 5th, 2008

A Mail Box: http://flickr.com/photos/johnnyenglish/73627419/Magazines are a thing of the past in some households. The internet sucked the life out of these old paper-bound relics, just like newspapers [free the bound periodicals!]. However, magazines do still exist and with them comes the need to keep circulation high and ad revenue higher. We got a ‘notice’ in the mail today that was a ‘late or missing’ payment notice in an attempt to get us to just send in a check and subscribe to a magazine my wife had canceled.

Tricky? Yes. Dishonest? Absolutely! This sort of tactic is slick, but wouldn’t work very well in other markets. Just imagine test driving a car at a dealership and waking up in the morning with a guy knocking at your front door asking for the first payment check. Or just try not to smile thinking about walking into Costco/Sam’s Club and having the sample ladies chasing you down asking you to pay for the sample you tasted – at full price and for the price of the entire box.

I think this sort of thing is far too common in some businesses, but be aware: just because it comes as a ‘notice’ doesn’t mean its a legitimate concern. Figure out the reality of the claim first. Don’t be swindled.

Trogdor: The Burninator

February 24th, 2008

If you have not see the Strongbad “Trogdor” video, here it is.  I know its weird, but since Homestar Runner and Strongbad tend to be internet icons, I’ll let you decide if the internet is weird before the video, or after the video.  You see: my wife’s relative had her house burn down on Monday last week.  Burninated.  Most everything is gone or destroyed.  It is pretty tough since that sort of event is so life altering.  She’s still waiting on more information about insurance and hasn’t begun (to my knowledge) the process of discovering the costs of rebuilding.

As you can imagine, this post is a reminder to back up documents off-site, or to keep them in a safe-deposit box at a bank/secure location.  I need to do this, too.  Some of the documents that she had are gone forever, some can be had for a fee (reproduction and shipping and handling costs), and some are going to be sorely missed.  Things like children’s first moments, photos, some computer data, and of course various valuables that are destroyed when flames hit them.

Consider her fire as a great lesson for us to learn from.  Consider her blessing in not being home for the fire (and therefore unscathed).  Make sure you have life-important things like wills covered in duplicate.  Make sure you have considered a location to store offsite data (external hard drives or sites that offer low-cost data hosting for such cases are a good idea).  Make sure that you tell your loved ones they’re loved – you never know what might strike, but you do know it won’t be Trogdor.

Note: This post is a tiny bit light hearted because the relative is actually doing pretty well emotionally.  I’m actually feeling kind of sick, but such is life.  Gotta travel tomorrow, so we’ll see how that goes. 

Playing House: Everyone at the Card Company is Lying

February 15th, 2008

If you’ve seen the television show ‘House’ then you’ve probably heard the lines about everyone lying.  In each episode something goes wrong with some patient and they have to find out what is causing the ailment.  Often the problem has to be ‘dug’ into and they have to find out who is lying about information so that they can get to the truth of the problem.  They don’t take ‘no’ from anyone.

If you have tried to get a lower interest rate from a credit card company and they’ve said no to lowering your rate and you’re paying anything like 18%: they’re lying.  Don’t take no for an answer.  Dig deeper.  Go up the chain of command until you’re speaking to Warren Buffet’s cousin.  Get to the person who can and will say yes.  Don’t put it off, don’t delay, call now.  Get a lower rate and save yourself some big cash!

Excuses that drones at the card companies will use include:

  • Your rate is the best we can do – that is not possible
  • Your account has been locked for rate reductions because of late payments – this is a totally bogus issue that is policy.  Policy that can be over-ridden by a higher up manager
  • Your card offers you rewards, those rewards are funded by your interest rate – bull pucky.  Those rewards are paid for by any number of things – but the interest rate doesn’t fix things.  If you have to switch card companies now may be the time to do it

Kick the credit card interest rates in the butt.  We got our interest rates dropped twice and each time they dropped the rate we saved $50.o0 in interest per month!  Of course we’ve got enough debt that we’re paying a lot anyway.  However, getting the lower rate will help us pay it off faster.

Five Ways To Tell Your Valentine You Love Them for Free

February 13th, 2008

We don’t celebrate Valentines day at our house.  We celebrate February 16th because it is the day that I asked my wife out when we were in high school.  Its kinda goofy but on February 14th I told her I liked her, but I didn’t have the guts to ask her to be my girlfriend.  Without this escape you’ve probably still got to tell your special someone they’re special, and here’s a quick list of things you can do that says, “You’re special.”  Without shelling out $100.00 or more in love stuff.

  1.  Write a letter experessing your feelings.  Don’t get a card from the store, but write a hand written letter.  If your  hand writing is as poor as mine, this means a lot of time spent doing it carefully, time means something in many cases – especially if your loved one knows you are normally hard to read.  Take time to think through it and consider writing multiple drafts if you have time.
  2. Plan a time to massage feet, hands, head, face or some part of their body that is not intended as a lead in to other things.  Just help your sweeheart to relax.  Make sure that they know you love them with a great time of relaxing and you giving of yourself.
  3. Use a dry erase marker on the mirror to write a love note.  I haven’t done this in some time, but it works great because the marker will wipe off of the mirror (check in a hidden part of the glass just to make sure).  That way when they look in the mirror they’ll be surprised by the great reminder of your love.
  4. Make a mix tape, iMix or special track listing on an MP3 player or home made CD.  This sure is fun and if its with music you have already, it says you took time, but it doesn’t have to cost you more than the price of electricity or the CD.  Dance with your Valentine to the music.
  5. Run a hot bath with candles around the room and read poems or the love letter you wrote to your Valentine.  If you’ve not got a great bath to do this in, consider at least setting up a space in your home where you can set the mood for romance.  Read the letter because it will mean even more then.  I recommend practicing just a little bit so that you don’t start crying (I do, but I’m a sap) and so you can add the right inflection and look up at the right times to make sincere eye contact.

These are just a few ways you can spend almost zero dollars and have a million dollar Valentines day.

Good Cof, Bad Cof

January 28th, 2008

Yesterday I spent approximately fifteen dollars on coffee.  An excessive amount, I know.  But it was an experiment.  I’m a coffee snob – not a Starbucks coffee snob, but a roast-your-own-beans if you can (I can’t because my roaster died and I haven’t had it repaired yet) type of coffee snob.  So I decided to test out the difference between the cheap 24 ounces for $7.99 coffee verses the $11.99/pound freshly roasted stuff at my local Whole Foods.  Here’s my dilemma: I, as a snob, need to figure out the cheapest way to consume high quality, tasty coffee.  Here’s what I’ve come up with so far:

  •  Cheap coffee always tastes bad to me
  • Starbucks coffee usually tastes funky to me (burninated) so its out
  • The cheaper good stuff at whole foods is still $10.00 a pound
  • Yes, I can taste a significant difference between a fresh roast and a not-so-fresh roast
  • I like medium roast coffees the best
  • I refuse to do various things to thin out the coffee ground usage: if you’re going to have coffee make sure it isn’t garbage.  If you’re looking for cheap caffeine go with tea – it’ll still taste good, but not have nastiness like cheap coffee.
  • I need to fix my roaster because then the beans can be had for several dollars a pound instead of 12 dollars a pound
  • I do like Peet’s coffee, but it is as expensive, or more expensive than Starbucks

What things do you do to make sure you get a little luxury, but at a frugal price?  Do you let yourself have a little luxury?  When you go to the store do you wrestle with these things?  I tend not to, but I find that when I have to buy coffee (which I actually drink sparingly contrary to what this post may imply) I convince myself to spend more every time.  My expensive/cheap experiment proved again to me that I can taste a difference and prefer the good stuff.  Help!

Gazelle Like Intensity

January 28th, 2008

Last night, and the night before, and the night before that I was up until past midnight.  Working.  You see I’m attempting to wrap up two side-jobs in an attempt to pay off debt faster.  Faster than I would be able to pay them off if I was just working for my normal big client.  It eats into family time.  It eats into time to do things like blog on the many blogs I have (I’m rather embarrassed to say I have five), it eats into time that I have committed to doing other things like Sunday School preparation.  But I’m focused on doing it because I’ve got to get it done.

Dave Ramsey calls it Gazelle-like intensity, I call it focus, and the reality of things is that if you don’t have the drive to get out of debt, you’ll simply be in it for a lot, lot longer than you would otherwise.  Possibly thousands down the tube in interest payments and weird fees.  My buddy worked 90 hours a week for about six weeks to get the major thrust of his debt paid off.  I can’t manage that due to various limitations on my body, but it was the very same drive to have the debt behind me that pushes me to work extra side-jobs.  There’s no reason not to just dive in and get it done.  Yes, it will cost you time and friend and family time in the short term, but it may gain you that back afterwards and if you add financial liberty to free time… you’ve got something.

Dead (Bulb) Man Walking

January 24th, 2008

Save a dollar in electricity each day (which is a number I’ve totally made up because there are too many variables involved) and take a walk through your house/abode before leaving it.  Check for lights on, TV’s on, VCR/DVD players on and most importaly stove burners and appliances that might cause a fire.

I frequently find lights abandoned in the ‘on’ position and left to consume watts that I’d prefer to not consume.  A quick walk down the hallway can add up.  Of course if you leave compact fluorescent bulbs on all day long you’ll save a lot in your electricity leak ;)