Thu 12 Jul 2007
Effectively Handling your Money…
Posted by Robin Bal under Financial Planning , LifeStyle , MoneyMatters , Personal Finance[2] Comments
There is inflation every year. You cannot stop an increasing in living expenses as prices of consumer goods increasing all the time. Saving money becomes an extremely difficult task to do. Here are some solutions for saving a little so that you can still meet your needs and still find ways to trim off a little for the future.
Budget – Get one and stick with it! And set aside at least a small portion for savings while you’re at it; savings for your future, your retirement, your education, your vacation, whatever. Head to your local office supply store for planning workbooks or budget sheets to use. Or head to your favorite search engine and type in, “budget planning” for hundreds of sites with articles, free downloads, tips, ebooks and other resources to help with your budget setup and follow up.
Plan Ahead – Make sure to plan for emergencies and the unexpected, like an appliance break down or garage door malfunction. Even if you can only set aside $100 or so each monthly, place it in an account and earmark it for this “Miscellaneous” fund. Then when things go wrong, and they will – nothing is perfect – you’ll be better prepared.
Monthly Items – Work out a monthly payment for items that you don’t pay monthly and set this up in your regular monthly budget. For example, for items like annual home owner or renter insurance, quarterly water bills and life insurance payments and annual trash bills, take the amounts and determine what they would be monthly. Then list the items on your budget log and pull these amounts aside, saving them in your account for those purposes. This way, when the bills hit, you won’t be caught off guard and have to scrounge for the payments.
What works well, instead of handling multiple savings accounts for each company owed, is to use index cards and one savings account. Create one index card for each bill. Then simply log the amount you’re setting aside on the card and deposit it into your savings account. Keep the index cards with your savings passbook to remind you what the balance covers. The total of all your index cards should equal the balance in your savings account. Make sure to create an index card for your regular funds that you are saving each month in step one above and a card for your Miscellaneous fund in step two above.
July 13th, 2007 at 11:24 am
hi Robin
Good Post. Just sharing with you what I got out of Harv Eker’s “Secret of the Millionaire Mind”. He suggested that we should split our income into 10% investment, 10% long term saving for spending, 10% self improvement, 10% play, 10% Charities and 50% Necessary Expenses.
July 14th, 2007 at 6:01 am
Hi Viv,
Thanks for your visit and comment. I need to get hold of “Secret of the Millionaire Mind”, I liked the 10% for charities, something many of never bother to look into.
Take care and cheers.