The journey or the goal.
I find it interesting when i look back on my life and times when i reached absolute clarity of understanding about something, the seeming illusion of completeness and it lead me to write this article. I have had several periods in my life where i really felt like i "got" life or myself or some element of something and yet these moments were so fleeting, before i was re immersed ion the complexity of day to day living or some drastic reality check upset the apple cart and my happy little world.
So much of life and what we do and are taught to do is related to "goals" We set them, strive for them and drive ourselves with seeming obsessive determination towards achievement. This crowning achievement that will bring happiness, nirvana, completeness etc. However each time this pace upon attainment is so fleeting, a wisp of time before we move onto the next goal.
Did you ever set yourself a goal, a weight, a test score, a GPA, a job title or some other accolade that you may have kept secret and held in a deeply personal place, or you may have broadcast to the world. Sometime later we often look back on this dedicated focus and laugh at how seriously we took this milestone, this building block of our life and future. How small it often seems now, or sadly in some cases, how we reflect upon the heights we reach and the pinnacle we crested as our former selves.
I have a unique opportunity to witness this sensation in the most extreme form by being married to someone who is very driven, highly competitive and has un-containable anxiety. She can never rest in place for even a second, tread water and look around at what is going to on or even reflect on where she is going. Her drive sets constant goals and targets, her competitive nature drives her to reflect on how well those around her are doing at reaching their targets and her anxiety never allows her to rest in case someone else is catching her, or she is falling behind or any one of the myriad of other thoughts that get to race through her mind uncontrolled and un-contained!!!
This is the great skill, the self discipline that i unfortunately see little evidence of in our education, upbringing and schooling system. To navigate one must pause and look around for landmarks, directions and to find a point of focus - a target. To then plow on to that target without any awareness of ones surroundings however, negates much of the pleasure of the journey if not the purpose. The goals itself upon attainment is fleeting for we already target the next goal and are moving forward again! Thus it seems to be that many people attain "venerable" age and suddenly sense life has passed them by, they are in crisis, what happened to this or that!
The process of reflection or prediction are vital tools and skills in life on must skillfully develop, learn from you r mistakes or the mistakes of others. Predict what the future holds and stay one step ahead.......However without living the "majority" of time in the "present" and "acting" rather than thinking we can truely harness wisdom and achieve our potential.......The secret that comes with this is if we live in the present we can excise our demons from the past and not be influenced by our fears of the future, we can enjoy the now, find the brief, beautiful fleeting moments and "live" them with joy, with our entire being for now we are taking pleasure in the journey not just in achieving the goal, creating the memories that will keep us warm in the future and gaining the experience that will guide us through.
I was talking to someone recently who reflected on how hard "life" was - for those who don't know, i had a Brain Aneurysm, my Wife was diagnosed with a Brain Tumor etc etc and yet the are surprised to see me laugh and smile more, to welcome challenge and attack and overcome any and all obstacles......to this i respond with several statements:
1) I will bang my head against a brick wall till either my head cracks or more likely the wall will break and i will proceed though the difficulty!
2) The ultimate goal in life is dying, its how everyones story ends, so with this realization brought on by our own experiences of mortality i now am dedicated to living every single day as fully as possible and nothing has the power to make me role over and die!
3) There are only two real options in life - fight or flight (freezing is in essence flight) and i know that flight just isnt an option as no matter how far or where you run you will always find yourself there!!!! I personally always advocate hard work, self discipline and determination as they are the cornerstone of building a better you - choose to fight as anything else is tantamount to giving up as the day we stop evolving ourselves, progressing and developing is the day we begin dying (we just may not realize it yet)
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Friday, December 21, 2007
Slowing Down
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
George Carlin again - Wrapping up everything cultural in a nutshell
This is the modern language of the modern man!!!
Great clip!
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Tuesday, December 18, 2007
6 Steps to Financial Freedom
- Increase Cashflow
- Earn additional income
- Manage Expenses
- Manage Debt
- Consolidate Debt
- Strive to Eliminate Debt
- Create an Emergency Fund
- Save for at least 3 months income
- Prepare for Emergency Expenses
- Ensure Proper Protection
- Protect against Loss of Income
- Protect Family Assets
- Protect against Death
- Long Term Asset Accumulation
- Outpace Inflation
- Reduce Taxation
- Preserve Your Estate
- Reduce Estate Taxes
- Build a Family Legacy
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Labels: accumulation, assets, consolidate, credit, debt, emergency, Finance, financial freedom, hedge funds, inflation, inheritance, insurance, investments, legacy, Money, success, wealth
Why it is important to start ones investment for retirement as young as possible!!!
The Rule of 72 can tell you how many years it will take your money to double. This is one of the principals and foundations of investment and retirement theory.
"The most powerful force in the universe is compound interest" Albert Einstein
Over the years there have been derivatives on the theme
1 The Rule of 72 is a mathematical concept that approximates the number of years it would take to double the principle at a constant rate of return. The performance of investments fluctuates over time, and as a result, the actual time it will take an investment to double in value cannot be predicted with any certainty. Additionally, there are no guarantees that any investment or savings program can outpace inflation. Please note that high risk has been historically associated with higher rates of return.
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Monday, December 17, 2007
A letter I wrote to a colleague this morning
Whatever you do, pay heed and know that it is too early for real estate right now and anyone who enters "undercapitalized" will ultimately be providing someone a little more a more patience and experience such as myself with cannon fodder!!!! Hold out, grow some cash reserves, be patient, foreclosures require 100% cash payments and the good stuff will not come till late 2008 early 2009 when the banks are so squeezed for cash - which i assure you they will be - that they have to clear some debt off their books! this will include a lot of prime real estate for those capitalized and good eye to take advantage of!
There will always be lots of skeptics and doubters in life - everyone laughed at me when i started selling my real estate in 05 - they called me stupid, naive and told me i clearly had lost the plot and no longer knew what i was doing, i must have been lucky to have built up what i did!!!! Being a visionary means being one step to five steps ahead of the market at all times! Educated guesses when right will make you very rich but even if you guess wrong so long as you bought right you get out with a profit you still have the last laugh!
The next boom and growth opportunity will not be in real estate it will be in three main areas, Retirement planning/ wealth transfer, renewable energy to combat the rising costs and diminishing supplies of fossil fuels and Brains.
After the recent market upheaval people are going to be so desperate to insure against running out of money (annuities) it will be crazy.
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Labels: Brains, Business, dot com, Finance, insurance, investor, Mental Healthcare, Real Estate, savy
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
The paradox of our time in history is
Isn't it amazing that George Carlin - comedian of the 70's and 80's - could write something so very eloquent...and so very appropriate.
A Message by George Carlin:
The paradox of our time in history is that we have taller buildings but shorter tempers, wider freeways , but narrower viewpoints. We spend more, but have less, we buy more, but enjoy less. We have bigger houses and smaller families, more conveniences, but less time We have more degrees but less sense, more knowledge, but less judgment, more experts, yet more problems, more medicine, but less wellness.
We drink too much, smoke too much, spend too recklessly, laugh too little, drive too fast, get too angry, stay up too late, get up too tired, read too little, watch TV too much, and pray too seldom.
We have multiplied our possessions, but reduced our values We talk too much, love too seldom, and hate too often.
We've learned how to make a living, but not a life. We've added years to life not life to years. We've been all the way to the moon and back, but have trouble crossing the street to meet a new neighbor. We conquered outer space but not inner space. We've done larger things, but not better things.
We've cleaned up the air, but polluted the soul. We've conquered the atom, but not our prejudice. We write more, but learn less. We plan more, but accomplish less. We've learned to rush, but not to wait. We build more computers to hold more information, to produce more copies than ever, but we communicate less and less.
These are the times of fast foods and slow digestion, big men and small character, steep profits and shallow relationships. These are the days of two incomes but more divorce, fancier houses, but broken homes. These are days of quick trips, disposable diapers, throwaway morality, one night stands, overweight bodies, and pills that do everything from cheer, to quiet, to kill. It is a time when there is much in the showroom window and nothing in the stockroom. A time when technology can bring this letter to you, and a time when you can choose either to share this insight, or to just hit delete...
Remember; spend some time with your loved ones, because they are not going to be around forever.
Remember, say a kind word to someone who looks up to you in awe, because that little person soon will grow up and leave your side.
Remember, to give a warm hug to the one next to you, because that is the only treasure you can give with your heart and it doesn't cost a cent.
Remember, to say, 'I love you' to your partner and your loved ones, but most of all mean it. A kiss and an embrace will mend hurt when it comes from deep inside of you.
Remember to hold hands and cherish the moment for someday that person will not be there again.
Give time to love, give time to speak! And give time to share the precious thoughts in your mind.
AND ALWAYS REMEMBER:
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.
If you don't send this to at least 8 people....Who cares?
George Carlin
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Labels: excess, george carlin, history, life, philosophy, sadness, satire, society
Monday, December 10, 2007
Leasing a Car is a Dirty Dirty Business
- Know the terminology of leasing, specifically the terms gross cap cost, net cap cost, cap reduction, residual, and money factor.
I was told that the car was financed at zero % APR – a fact I was told later upon complaining to the Owner of the dealership was factually correct as the lease has a money factor applied and APR does not apply to a lease!!!
- Ask to see the figures on paper up front
I kept asking for figures and the Salesman and his manager kept providing me with them verbally however as they didn’t write them down I am told I have no recourse
- Before you begin to negotiate, insist on disclosure of the money factor and/or lease interest rate, residual value, fees, rebates and incentives.
They rolled in a $2000 factory rebate – however to help me out the “Threw in” optional extras such as “back up cameras and side steps at no extra cost” which were ultimately added to the lease taking up the discount of the factory rebates!!! I may be mistaken but I think I am paying $30 a month for these two “not extra cost to me options” Make sure you get the Salesman/ Dealership to write everything out for you in full
- Make sure your cash down payment and trade equity are properly applied as a cap reduction payment (reduces the cap cost).
So I brought in a trade – I spoke to the salesman and let him know I was aware that I had negative equity in the car of $500-1000 – after working the figure he concurred that I did was correct and I did have a little negative equity in the car and he supported my knowledge of my cars value…. On the final paperwork I had just over $6400 of negative equity that they rolled into my monthly payments.
- Account for and understand all adjustments to the gross cap cost.
In general, gross cap cost - cap reduction + capitalized fees + capitalized taxes = net cap cost. Net cap cost is used to calculate the monthly payment.
- Account for every penny of the cash required at signing.
Ask the salesman to break-down this figure in writing. Typical components are first payment, security deposit, sales tax, sales tax on down payment, luxury tax, DMV fees, and acquisition fee.
- Always, always, always calculate the payment yourself.
It is not hard and can be done easily with a hand calculator. If the payment on the contract does not agree with your calculations, do not sign anything.
- Avoid high pressure sales tactics
My wife and I were at the dealership nearly 4 hours which was physically draining as well as disarming as we were subject to continuous reassurances etc etc. The dealership subsequently closed and the dealership was doing us a special favor in staying open to complete the transaction. Then the dealership closed increasing the pressure on us as everyone was now hanging around waiting for us!
- Has the Car Left the Forecourt
We went out on the test drive of the vehicle and the dealership didn’t return the car to the lot, the parked it out front for us to transfer our items directly from our trade into our car – for our convenience and as the dealership was closing they didn’t want it locked in the lot… They later cited that the car had left the dealership and was ours and it would be illegal for them to accept it back as it was now a used vehicle!!!
- Car Color
We asked for a black car, when we came to sign the papers the VIN number matched Grey car – make sure you check the VIN they are writing down on the paperwork from the actual car and model you want!
- Divide and Conquer
They escorted my wife into the dealership to start signing paperwork whilst I moved items from our trade to the new car… no one mentioned where she had gone and I presumed she had sensibly gone into the warmth of the dealership out of the cold wind.
- Alternate Dealerships
My wife had actually been taken to another dealership that was part of the group where the “finance director” was. Thus when I arrived the finance manager, the salesman and the branch manager had already run through the paperwork with her!
- Read before signing the dealership may not allow you to change your mind once you have signed even if you have not left the room.
Make sure you read and check all documents prior to your partner signing them, unfortunately when I arrived they were signed and the dealership refused to allow us to back out of the deal as she had signed them as you guessed it the car was no longer in the dealership lot which was locked for the night as the dealership had closed.
- Trust your instincts.
If something doesn't sound or feel right about the deal then don't do it. We wish we had just walked home and left their car there, giving us a stronger case to take to our lawyers, we were afraid the car may be vandalized or stolen which we believed could have lead to greater problems, we should have in fact asked the dealership to “store” the car for us over night
- Keep and eye on “YOUR” car keys
Don’t put the keys to your car down at any time and always keep at least one, when we went to take our car and leave theirs our keys were nowhere to be found. The dealership manager had actually taken it home himself to his house over 40 miles away!!! He mentioned that he gave the car – a convertible sports car – a good thrashing on dirt roads etc and the headlights no longer worked the following day.
- Strong Arming
Upon speaking with the dealership the following morning, after talking to lawyers and the better business bureau, I was informed by the dealership that I could not threaten them with a lawsuit as their lawyers were far smarter than mine and as we would never be able to win a cooling off period/ buyers remorse case.
- Leasing doesn't show up as a debt liability on your credit report because it's like renting.
The dealer told us that by leasing we would be reducing our debt to equity ratio, improving our credit score. However leasing shows up on your credit report as a debt obligation just like a loan. If you are late making payments, your credit is damaged, just like with a loan.
- The best way to acquire a new car is to lease first and then purchase the car at lease-end.
This is false. Although leasing offers lower payments and may allow you to drive more car initially than you might otherwise be able to afford, buying that car at lease-end adds additional cost and makes the total cost of the lease-then-buy scenario greater than if you had simply purchased the car at the beginning. Of course, if the convenience of having low initial payments is worth the extra cost to you, then that's your decision. Just don't let a dealer convince you that the extra cost doesn't exist.
- Early Termination of the Car Lease
Whilst the dealer and finance manager assured us there was no early repayment penalty should we choose to make a larger than usual/ lump sum payment against the lease, this proved to be untrue. There are fees involved in the early termination of a lease, fees for which you will be responsible to pay. Early termination can be involuntary as well. If the vehicle is stolen and not recovered, or totaled in an accident, the lease is forced to end. Very often your insurance reimbursement will not cover the entire balance due on the lease. Therefore you pay the rest. However, many leasing companies offer gap insurance, which provides you financial protection in such an event. We were told that we had GAP insurance included for free yet can find no mention of it anywhere in any of our documentation.
Also, when paying a car lease, you are paying for the depreciation plus interest. The depreciation is calculated as the difference between the cap cost and the residual value. While the depreciation is paid off evenly over the lease term, the depreciation of a car is not linear. The difference in the actual depreciation and the paid depreciation is known as the gap amount, and will also be paid in a prematurely terminated lease.
Additionally, some leasing companies will require you to pay off the remainder of the car lease contract before releasing you from the lease. Others will require a flat rate termination fee. Make sure you read all the fine print before signing your lease contract.
- Accidents may trigger early termination:
Your lease is "terminated," and you're obligated to pay off the lease. Insurance covers damages, but not lease payoff – I was assured by the dealership that my lease includes GAP cover that will make up the difference between insurance payoff and the loan amount, however with the dealership having rolled up so much negative equity into the car, I am highly suspicious that this will be the case!
- False Gestures of Good Will
The Dealership has very generously volunteered to give us our car back on a loan agreement for the next 2 weeks for us to sell privately to reduce the negative equity we had in our car. We do not however know what consequences this will have on our lease nor were they willing to explain them other than that they would be willing to write a new lease if we sold the car. They also meanwhile also informed us that the payoff amount may go up as the payoff date would expire during the 14 days they gave us as it was only good for 11 days and they take 10 to make payment!
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Labels: agreements, Business, Buying a car, Cars, Finance, hire purchase, lawyers, Leasing, leasing a car, legal, society
Impending Disaster for GM and GMAC
As 2005 drew to a close I predicted it was the height of the Real Estate bubble, in May 2007 I predicted Countrywide Financials (CFC) impending sub prime implosion. In July I started to forecast the Real Estate/ Subprime/ Conduit effect and now I make my prediction for 2008 – the companies to watch, are
GM & GMAC
These companies stock will in my estimation drop a minimum of 60% during 08 – I am expecting to see a $10-$13 GM share price during 2008. I am further expecting to see their Bonds drop down to a B- or junk bond rating. GMAC will probably enter single digits and also have their bonds downgraded to B- or junk status
Where am I getting my forecast from???
Okay – GM and GMAC are ultimately the true kings of subprime debt, with cars that no one wants they have become an money lending business, however unlike any sensible money lending business loaning money to people who cant afford to pay (loan sharks – see article on credit card companies, the modern day loan sharks) they are offering money at rates that would make a Japanese bank wince! Further more when they sell a car, they take a depreciating asset, throw in a hint of negative equity from a prior car, an artificially inflated resale value and voila you have a 50-60 unsecured loan, not at 19-39% APR like a credit card, but at 4.2%, scarcely outpacing inflation. Now add a past history of employ pensions (read gray bomb article) and you have a company with all the liquidity of Countrywide Financial!!! (Read impending doom article)
Work on the premise that should I make this story better – who will be affected by this implosion, non less than the beloved Cerberus group of Chrysler fame and their illegitimate father Citigroup…… starting to sound like a familiar chronicle…….
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Wednesday, December 5, 2007
The Web 2.0 Bubble
The Web 2.0 Bubble:
1. No missing vowels or double consonants in the company name.
2. A naive non-bubbly approach to business (charge customers real money for real value).
3. No way to throw sheep at other users in our software.
4. We're only revolutionizing one industry, not two.
5. For us, "exit strategy" means figuring out how to leave work at 2:00 a.m. (and go home to work some more) and not look like a slacker to the other members of the team.
6. Pathetic lack of Web 2.0 gradients on our website.
7. Have nobody with the title "BizDev" anywhere in the company.
8. We use overly simplistic metrics like growth in customers and revenue to see how we're doing.
9. Nobody creates the illusion that they're working -- but instead try to create the illusion that they have a life. Some succeed at this illusion better than others.
10. When we watch the underpants gnomes, we find it funny and don't find a striking resemblance to our business strategy.
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Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Everything You Ever Really Needed to Know About Personal Finance on the Back of Five Business Cards
A few days ago, I had lunch with an individual who is considering hiring me to give a multi-hour seminar to a business convention on personal finance. This person knows me from the local community and is a reader of The Simple Dollar and he felt that I might be the right person to give such a presentation.
During the lunch, out of the blue, he asked me to give a five minute nutshell version of what I would present to the group. I thought for a minute, pulled a pen out of my pocket, and asked him for five business cards. In those next five minutes, I summarized everything I know about personal finance in a pocket-friendly presentation.I saved the business cards, scanned them in, and thus, for your enjoyment, is my presentation (with some extensive helper notes so you can know what I was actually saying while drawing these cards).
1. The Most Important ThingIn the end, this is the fundamental rule of personal finance: spend less than you earn. It’s the one point that comes up time and time again in almost every personal finance book you read or talk that you hear. Why? Because it’s true.
There are two avenues to achieving this goal: spending less and earning more. By working on either (or both) of these areas, you can increase the gap between those two numbers - and that gap is your ticket to freedom. The harder you work on either spending less or earning more, the bigger that gap will become and the quicker that train to your dreams will arrive at the station.
2. Earn More!
So how does one earn more? Many people will argue that there is no universal way for people to earn more money, and they’re right: some people are born entrepreneurs, others function much better in an office environment. Some people are endlessly creative, others are masters at completing long lists of tasks.
Once you dig past that, though, there are some common things that anyone can do, regardless of their financial state, to earn more money.
1. Get educated. This doesn’t mean drop out and go back to school. It merely means to keep learning new things. If something interests you, read a book about it. Take evening classes to get certification in a certain area or get a masters’ degree. No matter what you’re doing, there’s some way you can learn more and improve yourself.
2. More income streams. Always be on the lookout for ways to have money rolling into your pocket from a lot of different places. Maybe you’re a good writer and can sell a short story or an online ebook. Maybe you’ve got a little piece of land somewhere that you can lease to a farmer or a developer. Maybe you spend your free time managing a flower bed in the park - why not put a little wooden freewill donation box out there for people to drop a coin in? Maybe you have some extra cash laying around with which you can buy a long-term treasury note that will keep issuing you a check every six months. Having more income streams merely means that losing one of them (like your job) is less devastating in your life and it also means your overall income for now will go up.
3. Start a side business. Instead of burning a few hours in front of the telly each evening, how about investing at least part of that time into starting a side business? You can try starting a blog with a few ads on it, or maybe you’re good with woodworking and can make deck furniture. Maybe you’re good at baking bread and can take loaves to the farmer’s market, or maybe you deeply enjoy gardening and can sell vegetables. There are lots of possibilities out there for starting a business that will supplement your current income and perhaps eventually grow into your main income.
4. Move towards your passions. Whenever the opportunity presents itself, gravitate towards the things that really excite you, because passion is what will make you successful. For me, my passion is writing, so I’ve made an effort to gravitate towards it by working on The Simple Dollar in my spare time. For others, it could be anything - maybe it’s leading a team, or perhaps it’s writing beautiful computer code. Whatever really excites you and makes you want to do more and more and more and better and better and better, that’s what you need to move towards at all times.
5. Don’t burn bridges. You never know when a relationship you’ve forged in your past might come in handy later on, even the ones you completely don’t expect. Thus, even if you feel wronged in a situation or want “revenge” on some people - or even if you just feel an urge to spread negative gossip - resist it. As you get older, you’ll find yourself time and time again bumping into people that you forged relationships with earlier on - if you burned those bridges, you’ll find that eventually you’ll have burnt that very bridge that you need to cross to get ahead. My advice? Never spread a negative word about anyone, because it never helps.
6. Keep in touch! When you do build a bridge with someone, don’t let it get old and worn out - spend the time to keep in touch with that person. Shoot them an email or a phone call every once in a while just to see what they’re up to. When it’s clear they need help and you can easily provide it, always provide it. I found the book Never Eat Alone to be particularly powerful in this regard. I’m rather introverted, and it’s often a challenge for me to initiate and then keep communication going with someone, and this book provided tons of tips on how (and why) to keep contact with people.
3. Live Frugal!For a lot of people, frugality is a nine letter word for cheap. They think of people doing stuff like buying cartloads of generic products, using forty coupons in the checkout aisle, wearing patched clothing, driving a rusted-out old vehicle, and other such things that it’s easy to look down your nose at.
Here’s a secret, something that I’ve witnessed several times in my own life and read about many more: those frugal people that you look down your nose at often have a mountain of cash in the bank (not always, of course, but more often than you think). They’re not drowning in a mortgage, they’re not making payments on a five figure credit card debt. They’re not working to death on the weekends or drowning an ulcer in Pepto-Bismol. They’re living their life according to their own rules.
The best part is that we can all apply some of those same rules in our own life. Here’s what you can do to start reducing that spending.
1. Maximize every dollar. Every time you spend money, you make a decision. You decide that whatever you’re giving that dollar for is worth it, and thus you make the exchange. The real key to spending less is to raise that definition of what a dollar is worth. You know those times when you buy something, but you realize you don’t really need it and you’re also not convinced that it’s a very good deal? Make the choice to not buy it, or buy a cheap version and see how much you actually use it. Don’t be afraid to shop around a bit.
Food is a great example of this. Quite often, people will eat out at places like Applebee’s and drop $20 or $30 on a meal that they could have made at home for $3. “But it saves time and is convenient,” you say? Just for fun, try making an equivalent meal at home sometime. You might be surprised to find out how easy it is and how much you’ll save.
2. Habits of all kinds are dangerous! Most people have some sort of routine in their day where they buy a morning latte or a bagel, or they drink six cans of soda, or they eat out at the same place each day for lunch. What these routines add up to is a lot of money. Spending $5 every day in a workweek adds up to $1,300 over a year - that’s a mortgage payment for a lot of people. Spend some time looking at the stuff you do every day, especially the ones that require you to spend money, and ask yourself if they’re really necessary or could be replaced.
3. The ten second rule Every time you go to make any purchase, even when you pay a bill, stop for ten seconds and ask yourself if this is really something you want to spend your money on. Do you really need this item? Do you really need to be paying $14.95 a month for unlimited text messages when you use maybe ten? Could you reduce that electricity bill by putting in a lot of CFLs? This one simple technique will often point you in the direction of spending less money.
4. Don’t make yourself miserable! Most of the time, when you cut a bit of spending from your life, you’ll find that you never miss it. However, there are times when you find yourself really regretting it. If that’s the case, then it’s probably a worthwhile expense for you. Saving money doesn’t have to equate to misery, it just means that you cut down on the unnecessary.
5. … but don’t forget the big picture. That, of course, doesn’t mean that you should justify every purchase with a basic “I want it and I have money in my account.” That shouldn’t ever be enough to motivate a purchase. I find that using a visual reminder in my wallet of what I’m financially working towards does a great job of keeping my mind on the big picture and helping me filter out what’s really needed and what’s just a fleeting desire.
4. Manage money!
Whenever you increase your income or decrease your spending, you’ll find yourself with more cash at the end of the month. That cash is your ticket to financial freedom, and the more you can get each month, the better off you are. The trick, though, is to not spend it, but to do things that will build a stable future for you. Here’s the game plan.
1. Pay off all high interest debt, such as credit cards. Anything with an interest rate over 9% needs to go as soon as possible. Use the extra money to make double or triple payments on these debts, focusing first on the one with the highest interest rate. When that one’s gone, keep going with each successively lower interest rate debt. This is akin to Dave Ramsey’s popular “debt snowball” technique.
2. Build an emergency fund. An emergency fund is an amount of money you keep in a savings account that’s intended to be used in the event of a major crisis, such as a job loss, a medical emergency, major car damage, and so on. I usually suggest to people that they measure their emergency fund in terms of months’ worth of living expenses - you should have a month and a half worth of living expenses for each person you claim as a dependent. So, for me in a house with two children and my wife, I have a six month emergency fund.
3. Max out retirement. By this, I mean you should go to one of those retirement meetings at work, ask exactly how much you should be putting away to ensure that your living expenses are well-covered in retirement, and put that much away. This varies a lot depending on how much you have in right now, how much your employer matches, and so on, so you should talk to your retirement planner at work about the specifics.
4. college savings? College savings are next. If you have kids, set up a 529 college savings plan for them and start automatically putting a certain amount into this account each month. The plan Iuse for my own children is College Savings Iowa, which is managed by Vanguard - I currently put in $100 a month for each child.
5. Pay off all debts. If all of these are covered and you still have cash left over (which you will, given some time), the next step is to pay off all of your debts. Get rid of your car loans, your student loans, and your mortgage. This is actually the step I’m focusing on right now, as I have already taken care of steps one through four.
6. Invest! You might also want to start investing at this point. My recommendation is to buy low-cost broad-based index funds because they don’t have many fees and grow very nicely over long periods of time. I personally invest with Vanguard directly through vanguard.com.
5. Control your own destiny!
Most people see the goal of all of this as being rich. That’s why you see so many books about millionaires on bookstore shelves - being a millionaire is something many of us aspire to, right?
Here’s the secret: it’s not about being rich. Having a big net worth is just an indicator of what this whole process is really about.
It’s all about freedom. Freedom from debt. Freedom from supervisors telling us what to do. Freedom to spend the time to do things right. Freedom to try out new things and follow our interests. Freedom to sleep until eleven one day, then stay up until two in the morning working on what we’re passionate about.
That’s what most people really want - I know that’s certainly what I want. Having a big bank account just means that I’m not beholden to others. I can follow my passions and dreams wherever they take me. If my job is not satisfying to me, I’m no longer tied to that paycheck - I can just get up and walk away. I can do whatever makes me happy and avoid most of what makes me sad, without regrets or worries.
It’s a lot of hard work to climb that mountain, but the air up there is the sweetest thing that there is.
Want to know more?
If you liked the information on these cards, you should really dig into some of the better personal finance books to learn more. I’ve read a pile of these and made a list of the best ones. You should also take the time to dig into The Simple Dollar as well as some of the other excellent personal finance and personal development blogs out there - they do a far better job of humanizing and explaining money and personal development than many of the “big” corporate sites.
Most importantly, remember that you can do this. Two years ago, I was almost bankrupt and in deep despair because I didn’t believe this stuff, either. It took a lot of learning and a lot of honest soul-searching, but I began to realize what was really important and I turned the ship around. Trust me: you can do it, too.
Written by TrentThe Power Of Web 2.0 - And the Myth of Google and FaceBook
The more time i spend delving into all that is web 2.0 and the more closer we get to the Launch of the the Brain Make Over Beta Site, the more perplexed i become by certain factors.
Firstly, we live in an age where Google (goog) is quoted at some $681 at time of writing which gives the company a valuation of approximately $213Bn. This is for a company that if my memory serves me correctly has about $11Bn of revenue and $4Bn profit.
Do I use google every day, resoundingly YES,
Do i think that Google has a fantastic search algorithm, again YES,
Do i believe that the company is worth 20 times its revenue and more than 50 times its profit, one second, did i just say 50 times their profit...something must be wrong with my calculator, maybe i have time warped back to 1999 and we are pre millennium and euphoric with Greenspans low interest rates!!!
Do you guys that own google stock realise that even if Google gets the 700mhz cycle and enters the cell phone market and even if they build solar plants and land a man on Mars, the potential earnings growth for the next decade has already been accounted for .... so here is my question...... Larry Page, Sergey Brin and Eric Schmidt are all bright and talented boys....so why do they own stock. If i was them, which obviously i am not, I would sell my stock and by someone like Microsoft who has a market cap of about 30% more 307Bn but has over $12Bn in profits on $50Bn+ of revenues. Lets throw in that this company fits the dynamics of both a Growth and an Income stock.
The second question is that of FaceBook, again valued at somewhere in the $10-15Bn range with revenue of less than $300m. This is another disruptive technology (I believe it is disrupting email as a more fluid and fulfilling interaction if i am to understand the hype correctly.) Like Skype this is all great but where is the revenue stream, the market is captive (which means they will surely leave given enough time) and it really serves little or no useful purpose!!! Did i just say that out loud, blasphemy. But in reality, there is a novelty in finding people i had long forgotten about and would have had no way of getting in touch with. However did i really want too, will i be able to strike up a stirring friendship and get something meaningful outr of the relationship.
So they counteracted this with a genius like devilishly cunning move (similar to the Fed increasing the Discount window to save the banks in August) of creating applications and opening up their platform. But Google copied the rapidly with a far larger network and there is still that huge issue of stick ability! Does anyone really stay on the site that long. You want to check what you friends are doing now, ok cool, i am gone see ya!!!!
So where does this all leave us, Web 2.0 the new internet will in my opinion soon cede itself to Web 3.0 which for me is interactive application based internet usage. whilst currently available i am talking about the web as a medium for absolute harmonization and integration of all facets of life........ Big, Bold and Brash maybe ..... or some would already say we are there ....... I will continue further when i explain the concept of Brain Make Over within the next month, so hold that thought.
Copyright Jonathan Rose 2007 - Creative Commons License
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