Posts Tagged ‘saving versus spending’

Buying Stuff: What are Your Budget Busters?

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

The essence of marketing, is getting  you to spend your money.  You vote for a product with your dollars.  Billions of dollars are spent by companies all over the world to get  and keep your attention long enough to imprint their brand on your brain.

My job, here at the Millionaire Nurse , is to teach, cajole, berate, preach, and guide you to make better choices with your hard-earned dollars so you can learn to build your own personal wealth.  As yesterday’s post suggest’s, I also want you to learn to give, but that is another story.

What you and I fight every day, is  the huge number of choices we have to spend our money. Intersect those choices with the commercial entity that has become known as “the holidays” and we are all in trouble.

  • When we have a perfectly good cell phone, why do we covet a new one?
  • When our car runs great, why do we drool over the newest Mustang, Prius, or the Mini-Cooper?
  • When our jeans have no holes or only designer holes, why do we have to have a new pair?
  • What is it about the latest pocketbook, pocket knife, or pair of shoes that drives us into a spending frenzy?

The experts in brain function/psychology have tried to explain the chemical changes that occur in our brain that makes us feel better briefly when we buy the latest bauble, smoke that last cig., eat that chocolate, or have that third, fourth or fifth drink, but this isn’t a science blog.

So how do we combat these very real feelings of lust for stuff?

  1. Planning-write down your list of needs, strike through them if they are just wants-get your partner or friend to challenge you.
  2. Keep a spending limit.   Yes this means a Christmas list with dollar values by each name and don’t you dare spend more than you wrote down.  During the non-holiday season, do the same.
  3. Challenge your family to give time and not money to each others favorite charity.
  4. Pray for the strength to overcome your urges.   John 2:16 comes to mind:  “For all that is in the world—the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and pride in possessions—is not from the Father but is from the world.”

The essence of building wealth occurs when you get rid of all the bells , whistles and hype  is controlling spending and increasing income.  So do your part this holiday season.  Even if you cut your spending by 5%, you are making progress.

Let us know your thoughts on what works to help you get past those spending mantras that repeat endlessly through your mind this time of year.

If you want tips on saving money-Check out my free ebook at The Millionaire Nurse-in addition to the free e book, I will send you a mini-course on personal finance and info on credit card management and banking-free of course.

Black Friday-Will You Blow Your Spending Plan in a Moment of Frenzy

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Black Friday-the day the retailers look forward to all year long.  The Friday after Thanksgiving gives all the retailers a chance to celebrate or suffer, as it frequently sets the tone for the holiday’s profits or losses.  Last year saw a drop in holiday spending as the recession took hold, the first drop in years.  What does this holiday season of spending look like?

Those of us on the other end of the  professional marketers spear, who have to do our best to avoid over-spending during this day are in the crosshairs.  We will be bombarded by advertisements, and recommendations for who has the best prices.

Unfortunately this sort of hype works.  Who can forget the video shots of those riots a couple of years ago, where someone was killed by a horde of shoppers.

So how do we prevent  over-spending, while still enjoying the traditions of shopping on Black Friday?

  1. Make sure you have a spending limit and stick to it.  Maybe carry your money in cash (safely of course), leave credit cards at home-similar to what some gamblers do to keep from over gambling.  You can only spend what you take.
  2. Make sure you have a list with prices of your planned purchases.  Part of the fun of this day, so I am told, is the excitement of finding something you were going to buy, at a better price than you had planned to spend!
  3. To find the best prices, and decide where to shop, do your due diligence.  Scan the shopping ads, and do your online research.  See this earlier post where I reviewed several coupon sites on the web.  See this question at Cash Commons, a great new site for personal finance questions on this subject.
  4. Frequently the best buys are early in the morning-you can’t be everywhere at once-so pick your battles-based on the amount of savings of items you have on your must-buy list.
  5. Enjoy the company of friends and family, make the day an adventure, and don’t feel left out or depressed if you are not sliding that credit card through the slot every few minutes.

So let us hear from you folks out there, share with us your shopping stories.  Confess your sins if you spent too much-confession is good for the soul.  Also let us know if you hear about a specific bargain that you would think others would like to know about.

And remember, if you need “Emergency Money Resucitation” go to my website at www.themillionairenurse.com and for your free e-book, maybe it will help you get your mind on saving money here close to the holidays.

And remember to let your friends and co-workers know about this blog, so we can get the word out to potential “Millionaire Nurses” everywhere.

Spending or Saving:Choices You Make Daily, Make You!

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Choices

The number of choices any of us face in a day is astounding and can have a profound affect on our life.  The police were chasing a stolen car in my neighborhood.  The thief drove through a neighbors yard to try to escape.  Eventually he flipped the candy apple SUV and was arrested.  The mug shot on the local news showed a kid grinning at the camera-no doubt proud of his little minute of fame.

I make that turn they were traveling on several times a day.  No doubt many of my neighbors do the same.  It was by the grace of God, that no one made the decision to drive to town, or visit a friend,  at just that moment, as they could have easily been T-boned by this idiot.  So we never know what our choices will lead to.

Today, I was searching the net looking for personal finance information for my writing.  A news tidbit or something I could share.

A Sony 32 inch television was mentioned on one of the CNET blog’s for a great price.  I, of course, have been drooling over flat screens for a couple of years.  My wife bought me a small one for Christmas, our first, for the bedroom last November on black Friday.  They were almost giving it away.

It being football season, I would love to have a bigger one for the den.  The TV we watch now is a 26 inch tube model that even the local repair guy, no kid himself, laughs at-it is so old.

My friends will not  come to dinner on Saturdays during football season here at my house because I don’t have a big hdtv flat screen.  (Maybe that is not all bad-I can go to their house and eat their food.)

So maybe this choice isn’t life or death, like the decision to leave my neighborhood at just the wrong time, may have been on Saturday.  But to be able to teach personal finance to nurses, as I have committed to do, I have to practice what I preach.

So, why should I not buy that flat screen?

  • I haven’t made a plan to buy a new television this year.
  • It is not in my budget.
  • I haven’t discussed it with my wife.
  • I haven’t  done an extensive search on features and models to make sure I am making a smart purchase.

So no, I didn’t order the television, even though I could have probably gotten away with it-(my wife likes her NCIS after all).

I will admit, though, I bookmarked the site, just in case….. another Christmas is just around the corner