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Top 10 FSBO Tips to Selling Your Home by
Owner
Thinking of Selling your Home? Don't
Believe the Hype When Hiring a Realtor to Represent You
Sell Your House Fast
Take Your Loss
Wealth Building - A Simple Solution to Get
Your First Million
Monthly Income-Do You Need Multiple Sources
of Income?
Speculation v Investment
Spiritual and Emotional Money Goals: The
Keys to a Financially Free Future
Squeeze Every Last Dollar Out of Your Home
Sale
Make Money with No Investment -Starting
from Scratch
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Then take a break, come back to it later and add
some more thoughts. The more you understand yourself, the more solid
your foundation for success.
Step Two - "Show me the money!"
To paraphrase Charles Dickens, if your annual
income is $20,000 and you're spending £20,001, that's misery; but if
your annual income is $20,000 and you're spending $19,999, that's
happiness. So you need to know what you are spending and what you
are earning. Not just in the big picture, but in the detail. You
need to know what you are spending on clothes, treats, meals out and
yes, on debt. Either keep a daily notebook, use a computer
worksheet, or invest in a package like Quicken, and track your
spending and your income in all the gory detail. You'll probably
surprise yourself at the way money is leaking out in all different
directions. But until you know what's happening, you'll stay
powerless to do anything about it.
Step Three - "Eliminate the Negative"
Now you know where your debt is, how much you are
spending on it, and where else the money is leaking away from you
it's time to start taking control. Take two steps to do this. First,
reduce your spending. Do whatever it takes: cut up your store cards
(and most of your credit cards); set yourself a weekly cash budget
(don't carry checks and cards around with you) and when you run out
of your weekly allowance that's it, no more; identify those things
you can cut out (magazine and club subscriptions; take-outs;
whatever, be ruthless). Second, put all your debts, where possible,
into one place. Consolidate those five or six card debts either with
a low interest loan or with a low or zero interest balance transfer
credit card. Sometimes a balance transfer card can be better than a
loan, provided you have the discipline to pay it off in good time or
you remember to keep switching to new balance transfer deals.
Step Four - "Accentuate the Positive"
So you've started to take control. The next thing
to do is place that control on firm foundations with some good
planning. First, set up a spending budget that covers all your
outgoings (easy with a program like Quicken) and stick to it.
Second, if you have any debts to pay off, set up an automatic
payment to come out of your pay check the day it goes into your
account - that way you won't miss it. Third, set up a savings plan.
That's right, even though things are tough and you're still in debt,
set up a savings plan. Find the highest interest account available
and start paying in (again set up an automatic payment). It doesn't
matter if it's a dollar a week or $100 a week, the key is to save
something. You might think it's best to use any spare cash to pay
off your debts, but the point of saving something is not - at this
stage - to build wealth. The point is to pay off your debts and feel
positive about it. Saving just a dollar a week is a positive thing
you can do; it's a way of telling yourself that you aren't a slave
to your debts, that you are actually in control of your finances and
you can stay in control of them.
When you have paid off your debts, that's when
you are in a position to move on to building up your wealth so that
you can have financial freedom. We'll explore strategies around that
in the Steps to Financial Freedom Part Two
Craig Brown is a life coach and web-preneur. For
information on credit cards go to
http://www.americancreditcardsguide.com |