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Posts Tagged ‘spending’

Engineer Becomes Writer: Saves Money

March 4th, 2012

Advance Loan BlogHow to live better and spend less money
By profession I am an engineer, with a university degree, diplomas, certifications, recommendations, etc. With all that came expensive suits and shoes, silk ties, a fancy car and a permanent throbbing headache. In addition there were clients and others who I had to entertain and be nice to. I spent money and I enjoyed spending it. Everything was budgeted for and some items were even allowed as tax expenses. But I still had to earn the money to fill the budget and that was okay too. Life was good except for the headache; I always had work and employed a staff of engineers to help me. This comfortable situation went on year after year. We traveled overseas, went to concerts and operas and ate in the most expensive restaurants.
 
A recession     
A recession came and with it my clients stopped building and slowly but surely my engineering office shrank. I laid off staff, I moved to smaller premises, I downsized my ridiculous car but all I managed to do was to stave off the inevitable. I finally closed the business. I was okay; I had kept up payments to my retirement fund and I had built up a healthy savings fund. I was still spending a lot of money. We spent mornings on the beach, we patronized the malls and the coffee shops and I missed the office days desperately. The headache was there but different somehow.  
 
Assignment
I received a call from a magazine one day asking me if I could provide a write-up and pictures of a well-known building in town. I rushed over to the address with my camera and took a hundred shots. I sat down at the computer and wrote furiously, pages and pages about the building, the client, the contractor and the architect. I dressed in my best suit, tie and shoes and took the finished product to the magazine and watched in silence as a thick blue pencil reduced the article to 800 words and 2 photographs.  “Do you want more work from us?” asked the editor. “Do I,” I breathed and left with an assignment of a review of another building and a check in my hand. “You don’t need to wear a suit and not more than 800 words!”

Assignment 2
I worked hard on the second article, determined to make it excellent. I can write, I laughed to myself. Could this be the start of something? This article was reviewed with a smile and no sign of the blue pencil. The check was also slightly larger. “Let’s push the next article to a thousand words. By the way, a friend of mine will call you about writing for the Post.” 
 
Full timer
You can see me around town these days. I am in shorts, tee shirt and sandals. I sit at the Coffee Cup with a bunch of other guys. Two are writers and two are artists. They are what academics call my "reference group." This is where I belong. My spending is down to a fraction of its former self, and my satisfaction level is even higher on the scale. And the headache has gone.

 

A Survivor’s Guide for the Perplexed Supermarket Shopper

February 13th, 2012

Advance Loan BlogHow to fight the supermarket conspiracy
The combination of products, temperature, aroma, background music, and décor of your supermarket is not coincidental. It is all part of the conspiracy to distract and hypnotize you to waste as much money as possible.
 
Dangerous
For decades now, leading researchers and marketers have devoted their professional lives to a single goal: to get consumers to spend or waste as much money as possible at the supermarket without them feeling it. The arrangement of products in a supermarket is an exact science, whose goal is to extend, as much as possible, the time spent by the consumer in wandering among the shelves. If you have ever gone into a supermarket to buy “just” a loaf of bread and a package of Diapers, yet found yourself on a trek that would be the envy of the most hardy explorer, you should know that this was the supermarket management’s explicit plan.
 
A healthy mind in a healthy body
Just as you do before a decisive examination, sports competition or important business meeting, make sure that your body is in top condition before beginning a visit to the supermarket. It has been proven that hungry people buy more. The primeval need to hoard food is awakened by the sense of hunger and thirst, and this influences the extent of our purchases. Supermarket operators know this full well. Modern supermarkets have a ventilation system that is designed to spread the aroma of the bakery department throughout the supermarket. The aroma stimulates and reinforces the sense of hunger, and from there it’s only a short step to filling a shopping cart with unnecessary products.
 
Know where you have come from, and where you are going
The main goal of supermarket architects is to get you to buy more than you have planned. Come with a shopping list and try to stick to it. Just as in programs like “American Idol”, any attempt at improvisation in the supermarket may end up being a disappointment. If the worst happens, and you have to choose a product on the spot, stop, take a deep breath, and remember a few basic principles:
 
Most accessible
The products that the supermarket management wants you to buy are those that are most accessible, and these are usually found right in front of you on the shelf. In general, these are the strongest, most profitable brand names for the supermarket. Look down to the bottom shelves, or up at the top shelves, you may discover competing products at more sensible prices.
 
Packaging
Larger packages are not necessarily more economical. In order to work out whether you really have a bargain, you need to compare the price per unit volume or weight. Most cell phones include a calculator function – don’t be embarrassed to use it.
 
At the checkout
When you reach the checkout, close your eyes, hum a silent prayer, or check your e-mails on your cell phone. The checkout area is a dangerous honey trap that requires an iron will, or serious distraction, to escape. The waiting time at the checkout is the supermarket’s last opportunity to wrest that last bit of money from your hands through “impulse buying,” motivated by a momentary impulse that can’t be overcome. Will you feel better after having gobbled down that chocolate bar that you set your eyes on?

 

My Disappearing Shopping Fund

January 12th, 2012

Advance Loan BlogMy money tree is bare and the there are no new buds
I have suffered a dramatic change. I have had to move from “spending” to “not spending”. I built my personal financial system carefully over years and years of spending money, sometimes cautiously, sometimes rashly and sometimes wildly. At all times I planned, saved and budgeted, always keeping spending directly linked to earning. Now I’m in a “hold spending” period. I saved hundreds of dollars in 2011 by getting some good deals on financial products. You can do it too.
 
Our shopping expeditions
Years ago I fell into the habit of accompanying my wife on her trips to the supermarket. These outings ranged from ‘totally boring’ to ‘mildly interesting’ until I discovered that there’s a man’s world in the supermarket. I discovered the 10 varieties of olives, the 20 varieties of pickles and the carousel of fiery hot spices. I found the exotic cheese counter and the cheap tee-shirt rack. I bought what I fancied. My job was great, the salary package was generous and I always had money in the bank.
 
Job collapse
At about 9am one morning I received a phone call from the owner of the company I was managing: “We are closing down. Not enough work, blah, blah, blah… the faltering hi-tech industry, yak, yak, yak… Our shopping trips changed. I still accompany my wife. We go to the supermarket – with a list. We buy the items on the list and come home. Money saved: Considerable.
 
I’ve made some changes
In the good old days when I had a problem with money, my first port of call would be the bank and my friendly bank manager who would always lean over backwards to help me. That’s gone. These days when I have a problem with money I put as much distance as I can between me and the bank. I’m just another customer and I’ve never met the manager. I changed banks recently, mainly because the bank on Pine Street offered better deals than the bank on Elm Street. If the bank can treat me a casual customer, then I can treat the bank as a casual service.  
 
Check your insurances
I had sudden urge to make sure my “papers” were in order in case I got hit by a bus. The results were surprising. Other than stuff like life insurance, pension and savings which I regard as a ‘do not open’ box unless the agent is present, I looked at such fascinating items as household and auto insurance. It’s been years since I received these policies. If you work on the basis of ‘no claims, no look’ as I do, the years slip away. I took them out and called a couple of new acquaintances in the insurance business. Surprise! The trusty old agents I had used all these years were no longer looking after my interests. They were renewing my policies every year without looking at the premiums. I replaced these policies with a new agent and saved huge amounts of money for the same coverage. I also told the new agent that I would be shopping around for new quotations at every renewal date. If the old agents didn’t look after me do I still have to look after them?

 

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