Small Wins

Small wins and Discipline Lead to Big Wins

Reducing Bank Fees

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by Arthur Kaliisa on 09-11-2007

Reducing Bank Fees

Summary: Tired of being “nickel and dimed” by your bank? There are ways you can reduce your bank fees, as described in this tip.
Well, no, this doesn’t mean that you can walk in to your bank and tell them they have to charge you less. It just doesn’t work that way. What we mean by reducing bank fees is reducing how many of them you have to pay. Reading the fine print and paying attention to your account balances can save you lots of money, a little at a time.
Fees should never take you by surprise. By law, banks are required to provide all the information on all the fees you’ll have to pay before you are liable for those fees. However, whether or not you read the provided information is up to you. Skimming your agreements can result in not seeing the small print—literally. Banks (and not just banks; most businesses) purposefully make information that customers find unfavorable hard to find, or at least easier to miss. For example, a commonly overlooked fee with savings accounts is a minimum balance; some banks will automatically close your account if it drops below a specified minimum, and others will charge you a fee.
ATM fees can be even sneakier than fine print. If you use an ATM owned by a different bank, you will have to pay a fee normally between one and two dollars. Customers are generally notified of the exact cost at the very end of the withdrawal process, which means that they would rather accept the fee, even if it’s higher than expected, rather than beginning the entire process again at another ATM.
The fees you’re probably the most eager to dodge are those for bounced checks and overdrawn accounts. These are usually some of the highest ‘incidental’ fees, and they take effect at bad times, too. Both occur when you have less money that you think you do, so you try to use money you don’t have.
Paying attention to your agreements and your assets should protect you from most unexpected fees, but you’ll have to scope out specific banks for yourself to see how much fee-danger you’re in. If your big bank turns out to be too much of a minefield for you, you may consider changing to a credit union—because they’re non-profit organizations, they tend to have fewer fees and to be more up front with those they do have.
Money.Tips.Net

Sticking to a Budget

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by Arthur Kaliisa on 08-11-2007

Summary: Bring out your budgets and dust ‘em off. You’re ready to budget again, and this time you’re sticking to it.

Making budgets is an odd hobby, I think, but if you don’t stick to a budget, is it really anything more than that? A budget does absolutely nothing if it has no reference to your spending or your saving. It can be hard, especially if you’re on a comparatively restricted income, to refrain from unplanned indulgences, but it’s definitely worth it; sometimes even your legitimate expenses turn out to be more than you’d anticipated, but you can recover. You have the money you have, and you can only make the most of your money by spending it wisely, and the best way to do that is through a plan: your budget.

Budgets are (generally) not meant to accommodate unplanned pizza binges, visits to the masseuse, or late-night shopping sprees. Expenses resulting from this type of behavior are strictly up to you and your personal discipline, which I know from experience can be a scary prospect. (There’s a pan of brownies in my kitchen right now that is disappearing much more rapidly than anticipated, and I seem to be the only one with chocolate on his lips.)

If possible, make sure you plan some indulgence into your budget to keep temptation from getting too strong. If your budget is so tight it’s cutting you in half instead of holding your pants up, something needs to change. Hopefully, by planning fun into your budget, it will be easier to deal with and you will be less vulnerable to sudden cravings, intense advertising campaigns, and sore muscles.

On the other hand, some expenses are beyond your control. No one plans on being pick-pocketed, but a stolen wallet can mean a lot of unplanned expenses in terms of time and money. Recovering from such accidental costs may take you off the beaten trail of your budget, but the detour doesn’t need to be permanent if you make your budget flexible. You may have a few unstable points in the first few months of your budgeting experience, but before long the benefits of using and sticking to a budget will seem so obvious you’ll wonder how you got along without one.