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3 Strategies to Keep Track of Your Purchases To Save Money

February 20, 2017 By MelissaB 3 Comments

I’m a big fan of buying in advance for items that I know that I’ll need.  For years when my kids were little, I’d go out shopping a day or two after Halloween to buy my kids discounted Halloween costumes for the next year.  I never paid full price for a Halloween costume, and after Halloween was over and the kids were done with the costume, I sold the costumes on eBay for close to the price I paid.

That’s the way I like to shop, and I know it’s how many others shop, too.  After all, shopping this way is a smart strategy to stretch your dollars.

The problem is that as life gets busier as the kids grow older, I’ve found that sometimes I forget what I bought in advance.  Then, I desperately go out shopping for the item I need, not realizing I had already bought it in advance.

track purchases
Track Your Purchases

Case in point: Last year, right after Christmas, I bought my daughter a green ruffled dress on clearance at a steal for this year’s Christmas.  But, I forgot I bought that dress, and come November, I spent a lot of my time searching children’s resale stores for a dress that wasn’t unreasonably priced.  I had no luck.  A few weeks ago, I was digging through some storage tubs in my closet, and I found the dress.

So this year, one of my New Year’s resolutions is to implement a strategy to keep track of all of my deals.  Here are some techniques I plan to use:

Keep all of the deals in one location.  I have a corner of my walk in closet where I keep a large storage tub filled with discounted items I buy whenever I see a good sale on things I’ll need later.  I use these items for my kids’ birthday and Christmas presents.  I have added another tub to this one.  I’ll store other items like seasonal dresses in these tubs so I know everything I’ve bought in advance is in one location.

Keep a spreadsheet of gifts.  Even if you keep all of your items in one location, you don’t want to constantly have to rut through everything to find what you’re looking for.  Keeping a spreadsheet of the items you’ve bought in advance as well as who they are for will make it easy to see at a glance what items you have.  This can also prevent you from overspending and buying more than you need.

Use the libib app to track books.  I frequently give books as gifts.  We also homeschool, so when I see a good sale, I’ll buy books in advance for the next year or two of school.  The free app libib is a great way to keep track of your books.  Simply scan the barcode with your smartphone, and you can create an inventory, even categorizing by person you’ll be giving the book to or genre.  You choose.

Buying things you’ll need in advance is a great way to save money. . .as long as you don’t forget about what you’ve already bought!

Do you buy items in advance?  If so, how do you keep track of them?

 

MelissaB
MelissaB

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in New York, where she loves the natural beauty of the area.

www.momsplans.com/

Filed Under: Children, Frugality, Married Money, Saving, ShareMe Tagged With: budget, frugal, frugaler, gifts

5 Best Subscription Gifts for Kids

December 18, 2016 By MelissaB Leave a Comment

It’s Christmas morning.  Your kids excitedly rip open their presents, and all day long, you can barely pull them away from their new toys.  If you’re lucky, the excitement lasts a week or two.  But then, unfortunately, the new toys lose their appeal and luster.

Does this sound familiar?

If you want to avoid the kind of gifts that quickly lose their luster, consider giving your child a monthly subscription present.  Then, the joy of Christmas lasts all year long as each month your child will get a new surprise gift!

Here are some you may want to consider:

Surprise Ride

best subscription gifts for kids
Subscription Gifts for Kids

If you have kids who love books and crafts, this may be the subscription service for you (and them)!  Each Surprise Ride box includes two activities, a book and a snack, and extras.  A recent Surprise Ride with a polar bears theme included the supplies to make a polar bear habitat and a polar bear coaster, a Magic Treehouse polar bear book and ice cream snack, and polar bear bracelet and snowflake game. All activities are designed for kids 5 and up.  You can get the monthly subscription or pay for 6 months upfront for a $40 savings, or 12 months upfront for a $60 savings.

Foodstirs

Perfect for your little food enthusiast, aged 5 to 12 years.  Each month, Foodstirs will send a kit to bake a sweet treat.  The ingredients are organic and do not contain artificial dyes or flavors.  Some kits available at the holiday season include the Very Merry Gingerbread Cookie Kit and Holiday Tree Brownie Kit.  Kits are shipped for free, and when you subscribe for a 3, 6, or 12 month box, you can receive up to 28% off the retail price.

Pley

How much fun would it be to get a new toy to play with every month?  That’s the premise behind Pley.  You choose a toy for your child from 500+ toys available for children from 0-12 years old.  Your child plays with the toy for a month; then you send it back and get a new one!  Avoid toy clutter in your home, and your child won’t bore of his toys!

Little Passports

Little Passports offers four different subscriptions: Early Explorers (ages 3 to 5), World Edition (ages 6 to 10), USA Edition (ages 7 to 12), and Science Expeditions (ages 9+).  The first three subscriptions focus on geography, and the latter on science.  The geography subscriptions include stickers for your child’s passport, souvenirs, photos, letters from the travelers, and online games.  Subscriptions are available for a variety of months and are cheaper when you commit to a 12 month subscription.

Kiwi Crate

Kiwi Crate offers monthly subscriptions for five levels, from ages 0 to 16.  Choose the crate that you would like.  For instance, in the Doodle Crate, for ages 9 to 16, your child can learn how and build their own clock with the supplies given!  A Tinker Crate for ages 9 to 16 offers a STEM project like creating a hydraulic claw.  Kiwi Crate offers subscriptions monthly, for 3 months, for 6 months, and for 12 months again, with the biggest discount going to the longest subscription.

Do your kids subscribe to any subscription services?  If so, which one is your favorite?

MelissaB
MelissaB

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in New York, where she loves the natural beauty of the area.

www.momsplans.com/

Filed Under: Children, Married Money Tagged With: gifts, kids

It’s O.K. If Your Kids Are Bored This Summer

June 1, 2016 By MelissaB 4 Comments

Ah, summer.  A time of relaxation, heat, and. . .boredom?

Yep, boredom.  When I was a child, the big activity for the summer was to go to Vacation Bible School one week of the summer.  The rest of the time, well, my days stretched wide open before me.

I might read a good book, or run through the sprinkler, or eat a popsicle, or lay on the grass looking at the clouds floating by or go bike riding with my friend or play on the swing set or play with Barbies.

Those were the days of summer.

I loved every minute that I was out of school, but by mid-July, after the excitement of the 4th of July holiday wore off and I’d been on summer break for several weeks, I often found myself bored.  I mean b.o.r.e.d.

Kids are Bored this Summer
Org. Img.: Bored by Marcus Nelson on <a href="https://flic.kr/p/qvVto">Flickr</a>

I was actually excited and ready to go back to school.

Do kids today feel that anymore?

The answer, typically, is no, but it’s O.K. if your kids are bored this summer!

Summer Can Hit Your Wallet Hard

If you want to keep your kid busy all summer long, you can expect to spend quite a bit of money doing so.  I have a friend who is paying over $1,000 for her seven year old to attend summer day camp for a few weeks.  And that is just one child!

Of course, families with two working parents must find ways to make sure that their kids are cared for, so that is part of the reason why kids are overbooked.  But my friend whose paying for her daughter’s summer camp is a stay-at-home mom.

Boredom Is Not a Bad Thing

However, if the parents are in a situation where they can let their kids get bored, i.e. one parent stays home to take care of the kids, boredom might not be such a bad thing.  Nancy Darling, a professor of Psychology at Oberlin College, states, “From a developmental perspective, kids have very little experience learning to find things to do FOR THEMSELVES.  They have been PASSIVE.  Adults shape their activities.  When they get to the point where they are too old for that—or there just aren’t adults to do it—the kids are at a loss.  They might know what they like to do—or what they don’t—but they have little experience figuring out how to make good things happen.  Boredom is okay” (Psychology Today).

Think about times when you were bored as a kid.  Those times obviously didn’t last forever.  You found something to do.  You may have compromised and played a board game with your younger brother even though you really didn’t like playing with him, but anything was better than boredom!  You may have written a story, or created a Lego invention, or made a new imaginary game.

Alyson Jones, who is a counselor, states, “Boredom is not the enemy to be conquered by action and another planned activity.  Boredom can be a vehicle to creative thinking, self-awareness, empathy and compassion.  When we are bored we are often alone with our thoughts—this is a great way for children to get to know themselves” (The Huffington Post).

If you have the flexibility in your schedule, why not give the kids some time to be bored this summer?  Your wallet will thank you, and someday your kids might, too.

What do your kids do for the summer?  Do you give them time to be bored or are they scheduled?

 

 

 

 

MelissaB
MelissaB

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in New York, where she loves the natural beauty of the area.

www.momsplans.com/

Filed Under: Children, Married Money, ShareMe Tagged With: Bored Kids, frugaler, married money, Summer

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