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Investing in Your Personal Finances

July 9, 2013 By Shane Ede 6 Comments

In business, we talk all the time about investing in your business.  We’re not talking about actually buying stock in your own company, although there are those that do that as well.  What we’re really talking about is investing the things that will make your business better.  For a cab company, that might mean investing in an extra cab or two.  Or replacing some of the older cabs in the fleet with newer ones.  It might be something as simple as sending an employee (or yourself) to training.  But, as much as we talk about investing in our businesses, how many of us actually invest in our own personal finances?

How to Invest in your Personal Finances

Invest in your personal FinancesInvesting in your personal finances can be something as complex as buying new investments.  But, it can also be something as simple as providing yourself with the training you need to improve your personal finances.  What part of personal finance scares you?  Is it the budgeting?  Is it the balancing?  Selling?  Buying?  Investing?  Maybe you just don’t understand how savings accounts work?  Investing doesn’t mean you need to spend money either.  All those things I just listed can be learned online for free.  It might take a bit longer because it isn’t all consolidated like it would be in a course.  You might need time sorting through sites like this one learning what the authors have to teach.  But, it can be learned.  And, when you’re done, and you understand something a bit better, you’ll have invested in your personal finance.

Earning Dividends on your Personal Finances

In the investing world, dividend paying stocks are the ones that many investors (for sure income investors) will look at first.  Why?  Because, even if the stock doesn’t gain any value, it’s still going to pay that dividend out in most cases.  The people who run the company have invested in the business to improve it enough that it can pay some of it’s revenues back to the shareholders.  You can do the same.  As you invest in your personal finances, and implement the things that you’ve learned, your finances will get better.  You’ll be working on them all the time to improve them.  As they get better, you’ll start earning dividends on your investment.  Maybe it will be in a higher rate of income. Maybe a higher rate of savings.  Or, maybe it will just be a higher rate of understanding that leads to a calmer sense of where your finances are headed.

The quicker you start investing in your personal finances, the quicker you’ll start earning those dividends.  Click on a few of those links in that list up there.  Learn about something that you don’t feel in control of.  Invest in your personal finances today.

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Financial Miscellaneous, Personal Finance Education, ShareMe Tagged With: Investing, investing in your personal fiannces, Personal Finance

Are You Leading Your Finances?

June 5, 2013 By Shane Ede 12 Comments

This last weekend, I attended a young professionals conference.  As you can imagine, a large part of the conference was spent talking about leadership.  One of the speakers was legendary basketball coach Dale Brown.  One of the breakouts was entitled “Visionary Leadership”.  I’ve also just started reading the book “Entreleadership” by Dave Ramsey.  In all of those places, there are lots of buzzwords that describe leadership, and what a leader is.

Of course, this being a personal finance site, my mind couldn’t help but apply as much of it as possible to personal finance.  When we think of our personal lives, we rarely apply the word leader to any aspect of it.  We apply it to ourselves and others in our work and volunteer lives, but not our personal lives.  Why not?

When it really comes down to it, we are the leader of our lives.  We are the ones who apply the same principles that leaders apply to business and volunteer organizations to our lives.  Or don’t.  We try and become better leaders at work.  We expect better leaders to lead us.  But rarely do we try and become better leaders in our personal life.

Leading your Finances

Leading Your FinancesPersonal finance aren’t all that much different from a business and a business’ finances.  We still have income coming in, expenses going out, and the profit left over.  Unfortunately, for many, that’s where the parallels end.  Let’s change that.  Let’s apply some of those leadership principles to our lives.  Specifically, let’s apply them to leading your finances.

Financial Efficiency

Business leaders are always looking for ways to make their business and employees more efficient.  Over the years, businesses have foregone the paper and pen and replaced them with computers.  They’ve replaced old marketing tactics with websites and social media.  Leading your finances means finding, and embracing, new ways to make your finances more efficient.  Forego the old check and envelope method of paying your bills and sign up for bill-pay.  Or automate your bill paying by setting them up for auto-pay.  Find ways to save that also create income.  Look into better rates at better banks.  Learn about dividend investing.  Learn about peer-to-peer lending.

Financial Opportunity Seeking

Many of today’s biggest and brightest businesses wouldn’t even exist today if their leaders hadn’t been continually opportunity seeking.  If all Apple still made was computers, it wouldn’t be the multi-billion dollar company that it is today.  If Steve Jobs hadn’t seen the opportunity in the iPhone, iPod, and iPad, they’d be just another company making computers.  Apply the same to your finances.  Peer-to-peer lending hasn’t always been what it is today.  There was a time where it was still a fledgling opportunity.  A small percentage, relatively, of the population saw the benefit of it as an investing avenue, and, for most, their finances are the better for it.  Be open to services and products that can help you make your finances better.

Continual Financial Improvement

Good enough is never good enough for a business leader.  The only thing that stays the same is their desire for improvement.  Beyond always seeking opportunity, we must also always be finding ways to improve our finances.  We must always be assessing the risk involved with those new opportunities, and making decisions on what will best improve our finances.

Financial Failure

Businesses fail.  If they have good leaders, they only fail momentarily and spring back stronger than ever.  They’ll have set the company up to be diversified so that any one failure shouldn’t be enough to ruin the company.  Investors talk all the time about the importance of diversifying an investment portfolio.  But, it can be applied elsewhere in our finances.  Having all of your money in one online bank is great.  Until your internet goes down and you can’t get to it to bill pay.  Diversifying to have a set amount of cash available in an emergency can help you out there.  Not depending on just stock investments is another great way to diversify for failure.  Prepare your finances so that an opportunity that fails only sets you back, doesn’t bankrupt you.

How can you improve your finances today?  What opportunities can you learn more about and assess for use in your finances?  What efficiencies can you create to make your finances better? What other leadership qualities can you apply in leading your finances?

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: General Finance, Investing, Passive Income, Personal Finance Education, ShareMe Tagged With: finances, leadership, passive income, Personal Finance

Debt Heroes

April 10, 2013 By Shane Ede 3 Comments

debt heroes
Amazon

Debt Heroes

By: Jeff Rose & Ben Edwards

Ben and Jeff approached me a couple of weeks ago and asked if I’d like to read a copy of their book, Debt Heroes.  It’s $2.99 on Amaon.

They released the book as a companion to the Debt Movement that Jeff started back in February.  They even offered it for free on Amazon for a couple of days.  I was hoping to release this review during those days, but I just couldn’t get it finished in time.  Unfortunately, it’s back up to it’s regular price of $2.99 (free for Amazon Prime members).  That’s probably good for me, as I’ll be using my Amazon affiliate links to link to the book here, but I’m a bit disappointed that you won’t be able to take advantage of the free deal.

Ben and Jeff set out to write a book about debt heroes.  Everyday people that you and I, the readers, can look up to as heroes in the fight against debt.  Inside the book, you’ll find profiles of 21 debt heroes that have conquered debt, and some tips from each on how they did it.  What I found even more interesting in each profile is that each debt hero points out what their weakness was.  Not surprisingly, it isn’t the same for each one.  Also not surprisingly, that weakness played a huge part in each of their debt story.

The book is a pretty quick read (about 177 pages if it were printed), and it’s full of inspirational stories about getting out of debt.  It’s not another “get out of debt with these steps” book, but a book to give you inspiration in your own debt battle.  Of course, the hope is that you read it and it gives you the push that you need to become your own debt hero.

I think I would have liked to have seen a little bit more of each debt hero’s story.  Each of the stories is accompanied by a link to where you can read the full story, so it’s accessible; I just haven’t progressed in my kindle reading to be clicking on links and such.

If you’re looking for a little inspirational reading to help you keep on track (or get on track) with your debt elimination, I think you’ll find what you need inside the (electronic) pages of this book.  Also, remember that you don’t need a Kindle to read the book.  Amazon has Kindle apps for Android and iOS phones, as well as for PC and Apple computers, and most tablets.

Pick up Debt Heroes today.

You’ll read about it at the end of the book, but Jeff and Ben have also created a “Debt Heroes Club” that you can join to get more tips and inspiration at DebtHeroes.com.

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Books, Debt Reduction, Personal Finance Education Tagged With: book review, Books, debt heroes

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