How to Budget your Finances

March 28, 2009 by  

Introduction
Learning to budget your income is one of those things where some people have no problem, yet others cannot do it for the life of them. Those of us who find budgeting easy and satisfying don’t really understand those people who can never manage their money properly.

1. Mr Macawber in David Copperfield by Charles Dickens, states the concept of budgeting. “Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen pounds six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pound nought and six, result misery.” Charles Dickens, David Copperfield, 1849 English novelist (1812 – 1870)

overspend and you will always be poor, as I found to my cost when first setting up my website design business, specialising in a web content management system, But spend a penny less than you get and you will always feel rich which we have now achieved. This may seem very obvious, but how often do we find we are spending more than we can afford? There are tempting offers within our grasp every day and it’s difficult to resist when they try to make us believe we might never get such an opportunity again.

• Hands up if you are someone who has difficulty managing your money?
• Hands up if you do not know how to administer your finances?
• Hands up if you find it difficult to resist bargains?
• Hands up if you are in arrears?
• Hands up if you don’t know how you are going to make ends meet for the next week?

If you have all your hands in the air (and your feet!) it’s time to do something about it. (In other words take yourself in hand!!) Sorry about the pun.

2. The first thing you need to understand is that people who are trading are in business to make money and they want their businesses to grow. To do this they have to increase sales, so they have to make things irresistible to the customers like you and me.

So remember, the next time you are in the red and struggling to pay the bills, there is some big guy out there raking in the profits. They are taking your hard earned cash and leaving you broke.

Change of Mindset
People who do not budget and find it difficult to manage their money seem to have a particular mindset. For instance, there may be an idea from childhood that being careful with money indicates to the world that a person is stingy. Being reckless then equates with generosity and not being largess. If you are loaded then spending money freely is not a problem, but if you are on a limited income or just never seem to have enough, then good financial management looks like a good idea.

3. One of the ways to change your thinking is to ask yourself, ‘who is the best person to benefit from your hard earned money’? Is it the big companies who are making loads of profit already(Fat cats) paying their executives million pound bonuses, or you!

Anxiety about your ability to manage your money and fear of figures may cause you to disregard your finances. I had a friend who admitted this to me and when I said I enjoyed the online banking system and being in charge of moving my money around and how easy I found it; she immediately changed her mind set and decided she could handle the online banking system and researched the best way to invest her money to make more of what she had.

Give yourself permission to think that being in control of your money is a practical way to remove the stress you experience around funds. That will give you more energy to enjoy life more and make even more money.

Guidelines to Liquidity
The most difficult thing to do is to face the veracity. When someone is on a spending spree they are out of control and out of touch with reality. The fantasy ignores the cost and the consequences of overspending (ie. How it’s going to get repaid).

So the first thing you need to do is keep documentation of everything you spend your money on. At this stage do not try to change what you normally do. Have a cash note book and write down all the things you can think of that you buy. This includes household bills and food, mobile phone, TV. Put a figure in the corresponding column. If you have actual amounts put them in, if not make a stab at it. Leave space for the things you don’t remember or even consider expenses. Beer, cinema, clothes even the coins you toss to street entertainers. Categorise it as fun money or entertainment funds.

Every time you take money out of your pocket/wallet/credit card/bank, write down what you use it for. Do this over one month, and by then you will have a fairly comprehensive list of your expenses. Make a total at the bottom of the page and on the opposite page write down all your income. When I first did this I found that one of my largest expenses was shop bought sandwiches every day!

Compare the totals. Have you spent more or less than you receive? Is your life going towards happy or miserable? It is at this point you really need to make a shift in your thought process.

Start by being tight fisted to people who want to sell you things. Look around for the best deals and always ask to renegotiate deals. I went on a negotiating course some years ago and the following week I put into practise what we had learnt. I reduced my spending by $350, just by asking!

Carry only a minimum amount of cash on you so that you are not tempted to fritter away $20 on some impulse purchase you don’t need. Those dollars add up fast and before you know a hundred dollars in your pocket is gone.

Cut up your credit card unless this is the most convenient way to pay regular items and you clear the balance at the end of each month. Use only one credit card, and find one that gives points for purchases. These mount up and you can claim vouchers to spend in your favourite stores. Also find a credit card that will take the full amount by direct debit every month so you don’t miss payments, accrue interest charges and generate a large fine.

Make a list when you go shopping and only buy what is on that list. OK, some things you may have forgotten to put down but make sure you avoid the impulse purchases. Keep a list in the kitchen and only put things on it when you have run out. Use up products in the cool cupboard and freezer to reduce waste and keep spending to a minimum.

Become a prudent shopper and consumer. Try and use up coupons, saving a few saved cents per purchase can really add up. Searching through clearance sections in stores is another way to save money. You may be pleasantly surprised to see how much you can reduce your bill on your usual grocery haul.

Conclusion
Budgeting is not for the fainthearted. It means fighting the urge to buy what is not needed. I run a web design company and if you are like me the temptation is strong to buy all the latest gadgets. But if you can think yourself into a new mind set you will find it much easier to change the habits of a lifetime. Be sure that all expenses are accounted for when you take stock of your situation. Once you have your finances under control, there will be enough surplus to save and allow to grow for the special events you may want to treat yourself to in life.

If you still have difficulty limiting your shopping habit, take a friend or relative with you on outings. Someone you can trust to steer you away from temptation. Once you conquer your shopping demons, you will be proud of yourself for doing so and feel a great sense of accomplishment. So don’t be overwhelmed, grab that pen and paper and get on track to prosperity.

Happy Budgeting

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  5. A Fabulous DIY Kitchen Project And Redesigning Plan, On A Shoestring Budget!

Comments

9 Responses to “How to Budget your Finances”

  1. wlangenyi on April 14th, 2010 4:41 am

    the only thing i picked up on is when he is being locked up at the beginning, when he wants to move his hands through the whole and on the chain, his own hands go down and fake hands replace it to get locked up. around 1:25

  2. smearedeyes on September 11th, 2010 8:57 am

    ahm reading the tale of two cities-charles dickens. super sweet n plot.

  3. Ping.fm on January 13th, 2011 11:44 pm

    Will Paybox be a Hot online Banking System? Why do they give you money every time you visit them?

  4. Twitter on January 23rd, 2011 12:03 am

    RT It was the best of times…165 yrs ago today Charles Dickens started a newspaper. #thisdayinmedia

  5. Robert on January 29th, 2011 4:08 pm

    My Favs:
    Treasure Island by Rober Louis Stevenson
    The Writings of Edgar Allen Poe
    A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
    The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkein
    Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
    Leaves of Grass by Whalt Whitman
    Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie
    In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
    Of Mice and Men by John Steinback
    Walden and Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
    I love the Transcendentalists.
    Also everyone should read Republic by Plato because as Emerson points out it encompasses every book ever written.

  6. g3010 on February 7th, 2011 1:01 am

    Best thing to do is read the book and you can have first hand knowledge of it's contents.

  7. SOS on April 10th, 2011 6:04 pm

    Charles Dickens was a very wordy writer. Just look at the first line of his book “A Tale Of Two Cities” for instance: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times; it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness; it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity; it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness; it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair; we had everything before us, we had nothing before us; we were all going directly to Heaven, we were all going the other way.” That first line goes on and on and on so that one has to make stops to breath in air before reaching its end. Run-on sentences is what many of Dickens’s books are made of. Here’s another of his typical sentences: “I had no advice, no counsel, no encouragement, no consolation, no assistance, no support, of any kind, from anyone, that I can call to mind, as I hope to go to heaven!”
    Maybe in his time (1812-1870) the verbose sentences of Charles Dickens were acceptable, but very few have the time it takes to read one of his stories today. If all the windy run-on were removed from one of his stories, his stories could be told in half the words and half the time. Publishers today do not accept windy prose.
    His sentences are good teachers for someone learning to write details into their stories. On the other hand, readers today would be nearly tortured to death by boredom, with the giant waste of time inherent in his long-winded sentences.
    He was popular in Europe and America and probably other parts of the world, too.

  8. Captain Jack on May 1st, 2011 3:10 am

    The Notebook is wonderful…

  9. liz n on October 6th, 2011 9:30 pm

    The 'antenna' they put in your neighborhood can handle 'X' number of calls within a radius of 'Y' miles.

    If you chart out the antenna on a map, they look like a growing cell culture. Several seperate blobs to start with.

    As the cell gets busier, they add antennas- either nearby or even on the same tower. In our cell culture, this is a growth phase- cells dividing, growing, filling in the space.

    With radio towers, you really could not do this- if they crowd together, it adds noise to the signals and causes problems, so you end up with areas with poor radio (or beeper) reception.

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