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Personal Finance – Successful Financial Budgeting Tips

  • Posted on November 26, 2011 at 12:00 am



Personal finance has always been one of the crucial aspects of success of an individual. Execution of one’s personal finance budget often requires discipline and perseverance. Many people obtain assistance from professionals such as accountants, financial planners, investment advisers, and lawyers.There is also personal financial software to help with your financial budgeting which saves a lot of money  and certainly your time.

Financial budgeting is the key to unlock your monetary success as well as your means of reaching your goals and dreams. Everyone wants to pay all their bills on time. Successful debt and asset supervision is the starting place for good credit. Unless you have unlimited funds to spend however you wish, the place to start is with good personal budgeting skills.

Here are some helpful tips in creating your personal finance budget:

Create a personal household budget which includes all your monthly and yearly bills. You must also include your spending money, savings goals, and retirement funding. It doesn’t matter how much money you make, it’s how you spend it. A personal and household budget will help you make payments on time, provided you follow the plan. Aim for your housing expenses to be about 33% of your income. If that is not possible, cut some expenses or look to at ways you can make more money. Follow a debt management program. Your debt may overtake your income and then you are forced to make late payments on bills or no payments at all because you don’t have the money. This becomes expense and can topple you over. A total debt payment (which ideally should be zero!) shouldn’t exceed 30%.  If it does, look to consolidate and chop ups some store cards with high interest. You can’t just spend money and hope you have enough for your bills. You must spend within a budget. Use personal financial software to save you time and accounting fees. The software will ask the same questions that a personal finance advisor asks, without charging you a high hourly rate, during a financial planning interview. Everything is already put in to the software so you don’t have to start from scratch or think too much.

A strong and stable financial situation has always been the short route towards a sound and independent financial situation. Maintaining control over your personal finance enables you to maintain control over more aspects in your live than just money and it all starts with having a good budget and sticking to it.

Needs of the State Code Requirements by the Company

  • Posted on November 24, 2011 at 5:04 am

There are so many products that you can use for your business needs or style, so many companies that manufacture various kinds of mobile phone for you can use in your requirements, so you can choose the brand and good quality in products that have been made by the telecommunications company will you use, and the country code is set to enter the number you have stored in your phone contacts and different codes from each country that produces telecommunications for your promo code.

A telecommunications company that offers various services to customers with a very reasonable price. For people who want to take advantage of their services and rates should get a Straight talk promo code that offers certain benefits that will suit your needs and requirements of individuals to be able to get a promo code to be able to relieve you in the purchase of phone you want is available in a certain time runs on the promo code you want.

Personal Finance – Understanding Personal Income and Expenditure

  • Posted on September 28, 2011 at 5:26 pm



“It takes as much imagination to create debt as to create income” quote attributed to Leonard Orr; if this is the case, then why is it that we create debts more easily than an income? well, most of us do, I know I do…I work so hard to create my income but on the contrary I easily get into debts.

In the last 5 years I have found myself getting into more and more debts, the more debts I get, the easier it gets for me to get to the next one and the next. My bank does not help either, the more debts I have, the higher the borrowing rates I am banded in, I guess it is because I am considered as a high risk to the bank.

Then there is overdraft charges, bounced direct debit charges, checks, late payments on my loans, utilities, mortgages all compounding into increasing my debt thus lowering my credit score and consequently increasing my APR…my debts feels like snow ball, free falling from a hill getting bigger by second, getting more and more out of control.

I took upon myself to look back at how I got into debts in the first instance; I knew if I have any chance of regaining control of my finance, I will have to know how I got in. It pays to understand how one gets into debt, and to do so, understanding income and expenditure is important.

Income is any earning that lands at your disposal, it may be money earned through paid employment, as business profit, or from investments. Expenditure (or sometimes known as expenses) is any transaction that takes away your earnings, for instance paying bills, mortgage, loans etc.

Income and expenditure chart, table or write up, (also known as cash flow) is a snap-shot of your earnings versus expenses. It is in essence looking at what you earnings (income), usually monthly against expenses (outgoing). An average person would not bother writing down his/her cash flow.

Using cash flow, it is easy to see how one gets into debt. When income is lower than expenses (also known as negative cash flow), the shortfall (deficit) has to be covered somehow from somewhere and for most of us it is covered by borrowing (loan, credit cards, store cards).

I began to learn that, if I am to avoid getting into debt, I will have to “live within my means”, i.e. at least break even between my income and my outgoing. To do this, I needed to master my will, guts and learn not to be ashamed of where I was, financially.

Most of the time, the pressure of conforming to other people’s expectations (keeping up with Joneses) is the one that gets us to live beyond our means, thus getting into debts. What we don’t understand is, debts have crippling effects and they are addictive in nature.

Robert Kiyosaki in his book cash flow quadrant (2000, p205) rightly said, “people who cannot control their cash flow work for those who can”; if we are to become free, we have to learn to control our cash flow and this begins by WRITING DOWN monthly cash flow account (personal income and expenses account)…it is surprising how those unplanned £5 expenses quickly adds up to £100′s plunging one down into ‘negative cash flow’.

The aim is to take control of the personal cash flow with the objective of creating income higher than expenses, positive cash flow (surplus) and use the surplus to get out of debt, invest to create more surplus and of course to ‘spend’ on pleasure. My personal motto is: “live within my means, then increase my means”, for pleasure, use surplus only…thus, no surplus, no pleasure.