Tag Archive | "2009"

For Teens: How to Ace Your First Test Managing Real Money in the Real World

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As a teen, you’re beginning to make some grown-up decisions about how to save and spend your money. That’s why learning the right ways to manage money…right from the start…is important. Here are suggestions.

Save some money before you’re tempted to spend it. When you get cash for your birthday or from a job, automatically put a portion of it — at least 10 percent, but possibly more — into a savings or investment account. This strategy is what financial advisors call “paying yourself first.” Making this a habit can gradually turn small sums of money into big amounts that can help pay for really important purchases in the future.

Also put your spare change to use. When you empty your pockets at the end of the day, consider putting some of that loose change into a jar or any other container, and then about once a month put that money into a savings account at the bank.

“Spare change can add up quickly,” said Luke W. Reynolds, Chief of the FDIC’s Community Affairs Outreach Section. “But don’t let that money sit around your house month after month, earning no interest and at risk of being lost or stolen.”

If you need some help sorting and counting your change, he said, find out if your bank has a coin machine you can use for free. If not, the bank may give you coin wrappers.

Some supermarkets and other non-banking companies have self-service machines that quickly turn coins into cash, but expect to pay a significant fee for the service, often close to 10 cents for every dollar counted, plus you still have to take the cash to the bank to deposit it into your savings account.

Keep track of your spending. A good way to take control of your money is to decide on maximum amounts you aim to spend each week or each month for certain expenses, such as entertainment and snack food. This task is commonly known as “budgeting” your money or developing a “spending plan.” And to help manage your money, it’s worth keeping a list of your expenses for about a month, so you have a better idea of where your dollars and cents are going.

“If you find you’re spending more than you intended, you may need to reduce your spending or increase your income,” Reynolds added. “It’s all about setting goals for yourself and then making the right choices with your money to help you achieve those goals.”

Consider a part-time or summer job. Whether it’s babysitting, lawn mowing or a job in a “real” business, working outside of your home can provide you with income, new skills and references that can be useful after high school or college. Before accepting any job, ask your parents for their permission and advice.

Think before you buy. Many teens make quick and costly decisions to buy the latest clothes or electronics without considering whether they are getting a good value.

“A $200 pair of shoes hawked by a celebrity gets you to the same destination at the same speed as a $50 pair,” said Reynolds. “Before you buy something, especially a big purchase, ask yourself if you really need or just want the item, if you’ve done enough research and comparison-shopping, and if you can truly afford the purchase without having to cut back on spending for something else.”

Be careful with cards. Under most state laws, you must be at least 18 years old to obtain your own credit card and be held responsible for repaying the debt. If you’re under 18, though, you may be able to qualify for a credit card as long as a parent or other adult agrees to repay your debts if you fail to do so.

An alternative to a credit card is a debit card, which automatically deducts purchases from your savings or checking account. Credit cards and debit cards offer convenience, but they also come with costs and risks that must be taken seriously.

Protect yourself from crooks who target teens. Even if you’re too young to have a checking account or credit card, a criminal who learns your name, address and Social Security number may be able to obtain a new credit card using your name to make purchases.

One of the most important things you can do to protect against identity theft is to be very suspicious of requests for your name, Social Security number, passwords or bank or credit card information that come to you in an e-mail or an Internet advertisement, no matter how legitimate they may seem.

“Teens are very comfortable using e-mail and the Internet, but they need to be aware that criminals can be hiding at the other end of the computer screen,” said Michael Benardo, manager of the FDIC’s financial crimes section. These types of fraudulent requests can also come by phone, text message or in the mail.

For more guidance on how to guard your personal information, see Protect against fraud.

Be smart about college. If you’re planning to go to college, learn about your options for saving or borrowing money for what could be a major expense — from tuition to books, fees and housing. Also consider the costs when you search for a school. Otherwise, when you graduate, your college debts could be high and may limit your options when it comes to a career path or where you can afford to live.

For more information on saving and borrowing for college, visit www.students.gov, a Web site with information from the U.S. government and other sources.

For more help or information for teens: Read “Start Smart: Money Management for Teens,” a special edition of FDIC Consumer News from the Summer of 2006 with information to help teens (and many pre-teens) learn how to make good decisions about their money. Find it online at www.fdic.gov/consumers/consumer/news/cnsum06. Also see our tips for anyone at any age.

Debt Ease: Start a Home Based Business

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A great way to ease some of the pain of excess debt is to start a home based business.  Think about your favorite thing to do and you may find a great business idea there or find one of the many MLM’s you can get you heart into. MLM’s are a great way to learn how to start a business, get good training, and meet new people. All of these things can help ease the pan of just sitting at home festering over those damn bills. 

Here are a few good tips to help you once you’ve started your new business.

To be a successful  home business entrepreneur, it is compulsory to develop and follow consistently a plan of action. Adherence to this plan guarantees success in your home business.

Here are seven Tips for long term success of your home business.

1) Make a Firm Decision- Decide what you would like to earn by the end of the year. Having decided your yearly earnings from sales, proceed to work backwards to acquiring weekly and monthly figures to meet your targeted yearly income.

2) Build Your List- Your list comprises of valued customers and prospects forming your database. This is your greatest asset and is built over time. There are no guarantees in any business, however with your own list, you are more confident that a percentage of your customer would make purchases from you. The key is to do the work one time of building your list and get paid over and over again.

3) Advertise your product or service -Take every opportunity to use different medias to advertise your business. Driving increased visitors to your site from various media placements is likely to give you good sale conversions. The key is creating a response to your advertising by ensuring that your ads are captivating.

4) Track and Evaluate Your Business – It is very important that you evaluate and track your business so that you can take quick action to correct any shortcomings. Start operating your business as though you are already a big company. Do not get caught up in shuffling paper clips with no serious business strategies in place. Successful people embrace the idea of tracking their business success.

5)Develop a Professional Approach- Project a professional image in simple ways such as setting up a mailbox at a UPS store in your area, acquiring a phone in your business name and opening a separate account for your checking business. This approach can help your home business excel.

6) Hire A Business Consultant- Your business consultant can be a coach or advisor towards the successful development of your home business. Seeking expert advice on ways and means to improve your business can accelerate business performance to a large extent. This is a good way to continuously grow your business.

7) Develop Good Customer Support- An effective customer support system in place for your home business can increase your sales revenue tremendously. This strategy allows customers and prospects to build good customer business relations and place more confidence in your business entrepreneurship.

Why Your Self-Handicapping Excuses Don’t Work (And How to Fix Them)

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excuse

The New York Times takes a revealing look at self-handicapping excuses—like “I barely slept the night before the test”—and why we create them, as well as the extremely unlikely chance that anyone else buys them.

The short version of the research and studies cited is that we all do it, in varying amounts, to protect our fragile egos. It’s a two-way victory: If you ace a project, you did great despite your car having trouble, your cat dying, being sick, and not having hardly heard the initial presentation. If not, well, hey, you know why.

If you’re a regular self-handicapper, though, you can grow too attached to whatever you use without knowing it, whether it’s alcohol, rule-defying, sleep deprivation, or whatever convenience you cling to. Those who study self-handicapping, though, offer a seemingly devious way to go at it another way and benefit—namely, get someone else to deliver your excuses:

In a recent study, James C. McElroy of Iowa State University and J. Michael Crant of Notre Dame had 246 adults evaluate the behavior of characters in several workplace anecdotes. The participants’ impressions of a character began to sour after the second time the person cited a handicap.

 

 

“What happens here is that if you do it often, observers attribute your performance to you, but begin to view it as part of your disposition, i.e., you’re a whiner,” Dr. McElroy wrote in an e-mail message. “But you can avoid this happening if someone else does the handicapping for you, and surprisingly enough, even if they do it often.”

Which cliched excuses and handicapping preambles do you wish you could banish, whether in yourself or co-workers? Let’s hear your take on preemptive defeat in the comments.

photo by: indoloony

The Top 7 Reasons Why Goals Are Not Achieved

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Set your goals so you can reach them

Set your goals so you can reach them

It is that time of year again when we reflect on what we had hoped to accomplish in the past year and what we plan to accomplish in the next. Most times we look back and realize that we did not quite measure up to our hopes and dreams. As a business advisor and executive coach I have found that people tend to make the same mistakes when setting goals for both their business and personal lives:

1. Goals do not support your life or business main purpose. Put another way, the goal is not aligned with what you are trying to accomplish. It has been said that the two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you discover why! Make sure your goals support your reason for being.

2. Lack of continual action. Goals usually die from inactivity. Make sure you take one positive step towards your goals every day. Make it part of your to-do list and schedule time to make it happen.

3. Lack of commitment. Many times we set a goal because it just seems like it should be completed or someone else thinks we should do it. Think of all those fitness and weight loss goals that start strong and fail by the end of January. It seemed like a good idea but we really were not committed to it.

4. Goals that do not inspire. Goals should excite you. Plain vanilla goals usually never get off the ground. Set your goals high – goals that have a WOW factor.

5. Loss of focus. Goals tend to get lost in the mundane issues we face every day. Keep your goals visible. Write them down and post them where you can see them every day. Create a photo album of things that represent your goals. Make it your screen saver or the background on your computer screen. What you see clearly gets accomplished.

6. Goals are not positively focused. All goals should be written with a positive focus. We are drawn to things positive and repulsed from things negative. Refocus negatively written goals to highlight the positive when they are achieved.

7. Goals are not SMART. SMART goals are those that are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and timely. SMART goals tend to give you a laser focus and keep you on track.

While avoiding these 7 mistakes will not guarantee your success, they will greatly improve your results for the coming year.

Improve your goal setting techniques with a free copy of the SMART Goal worksheet by sending an email to: smart@thecoachacademy.com

Dr. Dennis Hocker is an internationally recognized expert in helping executive coaches and business advisors better serve their clients. He is co-founder of TheCoachAcademy.com which provides specialized training to coaches around the world

How to Set a Goal Worthy of YOU!

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Set Goals Worthy of Yourself

Set Goals Worthy of Yourself

I have learned a lot about setting goals over the past 17 years studying in the personal development industry. Some goals I have attained and others I have not. It was not until I was coached myself by my mentor that I truly understood that there is a way to set goals and a mindset that guarantees your success in achieving them.

 

First we have to understand that people set goals 3 ways:

1)    They set goals based on what they know they can achieve

2)    They set goals based on what they think they can achieve

3)    They set goals based on what they want and don’t know how they will achieve it

The first two ways are logical thinking, circumstance driven and combine the what with the how. In the third way, there is no how, there is only the what. In setting goals there is only one golden rule: you should never mix the what with the how.

Michelangelo, the painter said that “you should not be afraid to set goals so high that you may never achieve them, but of setting them so low that you always do.”

You see, there is no stretching, no reaching, no faith and no passion involved in the first two ways. It is the same reason why people who set a goal to lose 50 pounds make it, and people who set a goal to lose 5 pounds never do. It is because the goal was too easy, too reachable and too close to where you started. It goes against our logical thinking, but the greater the goal, the greater the chances of achieving it.

When you set a goal and you have no idea how you will achieve it, there is a certain amount of tension like when a rubber band is stretched to its maximum. When it snaps back, it snaps back so much faster than another rubber band that is barely stretched. This is creative tension and is necessary because creativity is where all the passion, love, and inspiration come together into visible manifestation. When the goal is so far from your starting point, and so high that you have to stretch to get it, you develop passion and faith. Your mind starts to work in ways it hasn’t had to before. Your excitement is an energy that magnetizes and aligns you with all the people, events and resources necessary to get what you want.

Set goals that are worthy of you. Your time here passes anyway whether you go for those big dreams or go for those 5 little pounds. You will find that if you do go for your dreams, those 5 pounds will melt off in the process.

My mentor always says: When you finally reach your goals, you will find it is not the goal itself that was as important as who you have become in the process of attaining it.

 

Who do you want to become?

Give Your GMail a Makeover for 2009

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gmail-themes

We use Gmail everyday, do you get bored with the look of Gmail? Would you like to have a new fresh look for your Gmail? Gmail fans have been building unofficial extensions to spice up their inboxes for a while, but up til now themes haven’t been an integral part of Gmail.

Google wanted to go beyond simple color customization, so out of the 30 odd themes, there’s a shiny theme with chrome styling, another one that turns your inbox into a retro notepad, nature themes that change scenery over time, weather driven themes that can rain on your mailbox, and fun characters to keep you in good company. There’s even an old school ascii theme (Terminal) which was the result of a bet between two engineers — it’s not exactly practical, but it’s great for testing out your geek cred.

To customize your inbox, go to the Themes tab under Settings. They will be rolling out themes to everyone over the next couple of days, so if you don’t see them yet, you probably need to wait a bit. Please feel free to tell us which one you like most..

The Top 7 Reasons Why Goals Are Not Achieved

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skitched-20081214-012049.jpg
Uploaded with plasq‘s Skitch!

It is that time of year again when we reflect on what we had hoped to accomplish in the past year and what we plan to accomplish in the next. Most times we look back and realize that we did not quite measure up to our hopes and dreams. As a business advisor and executive coach I have found that people tend to make the same mistakes when setting goals for both their business and personal lives:

1. Goals do not support your life or business main purpose. Put another way, the goal is not aligned with what you are trying to accomplish. It has been said that the two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you discover why! Make sure your goals support your reason for being.

2. Lack of continual action. Goals usually die from inactivity. Make sure you take one positive step towards your goals every day. Make it part of your to-do list and schedule time to make it happen.

3. Lack of commitment. Many times we set a goal because it just seems like it should be completed or someone else thinks we should do it. Think of all those fitness and weight loss goals that start strong and fail by the end of January. It seemed like a good idea but we really were not committed to it.

4. Goals that do not inspire. Goals should excite you. Plain vanilla goals usually never get off the ground. Set your goals high – goals that have a WOW factor.

5. Loss of focus. Goals tend to get lost in the mundane issues we face every day. Keep your goals visible. Write them down and post them where you can see them every day. Create a photo album of things that represent your goals. Make it your screen saver or the background on your computer screen. What you see clearly gets accomplished.

6. Goals are not positively focused. All goals should be written with a positive focus. We are drawn to things positive and repulsed from things negative. Refocus negatively written goals to highlight the positive when they are achieved.

7. Goals are not SMART. SMART goals are those that are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and timely. SMART goals tend to give you a laser focus and keep you on track.

While avoiding these 7 mistakes will not guarantee your success, they will greatly improve your results for the coming year.

Improve your goal setting techniques with a free copy of the SMART Goal worksheet by sending an email to: smart@thecoachacademy.com

Dr. Dennis Hocker is an internationally recognized expert in helping executive coaches and business advisors better serve their clients. He is co-founder of TheCoachAcademy.com which provides specialized training to coaches around the world.

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