How To Save Money Fast

Putting aside money each month for an emergency is a smart thing to do, but sometimes something can come up last minute for which you need money right away. Or, you suddenly realize that a looming expense, such as college or a new car, is here, or arriving very soon. If you need to know how to save money fast, here are a few ideas to get that nest egg started or growing within thirty to sixty days.

Two Ways To Save

There are only two ways to save. Spend less than you bring in, and bring in more than you spend. Many people focus on the first more than the second, but if you can do both at the same time, you will make money fast as well as save money quickly.

Start With A Budget

Everyone loves to hate budgeting, but it’s truly the only way you can control what you’re spending. You need to allocate the money you have coming in, and see where you can cut. Don’t make it into a huge project, but take an hour or two on a weekend to make a list of everything you spend. Give it a category – shelter, clothing, food, fuel, utilities, insurance, medical expenses and miscellaneous are good broad categories. Then look to see where you are spending more than you need to, and cut there. Can you reduce your cable or phone plan? Can you turn down your thermostat to cut electricity? Can you take $100 off your food spending by cutting out fast food or junk food? Making meals at home, switching to one vegetarian meal per week can help cut your food bills.

Start Saving The Right Way

You need to open a savings account that you can’t easily withdraw money from. Stop in a local savings bank and open an account. You may be able to get a debit card that you can use only for deposits and not withdrawals – you don’t want to carry around plastic you can use to buy things with. Many banks still offer passbook or statement savings – you don’t have to get the debit card!

Each week when you come in under budget, put the extra into the savings account. Each time you skip an impulse purchase, add that amount to savings. If you don’t want to go there every day, keep a jar at home where you put the extra money, so you can see how much you’re saving. Or, you can open an online savings account with many banks, such as ING, and transfer the money you’re saving from your checking account. Some investment companies, like TD Ameritrade, also have money market accounts you can open for little or no fee per month, with no minimum balances. Look for their Suze Orman account which offers bonuses and promotions if you open with $100. This way you can also invest your money.

Earn More Than You Spend

By now, you should have at least an extra $25-50 per week you’ve been able to cut from your budget. If you’re really good at cutting, then you may be saving even more. But the way to boost your savings is to find more money to put into the account. How can you make fast cash to save more?

The easiest way is to sell some stuff you have around the house. Everyone has things they can get rid of in a yard sale or on eBay. Old furniture, CDs, computer parts, clothing in good condition, kid’s toys, electronics and appliances – the list is endless. You can make a few hundred dollars at a well-planned yard sale or garage sale. Smaller items that are easier to ship might get more if you sell at an online auction. be sure the cash you earn goes right into savings.

You can also get a part time job, or work online. While jobs are tight right now, part time minimum wage jobs are out there. All the money from such a job should again, go right into savings. If you want to work online, you can find online businesses who need writers or other freelance workers at sites like TextBroker, or Get-A-Freelancer or Rent-A-Coder. If you can write a letter to a friend, you can make extra cash writing for web site owners.

Put Away $500 This Month

If you’re really diligent, and willing to eat cheaply for a month, willing to forego the manicures and the car washes and the dinners at the fast food place, and if you hold a yard sale or garage sale and become a selling whirlwind on eBay, you can make $500 extra this month. Set that as your goal, and find a way to meet it. Open your new savings-only account, and get started. Once you have a nice chunk of money, find ways to keep saving (keep reading this blog!) and learn to invest your money – there are places to invest with just a little cash to start. Watch as the savings you have continues to safely grow at a good rate of return. Soon you’ll have that nest egg built up as well as your wealth-building mentality, to last for a long time.

Don’t Fear The Depression

It seems like a lot of people are concerned about how to save money in a depression, or how to protect what they have in the near term. I’m getting queries like “moving to the country to survive a depression” and “How to earn money in a depression”.

You have to remember, when we think of what we might face in terms of a depression, that we know very little of true depressions (hardly anything in personal experience terms). In the 1930′s, the depression hurt a lot of people because there was no social security safety net, no unemployment benefits, no welfare and food stamps. It was because of that lack that these safety net programs where instituted.

In addition, it’s well known that Herbert Hoover let the depression sink in because he refused to spend any more. Guess where we’d be if some conservatives had their way? Why would they want to repeat the mistakes of Hoover? True, we are building up a huge financial deficit. But there could be – could be – growth to get us out of it, if all goes according to Obama’s plan.

Nevertheless – if a family faces job loss or downsizing, foreclosure, if big banks fail and consumers hunker down and stop spending, we could be in for some tough economic times. Yet I tend to see this as a step on a path to a new way of thinking about how we live – just like social programs resulted from the Great Depression of the 1930′s.

Here’s where things could go, IMHO. We could start learning to live with less money. OK, after we default on our homes and credit cards, we learn that we don’t need all the latest doo dads to keep us happy. We plant gardens. We keep the cars we have running. We barter and trade with our neighbors – lawn cutting for piano lessons or something. We turn to our communities for swap meets and recipe trades and getting back to basics. We start to be creative again, not just consumers of someone else’s creativity, that is, we bake and cook instead of going out; we play games and go for walks instead of spending hundreds a month on cable; we go to the movie at the town hall with our blanket and picnic instead of paying $50 or more at the theater. We take a composting class or a bike repair course and learn a new language with friends.

We find that we don’t need the things we have been conditioned to buy. We find that yes, if we save instead of spend, we put some people out of work, but we reach out to those people and help them become useful in other capacities. We learn that this too is just a phase, on our way to a more sustainable, friendlier, less consumption driven lifestyle, where there wasn’t much substance behind all that garbage.

My feeling is you’d do better in a community, not the country, where people can share and educate and lend and play and work together to make things work. You are not well served by harboring fear or complacency, but rather we can do so much better by harnessing the same “we can do it” strength that we felt after 9/11. We are facing difficulty as a country, not alone, but together, and only with constructive effort and creativity – not fear-mongering and ignorance and infighting – will be succeed and build something better out of our challenges.

And believe me – there are going to be amazing investment opportunities. I’ll be posting some of those to keep a watch on in the coming weeks and months.

How To Slash Your High Electricity Bill

Seeing your sky high electric bill these days is almost enough to cause a heart attack. You may have tried everything you can think of to save on electricity back but still can’t get the numbers low enough. There may be additional electricty saving steps you can take to reduce your use that you haven’t come across. Finding new ways to conserve energy can be easy, but it will take the effort of your entire family. here are a few ideas:

1. Reduce your heating or cooling needs. In summer, raise your thermostat setting above 80 degrees, and use fans, both the ceiling and floor fans. They help stir the air and add to comfort. Be sure the ceiling fan is circulating air down, not up. In winter, up is fine when you want to move warm air from the ceiling down to the floor level. Using a fan can save more than $600 per year.

2. When you’re not home, turn off the air conditioning. The constant running means it’s working harder. You can raise the temp so it doesn’t run all day, and turn it back on when you get home.

3. Be sure to keep your air conditioner’s filter clean by cleaning it at least once a month. A dirty filter will make your AC work less efficiently and that requires more power. Be sure to also Clean registers in all rooms as well as the intake register. Close the registers in all rooms not in regular use. And speaking of clean, you can take a cool shower just before bed to help you feel cooler.

4. Cover your outside condenser with shade, and you can save up to 10% on electric. Just make sure shrubs or grass don’t block the unit’s air flow.

5. Examine your ducts for leaks. Older ductwork can leak more. In the attic, check how hot it is there. Use insulation to save up to 40% of colling power. You might also consider installing an attic fan, since by reducing your attic temperature by just 10 degrees, you can save as much as 10% on your electric bill.

5. Put compact fluorescent light bulbs everywhere you can. An old-fashioned incandescent light is just a mini heater that emits light. Fluorescent bulbs are cooler, and more popular than ever as money savers, so prices are coming down. They give off only 10% heat for 90% light compared to incandescent.

6. Paint your home a light color on the exterior, to reflect heat. Dark paint absorbs up to 20% more heat thereby increasing cooling needs.

7. Watch your appliance use. Use full loads in the dishwasher and laundry, or air dry clothing on a clothesline in good weather. You can also air-dry dishes the old fashioned way, and skip the high-power heated drying cycle. Also, replace old appliances with Energy Star, which use much less electricity.

8. Consider a tankless water heater. Traditional water heaters keep water heated all day long regardless of use, but a tankless heater heats water only as you need it. This can save as much as 25% to 50% of your utility bills!

9. An obvious one is to turn off electric appliances, electronics and other power hogs when not in use. Even when plugged in, “ghost load” power that keeps LED clocks and fast-on switch powered costs as much as 10-15% extra.

By saving just a few watts of electricity here and there it can really add up, plus you can see your success immediately right in your monthly bill! Make it a goal to cut your bills by 20%, and see if you can’t do that with simple changes. Saving energy helps you save money, and that’s something you can really bank on.

Making Money at Home In A Tough Economy

When the financial times get rough, everyone looks for new ways to make income. On this blog, we talk about Saving Cash, but that also means making more so youchave more to save.

A majority of Americans are insecure about their jobs right now, and rightfully so. The way to feel a little more secure is if you cut yoru costs, save the money, and also find ways to make more money and save that too. You can get a second job, possibly, but there are also options for working at home to make extra money.

Of course, nearly everyone would love to make a lot of money at home, be their own boss, and sit back and bank the dollars. Well, it just doesn’t work that way. But if you spend some time learning about what options are out there to make money from home, within three to six months, you could be putting aside a coupel hundred dollars a month. That’s a car payment, or at least some nice extra savings!

There are always plenty of scams too. Buying expensive courses is also not necessary. Here are a couple options for getting started making some cash at home, without any investment up front.

1. Sell your own stuff on EBay or Craig’s List. This is a classic, and believe it or not, people are still buying on ebay too! So, get rid of you junk, or offer to sell other people’s stuff, Ebay has excellent tutorials, and if you sell enough you might consider opening a store.

2. Sell other companies’ goods on your website. This is called affilate marketing. You are an affiliate of a merchant, build a website, and send traffic to the merchant, for a cut of the profits. Sites like Commission Junction and Ebay Partner Network help you get started. You will need a website however, but using a free service like Squidoo helps you set up sites where you can sell all kinds of affiliate goods to your visitors.

3. You can build a free blog that earns you money when visitors click on ads. Thius type of site uses Google Adsense, where Google places the ads, and you make money when your visitors click the ads.

4. You can create and sell items through sites like CafePress.com, which also provides you with a basic website for free to sell your own designs or those of other members.

These are just three starter ideas for building a business at home that makes money. We’ll post most in a future post about where to find more information and get your business in gear. Making money at home isn’t rocket science, considering how many people are making a living at it. Spend an hour each day and you could see extra cash rolling in in no time!

New Money Saving Ideas To Use Today

As we all look for ways to save money, there are amazing places you can find new money saving ideas and put them to work in your own personal finance plan.

The important thing to remember is, you aren’t just trying to save money, you should also plan to put that money into a savings account so you are really saving you money, and not just saving here so you can spend more there! That’s not how to build wealth – you want to save and invest for true wealth.  Start with basic budgeting, and from there you build to pile of cash you have to save and invest to biuld wealth.

So where can you find the best saving money tips? Ideas are everywhere. But the bottom line is that there are really only three, just three, ways to save money: (1) spend less, (2) make more, and (3) bank the difference between your expenses and your income. That’s it – literally everything you read on the web or anywhere else about how to save money will include one or all of those three things. Once you get those ideas under your belt, you’ll be inventing great ways to save money all on your own.

Let’s talk about the first item, Spend Less. The goal here is that you should try to to spend less than you make. Think this is too hard? Have more expenses left at the end of the month than money to pay for them? Try a little experiment. Next time you head to the store, just put back one of every four things you initially want to buy. think you need the item? Try doing without, just for this trip. yo ujust saved 25% on your shopping trip! Seriously, if you think you need that jar of spaghetti sauce, for example, think about what you have at home you can still use, or what else in your cart you can use. It may be hard to do, but even if you try, you’ll see how many things you really dont’ need to buy.

Next, you’ll want to think more about making more money. We’ve posted here on this blog in the past about how to make at least a little more money at home in your spare time. But the important thing is, as you reduce your spending, and increase your income, you’ll start to see a little extra money flowing into your life. Read other posts on this blog aotu making money, to get some ideas.

Last, when you’re saving money by spending less and making more, you can put that savings into a bank account and watch it grow. It might grow slowly at first, but if yo ustart putting $25, $50 or $100 in the bank each month, as well as money yo’uve saved by spending less, and any extra money you make, this is exactly how wealth is built. This is the money you will learn to invest in the near future and start to build some financial security for your family.

Even though you might be looking for new ways to save money, there are really only old ways, but put to good use by new thinking. To have the most options, we recommend you open a no-fee brokerage account today with www.TradeKing.com
so you can then invest your savings in safe investments like CDs, money market accounts, or mutual funds with more safe investments.