Organize Your Finances - Thinking Outside The (Shoe) Box

Written by Leo J Quinn Jr


If you’re like most people, your personal financial records are most probably kept in less than “Good Accounting Practices” standards.

For example, stashing old ATM receipts and hanging on to a stub showing what you paid for a pack of mints two years ago (cash, of course), might be filed with your paycheck stubs, credit card statements – paid and unpaid alike – as well as a few tax forms, a stray paper clip and a penny.

Anything from an old shoebox to a toolbox would do you for this method of personal financial tracking but you can do better than that.

Not to worry. Here’s how:

1) Plan for a few hours of “alone time” with your financial records. This is a dandy time to packrepparttar kids off torepparttar 111722 mall, put up a pot of excellent coffee and a little snack (preferably chocolate), as a treat when you’re done.

2) Supply yourself with ample space, such as a large dining room table. Make sure you have enough organizing supplies close at hand: sticky notes, file folders, a tub to hold them with hanging file folders, large envelopes, a check file, ring binder/s and a three-hole punch if you like, an open stacking file, and an organizer/sorter. A trash can by your side is a must.

3) Get everything from everyplace – shoe boxes, check files, file folders, etc. 4) While enjoying your cup of coffee, make a game plan. Decide what you’re going to put where: e.g., checks and statements go in a specific file for checks and statements, credit card statements can be unfolded and placed in a file folder, etc.

5) Start sorting onrepparttar 111723 table. Checks go here, ATM receipts go there, paycheck stubs go over there, paid bills go onrepparttar 111724 other side, etc. until allrepparttar 111725 “stuff” is divided into neatly organized piles. Use sticky notes to mark what-goes-where onrepparttar 111726 table to avoid confusion.

How To Get An Instant Pay Raise

Written by Leo J Quinn Jr


As a gentleman was leaving my class recently, he wanted me to clarify something I had said. He was making sure that he should take his four or five thousand dollar tax refund and pay off debt.

I was stunned. This money represented $400-$500 that could have been in his pocket every month. A survey of my friends this week revealed one who was getting back $2800 and one getting $3300 back this year.

Getting a large tax refund (over $500) means you are having too much money withheld from your check every pay period.

Many people use this as a forced saving plan and it does not make any sense. You are loaningrepparttar government YOUR money, interest free. Every $1200 in refund is an extra $100 per month you could have used to eliminate debt or invest for your future.

I 'd venture to say that most people who do get large refunds could use this money every month to ease their debt burden. This burden frequently leads to late charges and higher interest rates. Instead, they likerepparttar 111721 feeling of getting that big check inrepparttar 111722 mail and figuring out how to spend that chunk of money.

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