Step1
Read a Variety of Financial Books:
I mainly mean books in the personal finance and business section of retail bookstores, and not just theory-based textbooks. Different authors have different advice, and most likely after reading several books you'll find a few that "click" with you. Probably the three top authors I really like are Dave Ramsey, Robert Kiyosaki, and Dan Miller. I read other authors as well, and after several years of this my whole concept of money has changed for the better.
Be willing to keep a open mind however. For example, the first time I ready Robert Kiyosaki's "Rich Dad, Poor Dad," I honestly thought he was a little nutty. The second time I read it, it made a lot more sense. One of the bad "side-effects" of a college education if you're not careful is an arrogant attitude toward new ideas, and I had to keep myself in check when I first started looking into this topic.
Step2
Create a Budget and Manage Your Expenses:
The mention of this used to make me cringe because I'm definitely not the spreadsheet type. The thing is however is most people don't know when and where they're losing money without having some way of keeping track of it all. The simpler you can make it, the more likely you'll follow it. If you're married, it also helps you work together and start having common financial goals. It makes your relationship better and reduces a lot of common financial stresses. Taking the time to do this is just smart.
Along the way, you'll naturally find things you can probably change. The good thing is sometimes just being aware of a potential problem will go a long way in helping you solve it.
Step3
Develop a Plan to Quit Getting Into Debt and Pay Off Existing Debt:
For a long time, I really did think that debt was required to function financially in society. The funny thing is however that the more debt my husband and I have paid off, the more money seems to flow into our lives. This is why it's important to not skip reading advice from other people with experience. It's hard to get out of debt without a system or plan of doing it.
Step4
Look at Ways to Diversify Your Income:
For Generations X, Y, and younger, we need to factor in the fact that the work world is completely different from what our parents and grandparents experienced. The problem is schools have not really changed to train students what to really expect. We're mostly still taught to pick one career and completely stake our future on it. What often happens with people is they will major in college for one thing and end up doing something totally different. It doesn't make going to college a bad thing, but that situation needs to be factored in upfront.
By "diversifying your career," I'm borrowing the investing concept of spreading our your investments to decrease your risk. If you literally spread out your career across a job and one or more side careers, you decrease your risk of a corporate layoff or downsizing from ruining your finances. If you're willing to do this, you really do have an advantage over people who stake everything on their jobs.
Step5
Use All the Previous to Develop a Long-Term Plan:
Your finances are going to change at different stages in your life, so you'll have to adapt your plans to fit your current situation. The overall principles will generally stay the same, but you may have to juggle certain aspects of your finances to make them work as efficiently as possible.
Comments
MidniteWriter said
on 2/13/2008 I couldn't agree more. Education is key and your article helps with this. Money does not have to be irrelevant, no matter how much or little you have you can manage it well.
MrBB said
on 2/7/2008 This is an excellent article. I think schools are now starting to do a better job of teaching financial concepts but it should be a manditory part of every curriculum. It's nice to know the square root of 1849 or how to find the kidneys in a fetal pig. But its a just as important, if not more, to know the details of things like revolving debt and variable interest rates.