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Other Added - How To Simplify Your Living Expenses
Hate Your Job? Here's How It Often Leads to Getting Fired may use. Be careful not to get the lowest plan. Constant overages are very expensive overall.Ever been fired and it was a complete surprise? If you have, it shouldn’t have been. You missed the cues. Whether you created it or the company decided it, you lost control of your career. Frequently those two are intertwined, and if you don’t dissect the experience, you may recreate it.A Gallup poll found that 77% of Americans hate their jobs. To me, that’s not a surprising discovery because most people, before they begin their job hunt, don’t do the examination to learn what their perfect job is. And after a few years -- or sooner – disillusion and distaste set in. This, combined with fear of change, creates what they wanted: to be outta that lousy place. In other words, if you don’t tune in, you’ll tune out, and then you’ll be gone.Do you dread Monday mornings? Do you frequently disappear into your office grumbling about your stupid boss? If you’ve lost respect and enthusiasm for your company, your atti You don't necessarily need a home phone if you have a cell phone. With free nights, weekends and long distance, you may save considerably. Be careful with phone plans that have low rates, because the taxes add significantly to the bill. For your Internet connection, you don't have to get the highest rate of connection speed. For the average user, you won't be able to tell the difference and that can save you $20 a month. If you switch to broadband, don't keep your dialup (unless you travel often outside the country or in rural areas). Also, drop paying for AOL. All AOL features are free if you have broadband. Entertainment If you really wanted to be extreme about it, you could cut ente Can I Make My Site a 'Make Money Web Site'? Here's the thing: I'm a New Yorker. And in New York, it is amazingly difficult NOT to spend a lot of money, just on the basics! As a student of Harv Eker, I am trying to limit my expenses to 50% of my after-tax income, and I have to tell you, that is really hard to do. Harv isn't the only one to suggest this either: almost every money-management guru gives the same advice. Simplify your expenses.So you have a website, it has traffic but you don’t know how to monetize it right? there are a lot of things you can do like building a list for later use, joining an affiliate program etc - but the simplest way to turn your site into a ‘make money web site’ is to join Pay-per-click (PPC) networks. Pay-per-click services have different sources but the most popular would be Google Adsense; a good thing about PPC networks is that the advertiser is given freedom to choose the type and placement of advertisement in his/her website. You can still have control over your website design and monetization model, since you can pick the high paying Pay-per-click ads available if they think your site can provide them with the traffic they need. It is not difficult to do a ‘make money web site’ it just takes time, valuable content and registrations with the PPC networks. Why is PPC a good way to build a ‘make mon The fact is, if you want to become financially free, you must do two things: increase your passive income and decrease your expenses. Once your passive income is equal to or greater than your expenses, you are financially free. The concept is simple enough -- and in other articles I address creating passive income (the easiest and fastest way to do this would be by renting your rooms). But how do you simplify your expenses? Especially when you look around and you don't see a way HOW? Here are a variety of ways you can still live a decent life and be a bit more frugal at the same time. Food & Toiletries By far, making lunch at home was one of my biggest savings! I made lunch and snacks and bought them to work. Instead of buying shower gel, go back to soap bars. They last longer and are much cheaper. Don't wash your hair every day, and when you do wash your hair, only wash it once. That saves lots of shampoo. I made my own coffee at home -- or cut it out altogether and put that money aside in your financial freedom jar. One guru calls that the "latte factor." As a nation, we eat out a whole lot more and buy convenience foods to just heat in the microwave -- but these can be expensive. Cooking may take time, but it does save you lots of money. Buy generic! I was so opposed to this, and one day I ate some potato chips that my boyfriend bought. Seriously? They didn't taste different from the name brand. Try it. Ok, some things may be non-negotiable, but you'd be surprised what is. Your grocery bill will go way down. Take the effort to cut coupons, take advantage of sales, and go to discount warehouses, like Sam's Club or Costco. Heat & Electricity If you don't already have one, get an electric thermostat with a timer, so you can change the temperature automatically during specific times of the day. Lower the temperature when the family is out of the house. Use space heaters and lower the heat in the rooms you use. Use an electric blanket at night. There is plastic covering you can get at the hardware store and cover your windows. That keeps the heat in the house. Make sure your boiler and hot water heater are maintained properly. Wear layers of clothing and keep the heat lower. Use kitchen and bathroom vents sparingly in the winter Replace regular light bulbs with compact fluorescents Wash laundry in cold or warm instead of hot Use a clothesline instead of using the dryer Use a ceiling fan instead of an air conditioner. Cell Phones, Internet, and Communication Utilities Avoid pre-paid cell phones, even if you just want the phone for emergencies, unless you are careful to use a plan with minutes that don't expire. You pay exorbitant rates per minute. Never underestimate the minutes your teen may use. Be careful not to get the lowest plan. Constant overages are very expensive overall. You don't necessarily need a home phone if you have a cell phone. With free nights, weekends and long distance, you may save considerably. Be careful with phone plans that have low rates, because the taxes add significantly to the bill. For your Internet connection, you don't have to get the highest rate of connection speed. For the average user, you won't be able to tell the difference and that can save you $20 a month. If you switch to broadband, don't keep your dialup (unless you travel often outside the country or in rural areas). Also, drop paying for AOL. All AOL features are free if you have broadband. Entertainment If you really wanted to be extreme about it, you could cut enter Preparing For Disaster Recovery your expenses? Especially when you look around and you don't see a way HOW? Here are a variety of ways you can still live a decent life and be a bit more frugal at the same time.Disasters can happen any time and anywhere. Chemical spillage from overturned truck, power outages, brownouts or surges, windstorms, tornadoes and earthquakes can affect your business adversely. Prepare your employees and clients to respond to any possible disaster in advance by providing training and safety information. No business should operate without a disaster plan or back-up systems. Develop risk or contingency management plans, considering, human resources, physical resources and business continuity.Building a Plan:• Keep phone lists of key employees and customers handy with copies of the same to key staff members.• Designate and provide one remote number on your office voice mail system to record messages for employees.• Have programmed call forwarding for main business lines. If you cannot get to office, call in and reprogram phones to ring elsewhere.• Install emergency lights that tur Food & Toiletries By far, making lunch at home was one of my biggest savings! I made lunch and snacks and bought them to work. Instead of buying shower gel, go back to soap bars. They last longer and are much cheaper. Don't wash your hair every day, and when you do wash your hair, only wash it once. That saves lots of shampoo. I made my own coffee at home -- or cut it out altogether and put that money aside in your financial freedom jar. One guru calls that the "latte factor." As a nation, we eat out a whole lot more and buy convenience foods to just heat in the microwave -- but these can be expensive. Cooking may take time, but it does save you lots of money. Buy generic! I was so opposed to this, and one day I ate some potato chips that my boyfriend bought. Seriously? They didn't taste different from the name brand. Try it. Ok, some things may be non-negotiable, but you'd be surprised what is. Your grocery bill will go way down. Take the effort to cut coupons, take advantage of sales, and go to discount warehouses, like Sam's Club or Costco. Heat & Electricity If you don't already have one, get an electric thermostat with a timer, so you can change the temperature automatically during specific times of the day. Lower the temperature when the family is out of the house. Use space heaters and lower the heat in the rooms you use. Use an electric blanket at night. There is plastic covering you can get at the hardware store and cover your windows. That keeps the heat in the house. Make sure your boiler and hot water heater are maintained properly. Wear layers of clothing and keep the heat lower. Use kitchen and bathroom vents sparingly in the winter Replace regular light bulbs with compact fluorescents Wash laundry in cold or warm instead of hot Use a clothesline instead of using the dryer Use a ceiling fan instead of an air conditioner. Cell Phones, Internet, and Communication Utilities Avoid pre-paid cell phones, even if you just want the phone for emergencies, unless you are careful to use a plan with minutes that don't expire. You pay exorbitant rates per minute. Never underestimate the minutes your teen may use. Be careful not to get the lowest plan. Constant overages are very expensive overall. You don't necessarily need a home phone if you have a cell phone. With free nights, weekends and long distance, you may save considerably. Be careful with phone plans that have low rates, because the taxes add significantly to the bill. For your Internet connection, you don't have to get the highest rate of connection speed. For the average user, you won't be able to tell the difference and that can save you $20 a month. If you switch to broadband, don't keep your dialup (unless you travel often outside the country or in rural areas). Also, drop paying for AOL. All AOL features are free if you have broadband. Entertainment If you really wanted to be extreme about it, you could cut ente Networking to Success ensive. Cooking may take time, but it does save you lots of money.It was an awesome sight to wake up in the morning after a nice long sleep to find sign ups to your business. But, less then a month down the road, they were OUT!Your head spinned around and around. What happened? Where did they go?Well, let me tell you this:TEAM WORK MAKES THE DREAM WORK! Heard that before? It is true!If you are not networking with your sign ups and working together as a TEAM, they will split!Make sure that your Team knows that yuo are there for them and so is the upline.I was involved with so many programs and never got a call from my sponsor or upline. I gave it a go and tried to become successful. But, when it came down to staying or going, I had no ties to staying.Get the picture? I did not for a long time!Now, if I had someone who showed me they cared, was there for my questions and was really working with me directly, I would of felt that I had Buy generic! I was so opposed to this, and one day I ate some potato chips that my boyfriend bought. Seriously? They didn't taste different from the name brand. Try it. Ok, some things may be non-negotiable, but you'd be surprised what is. Your grocery bill will go way down. Take the effort to cut coupons, take advantage of sales, and go to discount warehouses, like Sam's Club or Costco. Heat & Electricity If you don't already have one, get an electric thermostat with a timer, so you can change the temperature automatically during specific times of the day. Lower the temperature when the family is out of the house. Use space heaters and lower the heat in the rooms you use. Use an electric blanket at night. There is plastic covering you can get at the hardware store and cover your windows. That keeps the heat in the house. Make sure your boiler and hot water heater are maintained properly. Wear layers of clothing and keep the heat lower. Use kitchen and bathroom vents sparingly in the winter Replace regular light bulbs with compact fluorescents Wash laundry in cold or warm instead of hot Use a clothesline instead of using the dryer Use a ceiling fan instead of an air conditioner. Cell Phones, Internet, and Communication Utilities Avoid pre-paid cell phones, even if you just want the phone for emergencies, unless you are careful to use a plan with minutes that don't expire. You pay exorbitant rates per minute. Never underestimate the minutes your teen may use. Be careful not to get the lowest plan. Constant overages are very expensive overall. You don't necessarily need a home phone if you have a cell phone. With free nights, weekends and long distance, you may save considerably. Be careful with phone plans that have low rates, because the taxes add significantly to the bill. For your Internet connection, you don't have to get the highest rate of connection speed. For the average user, you won't be able to tell the difference and that can save you $20 a month. If you switch to broadband, don't keep your dialup (unless you travel often outside the country or in rural areas). Also, drop paying for AOL. All AOL features are free if you have broadband. Entertainment If you really wanted to be extreme about it, you could cut ente Using The Cell And The Ps3 For A Venture Capital Moneymaker There is plastic covering you can get at the hardware store and cover your windows. That keeps the heat in the house.Internet cafes, video gaming dens, and coffee shops have one thing in common - a social area for people to come, enjoy each other's company and either watch or play games to pass time. Why not combine the elements with the newest next-gen console into a gaming haven where people can play, enjoy company, and see the best the Console world has to offer.What you'd need...2500 to 3000 sq foot area separated into a playing area and a cafe area. Estimate 250 sq ft for each play area.The play areas need to be separated into long trapezoidal shapes with the PS3 and a large screen TV such as an HDTV or LCD display set up at the narrow end. If you are grouping multiple PS3 units together, set up the play areas in a hexagonal shape with the PS3 units at the center, and the doors to the play areas on the outside.Each play area needs to be framed in glass, preferably safety glass such as you'd find in schools with Make sure your boiler and hot water heater are maintained properly. Wear layers of clothing and keep the heat lower. Use kitchen and bathroom vents sparingly in the winter Replace regular light bulbs with compact fluorescents Wash laundry in cold or warm instead of hot Use a clothesline instead of using the dryer Use a ceiling fan instead of an air conditioner. Cell Phones, Internet, and Communication Utilities Avoid pre-paid cell phones, even if you just want the phone for emergencies, unless you are careful to use a plan with minutes that don't expire. You pay exorbitant rates per minute. Never underestimate the minutes your teen may use. Be careful not to get the lowest plan. Constant overages are very expensive overall. You don't necessarily need a home phone if you have a cell phone. With free nights, weekends and long distance, you may save considerably. Be careful with phone plans that have low rates, because the taxes add significantly to the bill. For your Internet connection, you don't have to get the highest rate of connection speed. For the average user, you won't be able to tell the difference and that can save you $20 a month. If you switch to broadband, don't keep your dialup (unless you travel often outside the country or in rural areas). Also, drop paying for AOL. All AOL features are free if you have broadband. Entertainment If you really wanted to be extreme about it, you could cut ente Avoiding a Financial Crisis - How to Keep Your Small Business Alive may use. Be careful not to get the lowest plan. Constant overages are very expensive overall.Having a superb product, soaring sales and stupendous customer service are undoubtedly some of the things which go into making a successful business. But all of this is irrelevant if you suffer a financial crisis. Without a sound stable financial position the slightest shock can be enough to send your business crashing to the ground.So what can you do to ensure that all your hard work is not in vain? What can you do to make sure that a financial crisis doesn’t rock the boat or even sink it? Let’s take a look at what can cause these jolts and, more importantly, what you can do about it.Poor Record Keeping and AdministrationBusiness owners are usually not good record or bookkeepers! People who start businesses are the ones who have great ideas, see a gap in the market or have the personality to sell anything. They are not people who jump out of bed in the morning and say “Great, it’s a VAT and paperwork You don't necessarily need a home phone if you have a cell phone. With free nights, weekends and long distance, you may save considerably. Be careful with phone plans that have low rates, because the taxes add significantly to the bill. For your Internet connection, you don't have to get the highest rate of connection speed. For the average user, you won't be able to tell the difference and that can save you $20 a month. If you switch to broadband, don't keep your dialup (unless you travel often outside the country or in rural areas). Also, drop paying for AOL. All AOL features are free if you have broadband. Entertainment If you really wanted to be extreme about it, you could cut entertainment out altogether. But that's not really practical, so here are some ideas. First, if you think FREE, you may not get free, but you do end up with "cheap." Cheap doesn't mean less fun, either. Sometimes you can have MORE fun. If you live in a city, just try walking around. In New York, I have found impromptu concerts by street musicians or just sat in the park and people watched. You'd be amazed how much fun you can have! Instead of eating out or going to bars with friends, host a potluck at home or just have friends over for drinks. It's much cheaper to buy liquor than to buy drinks at the bar. For movies, go to matinees or the $2 movie (some communities have them). Yes, those movies are second-run, but hey, it's worth financial freedom to me. You can also always rent movies. Cable. When times are tough, the cable needs to get going. It can get so expensive! If you do need it for the reception, get basic and then rent movies. Buying a great DVD player and renting movies is cheaper than cable in the long run. If you rent rooms in your home like I do, keep the cable -- it's a perk for your tenants that are worth paying for. Take your kids to the bookstore and hang out. Find free community shows, like Shakespeare in the park or fireworks. Take the kids on the subway trip -- as far as you can and go explore. In New York, take the train to Coney Island. In the summer, there is always a local food festival or street fair. Get your kids involved in a community group, like a theatre. They develop skills, make friends and have fun. Clothing For kids, don't go over the top with the brand names, especially since the kids will grow out of them quickly. For adults and older teens, don't buy really trendy clothes that will only last one season. Buy classical fashionable clothing that will last, and get trendy with accessories. Buy shirts and ties or blouses and just one suit -- accessorizing is cheaper. Buy a few pieces of quality clothing as opposed to lots of cheap clothing. They will last a lot longer. This goes without saying, but buy clothing in the off-season and on sale. You will save a tone of money. Transportation A gas saving tip I just learned: put your car in cruise control whenever you can. It has cut my gas bill in HALF. If you live in a metropolitan area, try walking around the city as opposed to taking a bus or a train. In New York, you can even get there faster sometimes! :-) Maintain your car -- tire pressure, oil changes, everything. Preventative maintenance is way cheaper than repairs. Never use cheap gas - use quality gas and the correct octane for your car. It may seem more expensive, but it's cheaper in car repairs in the long run. Don't be afraid to walk, even in the winter. It's great exercise and it saves a ton of money. Bring a backpack with you for grocery shopping if you need only a couple of things. The Change Jar I have a change jar. Every time I pay for something, I always use bills and get the change. I put the change in the jar. You wouldn't believe how much money you can save! This money could be entertainment money, allowance for the kids
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