Although making resolutions to improve
your financial situation is a good thing to do at any time
of year, many people find it easier at the beginning of a
new year. Regardless of when you begin, the basics remain
the same. Here are my top ten keys to getting ahead financially.
1. Get Paid What You're Worth and Spend Less Than
You Earn
It sounds simplistic, but many people struggle with this
first basic rule. Make sure you know what your job is worth
in the marketplace, by conducting an evaluation of your skills,
productivity, job tasks, contribution to the company, and
the going rate, both inside and outside the company, for what
you do. Being underpaid even a thousand dollars a year can
have a significant cumulative effect over the course of your
working life.
No matter how much or how little you're paid, you'll never
get ahead if you spend more than you earn
2. Stick to a Budget
One of my favorite subjects: budgeting. It's not a four-letter
word. How can you know where your money is going if you don't
budget? How can you set spending and saving goals if you don't
know where your money is going? You need a budget whether
you make thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.
3. Pay Off Credit Card Debt
Credit card debt is the number one obstacle to getting ahead
financially. Those little pieces of plastic are so easy to
use, and it's so easy to forget that it's real money we're
dealing with when we whip them out to pay for a purchase,
large or small. Despite our good resolves to pay the balance
off quickly, the reality is that we often don't, and end up
paying far more for things than we would have paid if we had
used cash.
4. Contribute to a Retirement Plan
If your employer has a 401(k) plan and you don't contribute
to it, you're walking away from one of the best deals out
there. Ask your employer if they have a 401(k) plan (or similar
plan), and sign up today. If you're already contributing,
try to increase your contribution. If your employer doesn't
offer a retirement plan, consider an IRA.
5. Have a Savings Plan
You've heard it before: Pay yourself first! If you wait until
you've met all your other financial obligations before seeing
what's left over for saving, chances are you'll never have
a healthy savings account or investments. Resolve to set aside
a minimum of 5% to 10% of your salary for savings BEFORE you
start paying your bills. Better yet, have money automatically
deducted from your paycheck and deposited into a separate
account.
6. Invest!
If you're contributing to a retirement plan and a savings
account and you can still manage to put some money into other
investments, all the better.
7. Maximize Your Employment Benefits
Employment benefits like a 401(k) plan, flexible spending
accounts, medical and dental insurance, etc., are worth big
bucks. Make sure you're maximizing yours and taking advantage
of the ones that can save you money by reducing taxes or out-of-pocket
expenses.
8. Review Your Insurance Coverages
Too many people are talked into paying too much for life
and disability insurance, whether it's by adding these coverages
to car loans, buying whole-life insurance policies when term-life
makes more sense, or buying life insurance when you have no
dependents. On the other hand, it's important that you have
enough insurance to protect your dependents and your income
in the case of death or disability.
9. Update Your Will
70% of Americans don't have a will. If you have dependents,
no matter how little or how much you own, you need a will.
If your situation isn't too complicated you can even do your
own with software like WillMaker from Nolo Press. Protect
your loved ones. Write a will.
10. Keep Good Records
If you don't keep good records, you're probably not claiming
all your allowable income tax deductions and credits. Set
up a system now and use it all year. It's much easier than
scrambling to find everything at tax time, only to miss items
that might have saved you money.
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