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Finance Ebooks:
| | Cash In On Real Estate. |  | | How I Improved My Finances $602,620.98 In One Evening With This Amazing New Real Estate System!
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| | New! Dynacom Accounting Software - Soho. |  | | Promote Accounting Software ** 75% Profit! Make $22.46 Per Sale! Value $149 For Only $29,95. Help Entrepreneurs And Small Businesses Manage Their Finances The Easy Way! Offer A Full-featured Accounting Software. Need Help? Email Affiliates@dynacom.com.
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| | Easy MoneyPlanner - Control Your Finances. |  | | A Simple System To Plan And Project Your Monthly Expenses To Keep Yourself Out Of The Red. Little Computing Knowledge Required - Designed To Be Easily Compared With Your Bank Statement On A Regular Basis. Great For The Self-employed As Well.
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| | The Smart Startup Guide. |  | | Startup Secrets Of The Inc 500 Fastest Growing Companies. Learn How To Finance Your Startup The Way Serial Entrepreneurs Do.
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| | Banking Secrets - Revealed. |  | | Gain Total Control Of Your Finances And Stop Wasting Money. Eliminate Unnecessary Bank Fees And Get Better Rates On Loans And Savings By Following These Simple Steps.
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| | OptionSmart Picks. |  | | OptionSmart Picks: Trade Us Stock Options With The Average Return 10% Per Month! With OptionSmart As Your Guide You Dont Need To Be A Finance Expert Or Mathematician To Trade Options.
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| | Financial Planning/Money Management E-Book. |  | | This Financial Planning Manual Is More Practical In Nature Than Theoretical. Learn Powerful Money Management Techniques To Help You Take Control Of Your Personal Finances, Manage Your Money, Eliminate Your Credit Card Debt And Stay Out Of Debt!
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| | Personal Finance Software By Parcus Group. |  | | 100% Positive Customer Feedback, Take Or Improve Control Of Your Money, Learn How To Manage Finances & Invest, Increase Your Financial Intelligence, Take Care About Financial Future Of Your Family.
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Blogs & Sites:
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| [11/23/2008, 20:33] | Signs of Economic Recession: Laid Off Bloggers, Web Sites For Sale |  | Additional casualties and signs of economic recession: laid off bloggers and your favorite web sites for sale! Do you see what’s in store for you next year? Well, I’ve peeked at my crystal ball and can see the same thing you’re all seeing, an ugly 2009 as the economy continues to contract. Still no relief in sight (or maybe just a little, with Obama stepping in with a pep talk and an action plan). Still, the tremors reverberate in the blogosphere. More and more bloggers are reporting that they’ve been laid off, or are afraid that they will be. Some of the ones I know: Judging by the dates on these posts, changes have been coming fast and quick! I’ve also mentioned that TechCrunch has this layoff tracker while Gawker (the online media name that bloggers look up to ) is selling off The Consumerist, and Valleywag (what!? one less Silicon Valley blog?) and trimming its staff. You can see how the online world has been taking its hits. The trends have been reflecting reality for a while now, so when are they announcing that we’re officially in the dog house? I’ve also talked about how we’re coping with the recession in Silicon Valley, but whatever else I’ve got to say about this can fill a book. Anyway, it’s been the subject of deep conversation between me and my close friends and family these past few weeks. More Signs of Economic Recession Where I Live Just to see how widespread the financial pain is, I’ve polled the people I know for their stories and concerns — here are just a few: - A couple of people I know have been laid off in the last two weeks. These are people who work at smaller companies that are now embarking on cost cutting measures. With the VC spigot closing off, startups that aren’t solvent will be forced to cut back heavily or close down completely. Startups are living on borrowed time. These events are reminiscent of massive layoffs in Silicon Valley in 2000 during the tech bust, so it’s not new to me. I should get used to this happening every 5 to 8 years, I guess.
- Friends of mine who are consultants are experiencing delays in payments. Uh oh. They’ve done the work, but there’s some worry they’ll end up on a long list of creditors waiting to get paid.
- Too close to home! I never thought it would happen, but someone I know pretty well actually is in the process of losing their house. The story is complicated — he was a victim of a drawn out scam that got exposed by the housing downturn. And I’ve heard rumors of acquaintances going on short sales on expensive homes they purchased only a few years ago (and which I had the pleasure of visiting during house-warming parties galore way back when).
- I heard about how there are scores of luxury cars just sitting on Long Beach right now, with no takers. I got this story from a guy who’s well insulated from the crisis because he’s sitting on a huge pile of cash (he’s very conservative with his savings). Yet, he’s concerned about the effect of currency exchange on his international business.
- Some of us self-employed folks are seriously thinking of joining the many out there who’re already chasing what few jobs are around. I read that Cisco’s job listings have dropped by 93% in one week, from many thousands of openings to a trickle of a few hundred.
- I miss “happy” news. Could this be capitulation? Or close?
Break Open Your Emergency Funds For many whose lives have been viciously upturned by the forces of the economy, it sure feels that this recession isn’t “normal”. But the reality is that this is probably what a “true” recession feels like. The waves of an economic downturn are much like dealing with the effects of an impending tornado. The tornado spares some while it devastates others. You just pray it doesn’t hit your household when it comes, although you can expect it to do a number on your landscape. This has become a time of emergency for many. Our situation clearly emphasizes the importance of having enough insurance to cover ourselves when such a “disaster” hits — and when I mean insurance, I am referring to emergency funds and enough liquidity to tide you over during the storm. Does this mean we should have at least 1 years’ worth of expenses in cash? Maybe so, especially since nasty recessions can last that long! If you’ve got unemployment benefits covering you for 6 to 9 months plus a one year stash of cash, you could get through this nail-biting ride. So let’s hunker down in the basement and see if we can ignore the angry winds out there for now. I’m doing it by starting the ball rolling on some portfolio rebalancing efforts (gah!) and selling off investment losers. So let’s check what else is on the minds of our favorite financial bloggers, shall we? Notable Mentions Around The Web Recent Carnivals This is a post from The Digerati Life. 
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| [03/14/2008, 22:09] | Teen Teaches Financial Literacy to Adults |  | I freaking love this. One of the topics that I have seen frequently on the PF blogosphere is how little financial education there is for America's youth, and how that leads to poor decision making as adults. In a reversal of roles, High School Freshman and Teen Columnist, Emily Hu, writes For Adults, It's Payback Time. A brilliant nugget from Miss Hu's article: "It comes down to this: Once upon a time, when people were forced to really consider what they could afford and credit actually counted for something, people bought houses they could live in for a few years."
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| [07/04/2006, 07:20] | HSBC Savings Account @ 5.05% Interest Rate |  | Now that HSBC has raised its interest rate to 5.05% , I need to allocate any future liquid savings to HSBC instead of concentrating in Emigrant Direct. 5.05% is just too good to ignore. I would only be able to save $200/month, if that, for the next three months, due to the recent burglary and a purchase of a pair of new glasses (I'm legally blind), so I won't bee seeing a huge jump in terms of the accrued interest.
However, has anyone noticed how much of a pain accessing HSBC can be at times? Their passwords can be a pain to type in!! I still haven't been able to memorize the passwords. However, especially after the burglary, I appreciate the fact that HSBC creates long numerical passwords as well as an additional password for accessing the external link for transferrable funds (i.e. your checking account, etc.). I guess I can't have both easy accessibility AND safe security for an online savings account. |  |  |  |
| [05/27/2008, 13:07] | If You Don?t Know Where You?re Going, How Will You Know Once You?re There? |  | Do you ever sit down and think about how your life is progressing and where you’re headed? Laying out a roadmap for yourself can be a valuable experience. As the post title alludes to, if you haven’t defined your goals, how will you measure your progress towards them? Having a plan not only makes your efforts more measurable it can give the things you do more meaning and help filter out time wasters. You may have noticed I was silent on this site over the weekend, I was using the time for some strategic planning in my own life. My planning process is iterative in nature. I come up with some goals and plans to meet those goals. Then I sleep on it and re-evaluate those the next day. Looking at it with a fresh perspective, I may change around the milestones and tasks a bit. Needless to say, my planning isn’t complete but it was nice to get a start on it. Typically I would have provided a list of articles I enjoyed for the week but due to my planning I didn’t publish those. Instead, I’ll point out a few articles everyday this week, here’s the first few. – The Digerati Life lists 8 simple ways you can save a lot of money, try $1000. – The Mighty Bargain Hunter and All Financial Matters take a look at whether it’s worth your time to wait for free stuff. – Summer is here and My Dollar Plan offers some tips for saving money on weddings. – Million Dollar Journey gives us a strategy for asking for discounts. – Brip Blap loves working so much that he’s started the carnival of careers. – CNN covers how people aren’t canceling their vacation plans this summer, just changing them to be cheaper, reminds me of my series on saving money on vacations. – eHow article on how to earn extra money seems appropriate for tough economic times: - Get a part-time job
- Turn a hobby into money
- Get paid for focus groups
- Sell your stuff on eBay
I also took a look at ways to make extra money during a recession. Thanks to Money & Values and Canadian Dream for hosting the last two personal finance carnivals and including the articles Best Credit Cards for New College Graduates and Three Ways Your Boss Can Save You Money on Gas. 
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| [02/23/2006, 20:49] | The FICO score |  | FICO (rhymes with psycho) is an acronym for Fair Isaac Corporation (traded publicly under the symbol FIC) often refers to the best-known credit score in the United States which is calculated using mathematical formulae developed by this company. This score is one of the most important factors in obtaining credit in the United States. For institutions that use scores as a factor in their lending decisions, scores below certain numbers (typically set by each lender's risk management department) may result in denial of credit, or credit being offered at a higher interest rate.
Source: Wikipedia |  |  |  |
| [11/30/2008, 08:36] | Cyber Monday Tips |  |  1. Factor in S&H. A $10 memory card is a good deal until you have to pay $7 for shipping, then it’s not much of a deal at all. 2. Slow down. You have time, buying online can mean impulse purchases made on a credit card. You might regret it once the Cyber Monday hangover is over. 3. Shop by product, not by store. If you know what you want to buy, use Google to find it at the lowest price, instead of just finding the product at your favorite store. - Edwin, CashTheChecks.com |  |  |  |
| [01/11/2006, 17:59] | PaidExposure pulls a 4Daily |  | Well Aaron Bowering, you've done it. You have confirmed my worst suspicions. Yesterday I visited your website, as I do every day, expecting to see the same old message that has been there for weeks, informing me that you are in the process of transferring accounts to the new system and that I should be patient and wait for the program to resume. But no, this time it's different. Now you're telling me that because people have been nay-saying you all over the internet (precipitated by your lackadaisical effort in getting your site running again), you are no longer planning to resume PaidExposure.
Rather, you're pulling a 4Daily. You're telling people that you are going to refund a currently unannounced proportion of their original investment. Granted, you may be one rung higher than our friend Jim Hunt in the bad karma hierarchy, since you are apparently not counting compounds as a return on investment. But furthermore, since most of your payment processor accounts have been frozen (most likely due to chargebacks from members not getting their payouts for the past three or four months), members who upgraded with funds from anything other than e-gold are basically out of luck. With all your well-deserved negative publicity, you tell us that PaidExposure's name is tainted and so therefore you can't resume it, but will rather launch a new program with a new name and a new vision. Suffice to say you can count me out of that one.
All in all, it sounds as though you have run a pretty successful little scam. You had PaidResponse, which was a wildly popular program launched on the heels of Studiotraffic. You garnered yourself an army of autosurf disciples after running your site successfully for many months. When you launched a sister site, PaidExposure, your loyal subjects ran like lemmings over a cliff to it as well, expecting to reap huge profits. A few short weeks later, you closed down PaidResponse and forced everyone over to PaidExposure without really giving a valid reason for making this move. Then you hit the pause button on PaidExposure, feeding us this account transfer story while you waited for the 45-day chargeback window to expire. Now that we no longer have that option, we are left with you to decide how much if any of our original investment we can expect to receive in our refund.
I was small potatoes compared to some investors, but that doesn't make me any less angry. I'm not at all expecting to see a refund, since I upgraded with paypal. Sure, my statements above may just be speculation, but they seem to paint a pretty clear picture of what you've been doing for the past four months. I look forward to seeing you announce your new program so that I can shun people away from it. |  |  |  |
| [09/11/2007, 18:28] | A practical guide to earning money with your website |  | There are many reasons why websites are created. Some people create websites to earning money. This is a good reasons to create website but not everyones get success to earn money from their websites. If you want to earning money with your website you must have a good sites. This article shows you how to earning money with your website.
This is something you should do even before you build your site.
1. Selecting a domain name Selecting a domain name is the first step in the process of create website. You must look for in a good domain name. Good domain name must relatively short. This is important because domain must easy remember. Does your domain look long and difficult to remember like this: http://www.how-to-create-content-that-ranks-well-in-search-engines or Wouldn't you like it better if it was like http://www.mygreateswell.com. Create a memorable name for your domain. It's short, meaningful and easy-to-remember. It is your identity for both search engines and users.
2. Create Good Layout and Content Your websites must have a good layout but your layout don't make slowly if user access your websites. Just a simple design. A good layout gives your site a clean, professional look. Visitors will be able to find what they want. Besides that you must create content that ranks well in Search Engines. Search engines generally prefer to key in on the words people are looking for.
3. Get traffic to your sites Getting traffic to your site takes hard work. Many of the methods mentioned to bring more traffic to your website. The key to building repeat traffic is to create a website that is useful, unique and full of good content. List your site with Google and other popular search engines online. Search engine advertising is one of the best ways to bring targeted traffic.
After that three steps, you will easy to sell your ads in your websites or promote your own product with your websites. After that you can make money with your websites. Three steps to make money.. It's Easy.. Sure Not... It is takes Hard work... |  |  |  |
| [06/07/2007, 19:18] | Use An Age-Based 529 College Plan To Save For College |  |  Fidelity offers Age-Based 529 investments. Just pick a year. The best time to save for your children’s college tuition is when your child is born. A small investment now will help them cover their college costs in the future. Say you invest $10,000 when they’re born. Assuming a 12% annualized return, it will grow to about $80,000 by the time the kid’s 18 years old and ready for college. $10,000 investment to pay for $80,000 in school costs? Not a bad price to pay for college at all. Watch out though: You don’t want a bear market to challenge your kid’s future. You’ll want to secure that fund as cash as the child gets older. Use an age-based 529 investment to save for college. Age-Based 529 Plans automatically adjust from aggressive (mostly stock investments) to conservative (mostly bonds and cash) as the child comes closer to their project college years. All you have to do is pick a projected year and the fund will handle the rest. The downside is that you pay a bit more in management fees since it’s an actively managed funds. The upside is that you get to spend more of your time playing with your kid instead of balancing their investments.
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| [07/16/2008, 13:37] | Investing Hack: Why I bought $199 in Apple Stock Instead of a New Apple 3G iPhone |  | | By S. Shugars I’m a big fan of index funds because, quite frankly, I don’t know much about investing and I would rather spend my time doing other things than learning how to invest in individual companies. Warren Buffett agrees with me on this as his response to a question at the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholder [...] |  |  |  |
| [11/27/2008, 20:58] | Back to Basics: Food, clothing, shelter |  | We may think that we need a lot of things. We may think we need cable TV, our morning coffee and bagel, a couple of pints at the pub each Friday, or a really big house with a mortgage that the lender had to “make work for our income.” These aren’t really needs when we get down to it, of course. They’re wants. The stuff we really need — after breathing — are (a) food (and clean water) in our stomachs, (b) clothes on our backs, and (c) cover over our heads. To this you might add basic medical care, education, and a few other very important things. Most people (especially if you’re reading this now, and especially me) can stand to cut out a lot of non-essential items if it’s needed. This is extreme downsizing and simplification. It isn’t fun, but it can be done. Moreover, what’s spent on the essentials can be trimmed way down to boot as well, by doing the little money-saving things again. Even the essentials can be simplified and scaled back! Here are a few ways to get by on spending less for food: - Consider generic brands over name brands. Generic or store brands are usually (but not always) cheaper than the name brand, and for some products they’re comparable or even better than the name brands. I prefer store brand diet soda in some cases because I like the taste of one sweetener over another.
- Use coupons for items you buy anyway. You can get them a number of places, like your weekend newspaper, from magazines, online at the websites for the products, or online at places like CoolSavings or MyPoints.
- Substitute less expensive foods. How about oatmeal instead of cereal? How about eggs instead of meat? How about rice and beans?
- Buy food that requires more preparation or reconstitution. As in dried beans over canned beans, dehydrated milk over milk in a carton, raw oatmeal over instant oatmeal, or big bags of rice over instant rice. The other advantage of reconstituting food is that it may keep longer than the “fresh” food.
- Buy food with less packaging. Packaging means extra cost, and the food tastes the same if it can be resealed and consumed in time. Binder clips work fine to keep “family-size” snack bags shut. Reusable storage containers are great for all kinds of food storage.
- Buy in bulk if the price is right and if you know you’ll use what you buy. We buy rice 50 pounds at a time, and use it. I buy the big Costco-size box of oatmeal, and eat it. It usually saves money to buy in quantity.
- Spend more at the grocery store and less at the restaurant. The cost savings is clear here. Eat in with friends as opposed to eating out with friends.
- Learn a few easy, cheap recipes. I know how to cook rice well enough so that I can prepare a cheap, filling lunch (and dinner sometimes) merely by putting a few ounces of beans over the top with some Worcestershire sauce. Heck, adding rice to a can of soup works, too.
- Be diligent about consuming leftovers. Odds are you’ll only be eating the same stuff a few days in a row at most. (Except at Thanksgiving: It’s turkey leftovers for at least a week!)
Cut your clothing bills, too: - Make your clothes last. Making things last can be a money-saver. My wife is an excellent sewer and has given some of my clothes an extra life. Simple Debt Free Living has a decent introduction and link collection for clothing repair. But even before that, be kind to your clothes in the washer and don’t overdry them.
- Check out yard sales. We’ve found great deals on baby clothes at yard sales, as in maybe a dime apiece for a bagful. My wife and I have found clothes for us, too.
- Check out thrift shops. Sometimes the donated clothing has hardly been worn. The bigger ones usually have a good selection of sizes. Sometimes they run sales to make room for things.
- Check out consignment shops. These are perceived as a little higher-brow than thrift stores but the premise is the same: buy used and save.
- Check out the clearance racks in department stores. Some department stores perpetually mark things up just to mark them down, but there are still good deals to be had at places like Macy’s or Kohl’s. Since my wife has a Macy’s store charge card she gets special coupons that get her some really good deals. Wal-Mart’s hard to beat, too.
- Check out eBay. There’s always eBay! They’ve been getting much more buyer-friendly these days. Buyers cannot receive negative feedback anymore, and eBay is also waging war against inflated shipping charges (which is in their interest, but that’s another story).
Cutting costs on shelter can be a touchy subject but please remember, it boils down to a roof over your head: - If you’re renting, think very carefully before buying a house. Owning a house is a worthwhile goal but it can be very expensive. During the real estate bubble times of the past few years it was more expensive to own a house than it was to rent. Or, if it was affordable to own a house, in some areas, it would become too expensive later (adjustable rate mortgages). The start-up costs can be a bit of a shock. Plus, you’re a lot less mobile in a home than in a rented apartment.
- Reduce operating costs of your living space. Keep the temperature warmer in the summer and cooler in the winter. Use compact fluorescent lightbulbs where you can. Seal cracks where heat (or cool air) can escape. Don’t use the clothes dryer for one pair of socks. And so forth.
- Reduce financing costs of your living space. Pay the mortgage (or rent) on time. Consider paying the mortgage down a little faster. Consider refinancing an adjustable-rate mortgage to a fixed-rate mortgage to remove interest rate risk and take advantage of a depreciating currency. Work to get rid of private mortgage insurance as soon as possible.
- Test the waters for signs of trouble. Is the checkbook balance going down month by month? Why? Is it due to increasing costs associated with your living space? Is is possible to move into a cheaper living space if the costs of your current living space are getting out of control? (A good friend realized this. His family had built a larger house and had been renting their original, smaller house. The costs of the larger house were too much, so they are working to sell off that one and move back in to their original house. Hey, it happens, but they recognized what the problem was and are fixing it.)
- Can someone share your living space? Can you take on a boarder or a roommate? An unmarried woman at work has a house and has taken on a roommate to subsidize her housing cost. Alan Corey did this to great benefit; he took the smallest room in the house so that he could rent out the larger ones for more money.
- No affordable options in your area? Since moving is costly, it’s usually easier to cut other expenses before contemplating a move, especially one out of town to a less expensive area. But if nothing else seems to work, this is an option. It may mean leaving friends and family, and finding another job, but the housing cost issue can go away if the price difference is large enough.
- What if the worst happens and you lose your living space? There are some options. They’re not great options, obviously, but better than nothing. Living after foreclosure or eviction might mean moving in with someone who will take you (and your family if they’re involved). It can mean finding a church or other group that will take you as a “shut-in.” It could mean taking whatever job you can and renting by the week (Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Nickel and Dimed found this to be a tough life ). Even more simply, it could mean pitching a tent or sleeping in your car. This kind of living isn’t something I’d wish on anyone, but unfortunately more people will be thrust into this kind of situation. And in any case, it doesn’t have to be forever.

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| [07/08/2007, 08:24] | The Differences Between How Parents and Society Teach Boys and Girls Financial Awareness by Carrie Carter |  | With a divorce rate of around 50% and many people not marrying until they are in their thirties, it is surprising to find that there are still many women who aren't financially educated. Most of this can be traced back to two factors: upbringing at home and society. In both cases, boys have often been given much more training and many more resources than girls have and the effects are damaging women financially today as they face a world in which they have to take care of monetary issues on their own but have never developed the skills to do so. The Safe, Secure 1950's In the 1950's most women quickly married and settled down to raise families. Very few of them worked outside the home, and finances were handled by the men. It was a financially prosperous time and women were expected to focus on the home and child-rearing. This focus on home-making was passed on to daughters while sons were groomed to the "breadwinners" of the family. The obvious separation between girls and boys activities also managed to keep girls "sheltered" from financial concerns. They weren't expected to pay for anything on a date and parents didn't often expect them to hold down jobs. Boys, on the other hand, were expected to get a job at a young age, even if it was merely a paper route. The expectation was that a young man needed to "take on some responsibility" and "contribute." As the generation raised in the 1950's grew up and raised families of their own, they passed on the financial biases that had been instilled in them to their own children. Many of today's parents have made the same mistakes their own mothers and fathers did, ignoring the obvious need for women to understand and learn to handle their own finances in favor of hoping that their daughters wouldn't have to face the harsh financial facts of life. The belief that men would take care of women's financial needs was so ingrained that many of the "big picture" financial lessons were overlooked. Women tended to learn how to shop for bargains at the grocery store, stretch the budget at the holidays and that was about it. More complex lessons such as long-term investments, retirement planning and stock portfolio development were not a part of the picture. Boys learned how to manage their money, save for a rainy day, and make smart investments and a host of other financial strategies. Play and School Contribute to Gender Gap Interestingly, boys more than girls tend to develop habits that are more geared toward understanding numbers and how they relate to finances from a very young age. While girls tend to be "collectors," says Joline Godfrey, founder of Independent Means, "boys develop informal economies based on relative value from the age of six on while trading cards and other items. By the time boys start trading stocks and bonds, it's just another form of the game." Independent Means is a company which promotes economic independence and growth for girls and women aged 14 to 24. Even in school settings, boys are rewarded more consistently for being risk-takers, and investing is often perceived as a risky venture. Girls aren't encouraged to take risks and aren't rewarded for these types of behaviors and instead are likely to be cautioned to be careful. When faced with the prospect of learning about investing in the stock market or learning about retirement options, these same girls - now women - are more fearful of making decisions and less sure of themselves in making choices for themselves. Statistics Show Gender Bias A recent survey showed some startling discrepancies even today between teenage boys and girls and how much education they have received in the very basics of finance. Some of the findings include: * Many more teenage boys than girls report understanding of how to write a check and how a credit card works, including accrued interest. * Teenage girls are much more likely to be in debt than boys, with almost 50% reporting credit card debt as opposed to less than a quarter of teen boys having any debt. * Girls are more likely to report that learning about investing is boring, while boys report a real interest in learning about it. When asked to elaborate, girls often pointed out that this wasn't something they would be doing in the future, while boys indicated that it was important to learn so that they could be successful. The perception that girls shouldn't have to worry about their financial future in the long term (based upon the faulty premise that a man will take care of her or that she can hire a financial consultant to handle all of the boring stuff) is still present in many homes. Fortunately, the balance is beginning to shift as more parents realize that women who are successful in their careers must also be able to guide their own financial futures, not rely on others to do it for them. Programs Aim at Closing the Gap Today's girls are more likely to learn how to handle money at a young age. Cautionary tales in the news and on talk shows about women left destitute and the fear that social security can no longer support an individual in their golden years has, perhaps, contributed to this. After all, with most women outliving their spouses and more than half of women divorced, it's likely that today's girls will be supporting themselves in their retirement years - understanding Roth IRAs suddenly becomes very important. Companies and organizations are also stepping to the forefront with programs designed to educate teens in general and girls in particular. Boys and Girls Clubs of America, in collaboration with Charles Schwab, offer Money Matters: Make It Count programs in cities across the country. Visa works with Girl Scouts of the USA to provide two resources, the Cashin' In workbook and the Makin' Cents web game, to teach girls aged 13-17 financial responsibility. The web game specifically challenges players to find real-world solutions for characters' financial challenges. With such programs increasingly popular and the need for women to understand finances now a hot topic, it's to be hoped that this generation of fathers will teach their daughters as much about finance as they teach their sons. Carrie Carter: Author of: Think Your Way to Riches Kids' Style For more information or to arrange an interview with Carrie Carter at 810.252.2281 e-mail: carrie114cr@aol.com or visit: www.ThinkYourWayToRichesKidsStyle.com Carrie's passion is to help people on their inner journey to discover their personal road map for abundance, peace, and happiness. Her main passion is to give children worldwide the "Tools" which are lacking in the normal educational system and understanding to create the abundant lifestyle they are all worthy of. Experience Carrie's educational seminars, workshops, and private life coaching.
About the Author Carrie's passion is to help people on their inner journey to discover their personal road map for abundance, peace, and happiness. Her main passion is to give children worldwide the "Tools" which are lacking in the normal educational system and understanding to create the abundant lifestyle they are all worthy of. Experience Carrie's educational seminars, workshops, and private life coaching. |  |  |  |
| [02/13/2007, 16:53] | Creating An Ethical Will |  | You may or may not have heard the term ?ethical will?. But, for those who care about making their values and ethics part of their legacy, it is a tool to consider when planning your estate. Unlike a ?last will and testament?, which provides for the distribution of a person?s material assets, or a ?living will?, which contains instructions for how you want to be treated medically at the end of your days, an ?ethical will? is designed to let someone preserve and share their values, principles and beliefs for heirs and future generations, though it?s not legally binding. According to Personal Legacy Advisors? Web site, an ethical will is a letter that transmits the non-material assets that are also of great importance: your values, your story, the lessons life has taught you and the other information that is too valuable to risk being lost. Your ethical will is the tool that enables you to address the question, ?What do I want my loved ones to know?? As a concept, ethical wills are not new. The first written reference to ethical wills occurs in both the Hebrew and Christian Bibles. Examples are Genesis, chapter 49, and The Book of John, chapters 15-18. Over time, they evolved into written documents. While ethical wills were traditionally shared after death, along with the reading of an individual?s last will and testament, today they are often shared during the author?s life. While exact figures aren?t available for how many people are writing ethical wills, they are on the rise, based on increased Web activity and sales of ethical will resources. They have gained impetus particularly in the wake of tragedies like the September 11 terrorist attacks. Why create one? People are inclined to write an ethical will when facing a challenging event, or at a turning point in life. Some examples are facing the loss of a loved one, birth of a grandchild, expectant parents, becoming an empty-nester or approaching the end of life. Other reasons to create an ethical will include: - Your reflections will confirm what?s important and renew appreciation of your life to date
- You will create a personal message to those you love, of priceless value in the event of your absence
- If you do not tell your personal (and family) stories, they may be lost forever
- Your material assets can be given within a personal context
- You will mitigate confusion and hurt feelings with a personal explanation of potentially controversial elements of your legal will
- Your spirit will be expressed on paper, living beyond you in a timeless way
- Your words will link the past, present and future generations of your family
- You will enjoy peace of mind knowing the most important things will have been said.
Pros and cons. The pros of an ethical include having an opportunity to influence future generations. Through the process of writing an ethical will, the writer can gain self-knowledge and come to an understanding of what?s most important to him or her. This is valuable information not only for their families but their professional advisers as well. Another pro is that ethical wills are private documents. Unlike a will, which if admitted to probate will become a matter of public record, an ethical will is a private communication and will not be made public unless the author (or recipient) so desires. The con is that an ethical will is not enforceable in a court of law. Those who want to provide specific instructions, such as who is to receive which asset or how assets are to be distributed and under what conditions, would need to put the instruction in a will or trust. Setting up an ethical will. Ethical wills come in a variety of forms, from a short letter to a lengthy autobiographical statement, from an audio-recorded message to a bound album. There are three basic ways to create an ethical will. - Begin with an outline and list of suggestions. Once you?ve created a rough draft, you can review and personalize it as much as you wish.
- Begin with guided writing exercises. For example, start with phrases such as ?From my grandparents, I learned?? or ?I am most grateful for??
- Begin with a blank sheet of paper and write down whatever is relevant about your thoughts, experiences and feelings. This is an open-ended approach. Eventually you should be able to create a comfortable structure for your ethical will. For one-on-one help, an organization like the Association of Personal Historians may be of assistance.
Other tips from Personal Legacy Advisors include the following: - Start today: If you were not here tomorrow, what is the most important thing you would not want left unsaid? Write it down - now you’ve begun
- Relax: You are not trying to write for the Pulitzer Prize. The letter is a gift of yourself, written for those you love
- Ask yourself: What do I want to make sure my loved ones know and have in writing
- Take it topic by topic: Don’t try to write it all at once
- Be yourself: You cannot bequeath what you never owned to begin with
- Be careful, be loving. The reach of this letter is unknowable.
Sharing your will. It?s a good idea to share your ethical will not only with family and friends, but also with your financial adviser and attorney. Knowing what you value and what?s important to you will help them to develop a personalized plan that can help you to leverage your values in the future. An ethical will speaks to one?s posterity or descendants long after the legal will has been probated and forgotten. Of note, an ethical will is a dynamic document. Just as a will or living trust document needs to be revisited so does an ethical will, because events occur in ones’ life that have an impact on ones’ value systems. Share This 
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| [10/14/2008, 06:22] | Financial Crisis: The Theological Aspect |  | Here is an excerpt from an interesting article I read a few days ago: Says Anthea Butler, an expert in Pentecostalism at the University of Rochester in New York: “The pastor’s not gonna say, ‘Go down to Wachovia and get a loan,’ but I have heard, ‘Even if you have a poor credit rating, God can still bless you ? if you put some faith out there [that is, make a big donation to the church], you’ll get that house or that car or that apartment.’ ” Adds J. Lee Grady, editor of the magazine Charisma: “It definitely goes on, that a preacher might say, ‘If you give this offering, God will give you a house.’ And if they did get the house, people did think that it was an answer to prayer, when in fact it was really bad banking policy.” If so, the situation offers a look at how a native-born faith built partially on American economic optimism entered into a toxic symbiosis with a pathological market. … “Narratives of how ‘God blessed me with my first house despite my credit’ were common. Sermons declaring ‘It’s your season to overflow’ supplanted messages of economic sobriety,” and “little attention was paid to … the dangers of using one’s home equity as an ATM to subsidize cars, clothes and vacations.” Read the rest of it here. In addition to Wall Street, it looks like the faith business also needs a little more scrutiny. Apart from that, I am always surprised at how gullible people can be when it comes to being sold out divine rhetoric. If we keep up with this even God will need a bailout someday! Finally, God helps those who help themselves, for everybody else there is Mastercard everybody else needs to clearly understand the meaning of the words “deliquency” and “foreclosure”. |  |  |  |
| [09/03/2008, 16:08] | Do Bloggers have a responsibility to be "fair and balanced"? |  | It's a rhetorical question, I think. Or, maybe not. If I have already decided the answer, does that make it rhetorical. Because here's the answer: absolutely not. Several months ago, I wrote a post about the wonder juice, Mona Vie. It's a juice made with acai berry and other exotic sounding things that you couldn't possibly grow yourself. You see, you would have to get the magic seeds from the depths of the Brazillian rain forest. Ever wonder why the most healthy things in the world only grow in the far reaches of Brazillian rain forests and Himalayan mountain tops? Anyway, I analyzed the business plan offered to those wishing to be part of the Mona Vie pyramid. Er, I mean, take advantage of the exciting business opportunity. Looks to me like it is possible to make some money. Of course, I don't wish to view all of my friends and family as sales prospects. So, I guess I wouldn't be successful. Not surprisingly, the comments were one of two things. Either it was someone telling us all that Mona Vie cured their high blood pressure, insomnia, baldness, made them taller, grew back their amputated leg, etc. The other type of comment was that Mona Vie made them broke, ruined their marraige, caused them to be impotent and friendless. Tragic, really. So, I guess I shouldn't be surprised that it was that same post that instigated my first bit of hate mail. Here's the email that I found in my inbox this morning: "It seems that before you question the business of Mona Vie that you would at least find out what pv means. Hey, here's a concept why don't you drink it for a month and then make your claims. How long do you have to take vitamins before feeling any difference? Do vitamins help lower your blood pressure because that is what Mona Vie has done for my mother. Don't ruin it for everyone else who can benefit from the nutritional value of Mona Vie." It was sent from the catering department of a golf course. I wonder if she's slipping some acai berries into the fruit tart. Lucky golfers. |  |  |  |
| [11/21/2008, 18:30] | Restaurant.Com Discount Deals: Restaurant Coupons, Offers, Gift Certificates |  | Add this to my list of last minute gift ideas: a couple of Restaurant.com discount deals and coupons to give you up to 80% off the gift certificates you purchase. How about some good news for a change? I know my wallet needs a break from the never-ending drama in the financial markets, but just in time for the holidays, here are some pretty decent offers that make for some great gifts. Watch this space for the latest Restaurant.com deals and coupons you can use! Restaurant.com Discount Deals and Coupons Newest Deal: 70% Off + $10 off a $75 purchase at Wine.com only at Restaurant.com Description: Now you can save 70% Off + $10 off a $75 purchase at Wine.com when you try the new coupon code “THANKS”. It can be used on both of Restaurant.com’s most popular products, Dinner of the Month Club and the $25 Gift Certificates. This offer is now valid through November 30th! Where To Order: ~~ooOoo~~ Gift Certificates Restaurant.com has a couple of things they sell — they have $25 gift certificates that are normally sold for $10 each. That’s the usual price. But you can use promotional coupons as we’ve listed above, to receive even better prices for your gift certificates. Now with their current promotion going on, you can get those $10 certificates (with the $25 dinner value) for 80% off. They’re now going for $2 if you use the PROMO CODE: SURPRISE and visit this link. This offer will be valid through November 24. A very important caveat that you must be aware of and which I just double-checked: I’ve looked into the eligible restaurants where certificates can be applied, and the ones I’ve seen require a minimum spending amount at the restaurant. Please check your region for requirements on how the certificates can be used. Dinner of the Month Club Similarly, when Restaurant.com does a Dinner of the Month Club promotion, they give you a discount on already great prices on their Dinner of the Month Club program. Here’s an example of how their promotional discounts work. Let’s say they give you an 80% off coupon deal on their program, which offers you 3, 6, or 12 month’s worth of gift certificates plus some bonus free gift certificates if you subscribe to this. Here is how the programs will be priced (again, this is just an illustration of the value savings you can get by using the coupons): | | 3 Months | 6 Months | 12 Months | | Regular Price | $30 | $60 | $120 | | 80% Sale Price | $6 | $12 | $24 | | Shipping | Free | Free | Free | | Total Gift Certificate Value | $75 | $150 | $300 | | Bonus Free Gift Certificates (Value) | $10 | $25 | $50 | For the particular case of 80% off discounts on the gift certificates, if you order 3 months’ worth of gift certificates through “Dinner of the Month Club”, you get certificates valued at $75 that can be applied to any of your favorite restaurants on the Restaurant.com list. The price for those 3 month certificates will only be $6 PLUS you’ll get another $10 gift certificate for FREE. That is, your $6 will buy you $85 worth of gift certificates. By the same token, for $12, you’ll get gift certificates totaling up to $175; and for $24, you’ll receive gift certificates worth $350. Wooh, not bad! Note that the certificates are made available once per month from the time you make the purchase. By using this link, you’ll get the 80% discount offer AND bonus freebies when you sign up. You’ll need to use the PROMO CODE: SURPRISE, which lasts through November 24. For details on how to purchase, gift and redeem your certificates, just check the Help/FAQ section. What’s nice is that if you do use these as gifts, your recipient will only see their options for redeeming (and restaurants to choose from) but won’t see how much you’ve spent. These certificates will be good for a year from the date of purchase, but there can be special terms depending on which state you reside in, so just check their terms and conditions for additional details. One last note: Restaurant.com does these deals quite often. When an offer like this expires, it doesn’t take long before they come up with a new promotion. But discounts range between 60% to 80% off and are given out periodically, but you just don’t know when they’ll be available. For the latest, current deals, please refer to our announcement at the beginning of this post for details. This is a post from The Digerati Life. 
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| [03/12/2008, 13:06] | How The Credit Mess Squeezes You |  | | Here is a great article that puts the credit crisis at a level the typical person can understand. It shows the small places that it could effect the average person's financial life. Student loans and credit card rates are going up due to a lack of available money to loan out. (How the Credit Mess Squeezes You) |  |  |  |
| [02/22/2006, 17:07] | With 12DailyPro gone, who's left? |  | Things with 12DailyPro are just getting worse and worse. Charis' latest move is to cancel the convention she's been planning for months now, claiming that because of the media attention she has earned over the past month, the convention "could become a volatile event that could exacerbate current problems and possibly damage our relations with investigators." In plain English, I think that means that she doesn't want herself or her members to wind up in front of a camera, unable to answer questions about her business model. Her attorney claims that they are cooperating with the FBI, and because of that it is inappropriate to comment while they are investigating. It's no secret that many other surf sites invested in 12DailyPro as a means to finance their own programs. GrandHits and 911Hitz were among them, as they made clear in a message on their member page a few days ago (before they took the sites down). Nate at KnightSurfers, in his admirably forthcoming style, has admitted in the past that he believes in reinvesting in the industry. He undoubtedly lost a pretty sizeable chunk with 12DailyPro, yet he believes that he can continue operating his program with minimal slowdowns. He seems to be one of the more dedicated admins out there, and so I applaud him for that. I hope that he can make it work. I'm currently awaiting payout from a Moneybookers upgrade that I made before they froze his account. He claims that he is in the final stages of getting that money released to him, and at that point he'll be able to level with people like me. It should be any day now... VivaSurf seems like it is poised to capitalize on 12DailyPro's problems. Vivasurf.us was launched as a way to get around the stormpay problem, but it's evolved into something else now. Vivasurf.us is now a 14% /10 day program, and the new home to a lot of dissatisfied 12DailyPro members. Although Vivasurf had its own problems with Stormpay and has deferred all paymets this month, he seems like he's willing to try to work things out. I'm in for a test drive at the new site, so we'll see how it goes. Robert for sure has a few investments outside the surf industry. His Empowerism page is shown frequently while surfing his sites, as well as one for Kemptech Domains, another site that he owns. He has clearly diversified and is trying to make a real legitimate buck with our upgrades in order to pay us. Flosurf was a smaller program in which I've been a member for a few months. Flo is very pleasant and forthcoming, and she also seems to be one that we can rely on. Her payouts to date have not been delayed at all. Luna-surf.info is another program that I haven't promoted much, as it's still in the testing phase. Tim, the admin, has also been quite honest about the state of his program and has made it abundantly clear that he has no plans to fold up or reneg on his obligations to the members. Eprofitsurf and Auto-surf.biz, which were run by the same folks, have now merged. Everything from your auto-surf.biz account should have been combined with Eprofitsurf, so now you just surf the one site, which operates under the old Eprofitsurf terms of 2% for 2 years. They are now running their own payment processor as well: Auto-Surf-Money.com. This is a smart move for them. When people pay in with their own cash, it goes to eprofitsurf. When eprofitsurf pays you, it goes to auto-surf-money. Unless you request a check from them, the money never leaves their hands, it just gets shifted around on paper. That's going to allow them to run on a huge defecit, since many people are going to be content to just see their auto-surf-money account grow on paper without pulling out any cash. At least, that's the way that I see it. It just adds another layer of protection. So my advice to everyone is to keep your auto-surf-money account at a minimum. Keep requesting those withdrawals so that the money stays in your hands. DadnDave's seems like they are poised to come out on top of the situation as well. They did what I had hoped more sites would do: hit the pause button for a while to get things straightened out and then go back to business as usual. The site basically shut down for the month of February, and is going to come back full strength in March. They're going to add an extra month to everyone's upgrades to compensate for the downtime. Congratulations Dave, that was a very smart move. They are also closed now to new members. He seems to have a good crowd around him and I'm looking forward to more successes there. It's still going to be touch-and-go for a while as the Stormpay and 12DailyPro situation develops, but at least the sites that I have outlined above seem to be in reasonably good shape. We'll just have to wait and see - March should answer a lot of questions for us. |  |  |  |
| [07/08/2007, 08:16] | Online Internet Business Success Depends On Your Dedication by Tatiana A. Ivanova |  | The degree of online business success you experience will be directly determined by the amount of effort you put into your business. While many online businesses promote themselves as being the best and fastest way to achieving wealth online, not everyone will become rich operating an online internet business. It makes no difference the type of online business you operate, there are still basic truths to turning it into a success. Compare your internet business to a small business on the side of a road that very few cars pass on a daily basis. You have a decent looking building, but it looks much the same as other buildings in the immediate area with nothing to distinguish it from dozens of others. There is nothing on the outside of the building declaring what is inside and no indication that the products you sell, or service that you offer, is the best and least expensive. Add to that the fact you have no advertising in the paper, magazines or the internet. Basically, not a soul knows you exist. Undoubtedly you will be closing your business in a short period of time. That could be your internet business on the side of the electronic super-highway, with the difference being instead of car slowly driving by, potential visitors are whizzing past your site at the speed of lighting, having no idea you are there. At least by the side of the slow road there is always the chance of someone stumbling into your parking lot. On the internet if your address is kept a secret, there is no chance anyone will find it. This is where internet marketing and network marketing techniques can help put your site in front of the millions of daily internet visitors. Most people looking for a product or service on the internet start with a search for a specific word or phrase. Unless your website is set up to attract search engine spiders, you will be ignored. Think about when you are searching for something and how many times you went past the second or third page of search results before clicking on a link. You may seem satisfied that your site is showing up in the top 100 search engine results, but your potential customers still will not be able to find you. How well you optimize your website to be found on search engines is up the knowledge and experience of the person building your website as well as the text content your site offers visitors to satisfy search engine requirements. Additionally, you may have the best optimized web site on the internet, showing up as number one or two on the first page of search results, but if your site does not reflect the quality of the product or service you are offering, your visitor numbers will fall, right along with your search engine ranking. Online Internet Business Success Depends On Your Dedication The degree of online business success you experience will be directly determined by the amount of effort you put into your business. While many online businesses promote themselves as being the best and fastest way to achieving wealth online, not everyone will become rich operating an online internet business. It makes no difference the type of online business you operate, there are still basic truths to turning it into a success. Compare your internet business to a small business on the side of a road that very few cars pass on a daily basis. You have a decent looking building, but it looks much the same as other buildings in the immediate area with nothing to distinguish it from dozens of others. There is nothing on the outside of the building declaring what is inside and no indication that the products you sell, or service that you offer, is the best and least expensive. Add to that the fact you have no advertising in the paper, magazines or the internet. Basically, not a soul knows you exist. Undoubtedly you will be closing your business in a short period of time. That could be your internet business on the side of the electronic super-highway, with the difference being instead of car slowly driving by, potential visitors are whizzing past your site at the speed of lighting, having no idea you are there. At least by the side of the slow road there is always the chance of someone stumbling into your parking lot. On the internet if your address is kept a secret, there is no chance anyone will find it. This is where internet marketing and network marketing techniques can help put your site in front of the millions of daily internet visitors. Most people looking for a product or service on the internet start with a search for a specific word or phrase. Unless your website is set up to attract search engine spiders, you will be ignored. Think about when you are searching for something and how many times you went past the second or third page of search results before clicking on a link. You may seem satisfied that your site is showing up in the top 100 search engine results, but your potential customers still will not be able to find you. How well you optimize your website to be found on search engines is up the knowledge and experience of the person building your website as well as the text content your site offers visitors to satisfy search engine requirements. Additionally, you may have the best optimized web site on the internet, showing up as number one or two on the first page of search results, but if your site does not reflect the quality of the product or service you are offering, your visitor numbers will fall, right along with your search engine ranking.
About the Author http://forever-aloevera.myflpbiz.com http://tatiana.successuniversity.com http://tatiana.buildreferrals.com http://1105934.profitmatic.com To get more information or download your own copy of the Resource Report for free visit: http://www.the-resource-report.com/?newest_version=28845 info@tatianaivanova.ws |  |  |  |
| [07/21/2008, 14:01] | God and Money: Prayer Won?t Fix People?s Finances |  | | By M. Ellis, Special Guest Writer The other day a friend invited me to her church because she knows that I’m interested in finance and the minister was beginning a series on God and finance. I almost declined because the thought of a minister preaching on God and finance gives me the heebie jeebies. I’ve often [...] |  |  |  |
| [11/24/2008, 09:47] | Stop Wishing, Start Planning |  |  “It takes as much energy to wish as it does to plan.” - Eleanor Roosevelt People wish a lot, but do they plan just as much? Set small financial goals, make them attainable and stick to them. Don’t set a goal like “This year I’ll get my act together.” Set a goal such as: “This year, I’m going to put $100 of every paycheck into my savings account.” That is a realistic goal. Setting short-term realistic goals is good because it gives you confidence every time you reach them. That confidence gives you the determination to do it again the next paycheck. Let’s do some quick math.. $100 every 2 weeks in a month is:$200 $200 a month one in a year is: $2,400 Plus $100 in interest earned: $2,500 This means that if you save up just $100 from every check you can take you and your family on a vacation every single year. The only thing left is the hard part, sticking to your goal. - Edwin, CashTheChecks.com |  |  |  |
| [12/09/2008, 18:43] | What Are Your 2009 Financial Goals? |  | We’re nearly midway through December already. That means 2009 is just around the corner. In the spirit of the new year, I’d like to ask: What are your 2009 Financial Goals? Here are mine in order of importance: 1. MAX OUT my wife’s 401(k). We haven’t maxed out her 401(k) in years. The market’s down so it’s the PERFECT time to get back into the habit. The IRS raised the employee contribution limit to $16,500 for 2009. My wife gets paid twice a month so that means she will be contributing $687.50 per paycheck. Wowza! On top of that, she’ll also get a generous employer-match of 75% of the first 6%, or 4.50%. The employer-match should easily put her over the $20,000 contribution mark for the year (and maybe even closer to $25,000 if we get profit-sharing). 2. Recommit to our budget. I know, I know,…we should already be doing this. However, I got kind of lazy and complacent and haven’t stuck to our budget. We make decent money so it’s really silly of us not to using our income wisely. We do save money each month but we could do a lot better with some discipline. 3. Continue building up our emergency fund. Our efund is nowhere near where I’d like it to be. So, the third goal for 2009 is to get it to $10,000. Those are my financial goals. What are yours? ShareThis |  |  |  |
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