Book Review: How to Make a Budget: Simple Budget Techniques and Tips on Saving Money

How to Make a Budget: Simple Budget Techniques ...

Book Review: How to Make a Budget

Recently I wrote about how to create a simple household budget that will allow you to track where you are spending your money. Bryan Carr’s Kindle Edition e-book, “How to Make a Budget: Simple Budget Techniques and Tips on Saving Money” takes the realm of budgeting a notch higher. His book not only helps you see where you money goes, but it also features several money saving tips that are quite useful, as well as what to do with the money you saved following his suggested frugal spending.

His recommended budgeting strategy is to create a baseline budget using data from your recent three months statements of all your bank accounts and credit cards, including receipts of purchases. Although he added receipts of purchases includes cash, this is where I find the baseline input lacking. We usually do not get receipts for our cash purchases such as your lattes, magazines, parking fees, fast food and the likes. These could add up to a lot when we calculate how much these are costing us for three months. This flaw, however, is compensated by the free budget template that can be downloaded from his site. I always prefer digital recording of dollars and cents rather than paper and pencil that is so yesterday. [Read more...]

Budgeting Made Simple

Simple Budgeting

Do you know where your money goes?

Budgeting is for everyone – rich or poor alike.  It is a useful tool for tracking where our money goes.  It helps us to live within our means and get out of debt.  It can also help us save for the future.  Budgeting, simply put, is a spending plan.

However, before we can accurately set up a household budget, we need to have a good understanding of what we’re spending our money on.

 Here are the stepping stones  on how to create a budget:

 SS-1:  Keep Track of Every Penny Spent for the Next 30 Days

Buy an inexpensive small notebook and list every expenditure you make however small it may be.  If you put a quarter into a parking meter, write that down, too.  This is the best way – writing it down right after you spend.  If this is too tedious for you, the next best thing is to recount the expenses you made throughout that day at the end of the day.  This will require a good memory and not more than 15 minutes each day.  Because I tend to forget [Read more...]