Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

12 Ways To Spruce Up Your Home On A Budget
How often do we look round our homes and think, "I wish I could spruce things up a bit ... if I only had the money"? Well, brightening up a home certainly doesn't have to break the bank. Follow my tips on how to give your home a lift without...

CD Duplication, Get It Done Within Your Budget
CD duplication is the process of taking what is on one CD and putting into more CD's to sell or give away. It is very important to insure that what you plan to do is legal. By this we mean that it is just never okay to duplicate music that is owned...

Effective Small Business Web Sites On a Budget
As more and more of the world's business starts taking place online, we're left to wonder how our own web pages will stand up and out in the jumble of everybody else's. Small businesses don't always have the option to buy expensive graphics or to...

Pay-Per-Click Marketing - How to Waste Your Advertising Budget
A well-oiled pay-per-click search engine campaign can land hundreds of highly targeted visitors on practically any website within a matter of days. That isn't new information. Most experienced online business owners already know it. But...

The Bitch, the Budget, and a Book! UK News Review
Well Darlings, How was it for you? GB's Budget? Whether you see that GB above as "Great Britain", "Gordon Brown", or "Grab-it Back" is, I suppose, very subjective. Gay people have come out of it with a bit of a mixed deal. If you like a...

 
How To Not Blow Your Budget This Christmas.

Every year thousands of families make a fresh decision to start living by a budget. They set up accounts on their home computer, begin to track everything they spend and set limits designed to help them save more and spend less.

Gwen Mathews is the Mother/Chief Accountant in one of these new budget conscious families. She and her husband Pete set up some ambitious financial plans with the goal of paying off their credit card debt. They split their family income up into categories and were doing just great. That is until the holiday season came along.

As Gwen scanned the family Christmas list she realized that the 'gift giving category' her and Pete had agreed to early in the year wasn't going to cut it.

Pete, Gwen and their three children sat down after dinner that night and laid out the situation. Christmas was a month away and the budget was clearly not going to buy the family the kind of presents that they were used to. They needed to make some decision together as a family. What did they want more? Expensive Christmas gifts or a shrunken credit card balance?

The secret to keeping a budget during the holidays is to:

A. Have a clear vision of your priorities. Remind yourself and your entire family of the reasons you had for getting on a budget in the first place.

B. Make a complete gift shopping list and then prioritize it according to your relationship with that person. Immediate family comes first, extended family, friends, co-workers, etc. Start at the bottom and cross off any names that absolutely don't need to be there - then assign a portion of your budget to each of the remaining names.

C. Get creative with your gift giving. A day in the kitchen with the oven at 350 degrees will take care of a lot of people on your shopping list. A plate of home made Christmas cookies is a welcome and touching gift.

D. Give up keeping up with the neighbors. The surest path to a blown budget is to start comparing what you're doing with what someone else is doing. Remember, they'll likely be crying come January.

E. Don't start shopping too early. Many a Mom has spent their entire holiday budget before Thanksgiving thinking she's a smart cookie to get it all out of the way. Then the Christmas sales kick in and she's kicking herself and thinking 'Well I can spend just a little bit more can't I?".

F. Final rule: No impulse buying. If someone gives you an unexpected gift, it doesn't mean you have to run out and buy them something - that's what 'Thank You' is for.

By keeping their goals in mind and recruiting the support of their children, Pete and Gwen survived the holidays within their budget. As their gift to each other they wrote an extra payment to the credit card company. If they keep that up, they'll be celebrating a debt free Christmas next year.

About the author:

Kelly McCausey writes a weekly newsletter encouraging other Moms to be better money managers. Get your free subscription by visiting http://www.MomsMoney.com.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.