The best way to manage your money is to have a plan. Or a budget. Or a financial checklist. No matter what you call it, you won’t truly be in control until you know how much money is coming in and where it’s all going. The tough part is being honest with yourself about your spending.
If you’re like most people, you’re admittedly afraid to see your spending habits written down. It’s scary, and seeing any negative habits on paper can give you that uncomfortable sinking, twisty feeling in your stomach. Well, too bad! You have to do it. Get someone to hold your hand or offer you a shoulder to cry on or fix you a drink. You’re going to make a financial checklist so you can get on the right track, right now.
Check Your Spending
Start with your income. Next, write down all of your monthly expenses. Include all of your bills, groceries, gas for your car, and yes, even the random but common little expenses like eating out, going to the movies, your weekly magazine, and your daily cup of designer coffee. You’ll see right away how much of your extra cash is being spent on unnecessary items. You can make dinner at home, join a movie rental service like Netflix for cheap, read your magazine online, and brew your own coffee for less than $10 a month.
Invest Your Finances
Once you figure out where to cut back, you’ll see a little bit more wiggle room with your money. Take that money and start a savings. Invest in an IRA, your 401(k), a CD, a Money Market, etc. Even a few dollars a week saved can add up quickly enough to come in handy when an emergency arises.
Plan to Get Out of Debt
Make a plan for getting yourself out of debt. You’d probably have even more extra money if you didn’t have to pay those darn credit cards that keep accumulating interest. Take some of the extra money you found from cutting back and put it toward your debt. Start by paying off your smallest debts first, then take that amount you were paying to that account and add it to your payments for the next smallest. If you follow a plan like this one, you’ll slowly but surely climb out of the hole.
Check Your Future
Don’t forget about your future. Set some financial goals, and write those down on your checklist, too. Writing down your goals has been proven to increase your chances of actually achieving them. Where do you want to be in 5 or 10 years? Even better, where do you SEE yourself in that time? Don’t dream it, do it. It starts by being honest with yourself and writing it all down. What are you waiting for?


