The 10 Golden Rules of Saving on Everything
By Brandon Ballenger
Source: Money
Talks
You
resolved to save more this year, but it's just not happening. Take
heart - it's still early in the year. Use these tips and you're
guaranteed to spend less on the things you want.
Source: Money Talks (http://s.tt/12mMM)
You resolved to save
more this year, but it's just not happening. Take heart - it's still early in
the year. Use these tips and you're guaranteed to spend less on the things you
want.
Below, as well as others
like it, you’ll find thousands of individual tips to save money on virtually
everything you buy, from groceries
to funerals.
But when you boil it down, most ways to save can be condensed into some simple
rules – use them and you’ll painlessly find ways to meet your savings goals.
1. Never buy new what you can buy used.
That brand-new sparkle
comes at a high price, on everything from cars to furniture to clothes. Let
somebody else take the hit. Instead of heading to the department store, head to
the consignment store, thrift shop, yard sale, or sites like Craigslist or eBay.
2. Never buy this generation when last generation will do.
Ignore the commercials
that entice you to buy the latest and greatest. From cars to computers, buying
yesterday’s technology can save you 20-50 percent. Early adopters are often
paying for nothing more than bragging rights – why not wait and brag about how
much money you saved?
3. Always ask for a lower price.
People say you get what
you pay for. We say you get what you ask for. In addition to negotiating more
traditional things like houses and cars, our writers have succeeded in scoring
lower prices on hotel rooms, doctor’s visits, cable bills, and car repairs, as
well as asking for and receiving lower rates on loans and higher rates on
savings. Check out Confessions of a Serial Haggler.
From now on, consider
the price of services or big-ticket items as what they are: an opening bid.
4. Stop paying for name brands.
What’s in a name? Often
nothing more than a higher cost. Paying more is OK if the higher cost means
higher quality. But it’s not OK to pay more simply to help pay for some
company’s annoying commercials.
One of many examples:
More often than not, generic patent medicines like aspirin and cough syrup
aren’t similar to their brand name counterparts. They’re identical. There’s only one reason anyone would pay up to
50 percent more for an identical item - some commercial told them to.
5. Share with your friends and neighbors.
It’s probably not
practical to share a car with your neighbor, but what about his ladder, or your
lawn mower? If it’s something neither of you need to use on a regular basis —
and you get along well enough — get together with one or more people on your
block and form a neighborhood co-op. In addition to reducing the cost of common
household items by 50 percent or more, you also reduce clutter.
And if you use something
really
infrequently, rent it
instead of buying it.
6. Try to substitute imagination for money.
People often pay for
pre-packaged ideas by habit when they could easily come up with lower-cost
ideas that are also better. Instead of buying cards and gifts, make your own.
Instead of taking your date to a restaurant, take her on a picnic. Instead of
meeting at a bar, have your friends over. Instead of heading to hotel, camp
out.
Use your mind instead of
your money and your life will be more interesting and less expensive.
7. Try to make it or fix it yourself.
Just because something’s
available in a store doesn’t mean that’s the only place you can buy it. Check
out 6 Alternatives to Expensive Household
Cleaners, Do-It-Yourself Laundry Detergent
and Household Products Vinegar Can Replace.
And that’s the tip of
the iceberg. From Homemade Halloween Costumes to Home Repairs to growing your own
food, you can save a bundle by using your hands instead of cash. And you can
find help with just about anything online.
Additional benefit? You
feel more independent, because you are.
8. Always use the Internet.
While using the Internet
to comparison shop should be obvious, there are new techniques and technologies
evolving constantly. For example, PriceBlink: This browser add-on
automatically searches for a lower price and/or coupons on anything you’re
looking at or searching for online.
Don’t ever buy anything
online or off without first searching the web to see if you can find a coupon
or discount. But the Internet is a double-edged sword…
9. Never subscribe to “deal” websites.
While it’s smart to be
able to find online coupons and deals on the things you want, it’s dumb to
allow websites to fill your in-box with dozens of potential impulse buys. Tell
the Internet what you need: Don’t let the Internet (or TV commercials or your
friends) tell you what you want.
10. Sell before you buy.
Before you buy anything
you want, make it a habit to first sell something you don’t. Your garage and
closets are full of stuff you no longer use. So before you go to the store or
click that online “checkout” button, stop. Put off the purchase – first, take
some clothes to the consignment shop, or take a picture of something you’re no
longer using and put it on Craigslist. It only takes a
minute.
As soon as it sells,
apply the money to the purchase you were going to make. Now you’ve saved on
something you wanted, and gotten rid of something you didn’t.
Source: Money Talks

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