John Lowe of MoneyDoctors.ie gives invaluable advice on being creative when it comes to finding money for the remainder of the year and into 2024…
If you feel that there is ‘far too much month left at the end of the money’ and you would like to do something about it, this short article may help.
There are three ways to find extra cash:
- you can sell something,
- you can generate extra income or
- you can reduce your spending.
However, the following may act as a useful aide-memoire if you are in need of extra money and slightly stumped as to the best way to get it.
Sell sell sell…
As Homer Simpson so sagely remarked: ‘If you really need money, you can sell your kidney, or even your car.’ In fact, you may not have to part with objects as vital to your well-being. A friend’s son recently talked his parents into a 50/50 split on any of their possessions he could sell on eBay. They spent an hour going round the house gathering up unwanted items, including magazines, books, clothes, jewellery, some prints, a 1970s fondue set, a genuine cowboy hat and a cappuccino machine. Over the next two months, he sold almost all of it and raised, to my amazement, a staggering €2,100. A surprisingly large percentage of this sum was generated by grossly inflating the cost of postage and packing. He sold old copies of magazines for 10c each but charged €2.50 for the envelope and stamps. Anyway, I won’t labour the point. Selling possessions you no longer require may rake in more cash than you imagine.
Could you be earning more
‘It is true,’ commented Ronald Reagan, ‘hard work never killed anyone, but I figure, why take the chance?’ On the other hand, a bit of hard work is maybe what you need to do if you want to boost your income. Here is a checklist of the different ways in which you can earn more:
- negotiate a pay rise
- do overtime if you are allowed
- take on a second job
- moonlight ( a secret night job…)
- start your own small business.
How to spend less
What one wants to do, of course, is spend less without it dramatically affecting one’s lifestyle. This may be easier than you imagine because one of the key features of our consumer culture is a vast amount of waste. We pay a great deal, too, for so-called convenience. A simple illustration of this is the difference in price between dishwasher powder and the more expensive pre-formed tablets. Another is tea.
Loose-leaf tea has recently been relegated to the bottom shelf in my local grocery store, forcing one to adopt the crouching stance of an Indian plantation worker in order to pick out a box. ‘People can’t be bothered with real tea anymore,’ explained Noel, the manager. The way he said it you would think that it was necessary to build a ceremonial tea pavilion, slip into a kimono and worship the deity of tea, Rikyu, in order to brew a proper cuppa. Tea bags bear as much similarity to tea as wine gums do to Château-Pétrus. It isn’t just that real tea is of a higher quality and tastes better, cup for cup it costs less money.
Anyway, I digress. The real point is that by logically working through one’s regular expenditure it may be possible for you to make some major savings without feeling any the worse for it. Indeed, the opposite could well be true. Cheaper is often better.
Keep a money diary
At the risk of repeating myself, one of the most effective ways of reducing one’s outgoings is to keep track of every single penny one spends. Carry around a notebook and write down everything — matches, stamps, newspapers, train tickets, elephant rides, car insurance, ice cream cones, bag of nails, I mean everything — as you pay for it. Or even download my free Money Doctors app (tracks your spending – 13 categories including online.. just do it for 4/5 weeks to capture your excesses.. report gives you top 5 spends, total amount for the period you have spent and geographically where you spent every cent – there is a google maps hook up in the app) Why? Seeing it in black and white almost always has the effect of highlighting items of expenditure that aren’t really necessary. Somebody who buys 3 lattés a day will be horrified to know they are slurping to the tune of …€ 4,149.60 every year ! It will also help you to identify the areas where the biggest savings can be made.
Let me know how YOU could find extra cash….