9 Methods for Mastering Your Money
Published on - January 5th, 2009 (Modified on - January 11th, 2013) (by J.D. Roth) 2008 was a miserable year for money. The stock market tumbled, unemployment soared, the housing market continued to crumble, and retirement savings shriveled away. Whew! Here’s hoping 2009 will be better!
But hope can only do so much. Hope cannot bring change. Action brings change.
If one of your goals for 2009 is to take control of your money (instead of letting it keep control of you), this crash course in financial basics can help guide the way. Here are nine simple but effective actions you can take to build a better financial future.
Method #1: Track every penny you spend
The authors of Your Money or Your Life admonish readers to “keep track of every cent that comes into or goes out of your life.”
[This is] the best way to become conscious of how money actually comes and goes in your life as opposed to how you think it comes and goes…This is the step that somehow makes the biggest impact.
It doesn’t matter how you track your spending — the most important thing is to do it.
- You can use a cash notebook.
- You can use an online tool like Wesabe, Mint, or Quicken Online.
- You can use a piece of software like Quicken or Microsoft Money.
Whichever method you choose, stick with it. Make it a habit. Don’t fudge the numbers. Record your transactions as soon as possible. Most of all, don’t judge yourself. Tracking your spending is an exercise in data collection; it’s not the appropriate time to change your habits.
Method #2: Develop a budget
After you’ve tracked your spending for a few weeks (or months), use the data you’ve collected to develop a budget. According to The Millionaire Next Door, budgeting is one thing that sets the wealthy apart from the rest of us — 55% of millionaires keep a budget.
Many people — myself included — fail to budget for a variety of reasons: it’s boring, we don’t think we need it, or we don’t know how. But this simple act can provide a roadmap for your money.
There are a variety of budgeting methods you can choose, from Andrew Tobias’ three-step budget to the 60% budget. My recent favorite (and a favorite of GRS readers) is Elizabeth Warren’s balanced money formula: 50% to Needs, 20% to Savings, and everything else to Wants. Simple but effective.
Crave more budgeting tips? Check out this article highlighting 13 tools for building a better budget. Hate the idea of budgeting? Consider the spending plan, a budgeting method for non-budgeters.
Method #3: Optimize your accounts
For eighteen years, I was an account holder at a large national bank. I paid an $8 “service charge” every month, as well as many other fees. I received terrible service and earned no interest. Over the last couple of years, I’ve finally begun to optimize my accounts. If you haven’t already done so, consider the following:
- Open an online high-yield savings account. Even in this era of low interest rates, it’s still possible to earn about 3% on your savings. Internet favorite ING Direct currently offers a 2.50% APY and FNBO Direct offers a 2.80% APY. These rates are about as low as they can go, and should increase in the months and years ahead. And if you don’t need as much liquidity with your investments, consider researching cd rates which may offer a higher interest rate.
- Choose a rewards checking account. Believe it or not, it’s possible to find checking accounts that pay interest. Online checking accounts generally pay between 1% and 3%, depending on your balance. But you can usually find an even better deal through your local bank or credit union. Check out this huge list of rewards checking accounts.
- Use a rewards credit card. If you have trouble with credit, it’s best to avoid plastic altogether. If you can use credit responsibly, be sure to choose a credit card that pays you and be prompt to check your free credit report. Avoid cards that carry an annual fee. Find a rewards program that matches your lifestyle. But don’t choose a card just because it offers a signup bonus or because it gives you a discount at your favorite store. Remember: your goal is to find a useful tool. Look for a long-term relationship you can live with.
It’s important to choose accounts and systems that work for you. I signed up for a rewards checking account at a local credit union, but the nearest branch is fifteen minutes out of my way. I never use it. I had to compromise by opening on online checking account instead. I earn a lower rate, but it’s an account I’ll actually use.
Method #4: Start an emergency fund
For years I lived paycheck-to-paycheck. I spent everything I earned. This worked well until something went wrong. Suddenly I’d find myself without money to pay for a car repair, or facing an expensive doctor’s bill. I financed emergencies with credit cards. I finally paid off all of this debt at the end of 2007.
After you’ve optimized your accounts, make it a priority to save for emergencies. In The Total Money Makeover, Dave Ramsey explains why he believes an emergency fund should come before anything else:
Since I hate debt so much, people often ask why we don’t start with the debt. I used to do that when I first started teaching and counseling, but I discovered that people would stop their whole Total Money Makeover because of an emergency — they felt guilty that they had to stop debt-reducing to survive.
After you’ve saved $1000, then you can attack your debt. Open an online high-yield savings account and add $20 or $50 to your account ever time you get paid. Two years ago, I opened an account at ING Direct, where it’s simple to schedule automatic deposits.
See also: Learning to love the emergency fund.
Method #5: Get out of debt
Are you struggling under a heavy debt load from credit cards or student loans? Make it a priority to unload some of this this burden in 2009. At the end of 2007, I said good-bye to 20 years of debt — it feels fantastic to have that weight off my shoulders.
If you have the mental discipline, you’ll save money by paying down your high-interest debt first. But if you’ve tried that method before and failed, consider using a debt snowball. Pay your debts starting with the smallest balance first. Here’s how:
- Order your debts from lowest balance to highest balance.
- Designate a certain amount of money to pay toward debts each month.
- Pay the minimum payment on all debts except the one with the lowest balance.
- Throw every other penny at the debt with the lowest balance.
- When that debt is gone, do not alter the monthly amount used to pay debts, but throw all you can at the debt with the next-lowest balance.
The debt snowball can give you awesome psychological payoffs, keeping you motivated to stay in the game. It’s not mathematically ideal, but it worked for me (and for many others besides). However you choose to get out of debt, stick with it. Don’t give up.
Method #6: Fund your retirement
The current economy gives a lot of people the jitters. But if history is any indication, now is a great time to be buying stocks for your retirement. Take advantage of any employer-matched opportunities, such as a 401(k). Also consider starting a Roth IRA.
If you’re young, you probably don’t think you need to start a retirement account. You’re wrong. No matter how old you are, now is the time to begin saving for retirement. The extraordinary power of compound interest favors the young — and in a big way! In The Automatic Millionaire, David Bach writes:
The single biggest investment mistake you can make [is] not using your [retirement] plan and not maxing it out.
After reading The Automatic Millionaire a couple years ago, I opened a Roth IRA at Sharebuilder. It was easier than opening a checking account. I managed to make the maximum contribution in 2006 and 2007. In 2008, I maxed out my 401(k).
Don’t understand retirement accounts? No problem. Last year I explained what a Roth IRA is and why you should care. For more ideas, check out Wesabe’s simple investing group.
Method #7: Automate your finances
For the past eighteen months, I’ve been moving toward a system of paperless personal finance. Along the way, I’m learning the value of automating routine transactions. When you make things automatic, you remove the human element, making it more difficult for you to mess things up.
The classic example is overdraft protection. By tying your checking account to your savings account, you have a safety net if you bounce a check. But there are other ways this can work for you. For example, I’ve set up automatic payments with the gas company, the cable company, and my auto insurance company. I also make automatic deposits to my online savings account.
One terrific advantage to automation: when pay your bills and do your saving and investing automatically, it’s easy to tell how much you have left over to spend at the end of each month!
Method #8: Earn extra money
You can meet a lot of your financial goals by reducing your spending and using the right tools. But nothing supercharges your progress like a boost in income. How can you earn extra money?
- Ask for a raise. Several readers have written to tell me how they’ve given themselves a raise through ambition and ingenuity. Here’s one example.
- Switch employers. Not every employer is able or willing to offer raises, even when they’re merited. If you’re in a position where a raise isn’t possible, consider finding a new employer.
- Take a second job. Many people find that the best way to get out of a financial hole is to temporarily take a second job. Nobody wants to work more than 40 hours per week, but sometimes that’s what is needed to get out of debt or to save for a house. Just remind yourself that you’re doing this for a short time.
- Use your hobbies. Yes, it’s possible to have money-making hobbies. You’re not going to get rich playing World of Warcraft, but many people use productive hobbies to earn a little extra income.
- Volunteer for medical research. Last summer, I earned $120 for a couple of hours spent participating in medical research. My colleague Donna Freedman has earned extra cash by giving blood and watching porn (though not at the same time).
- Sell things. When I decided to get out of debt, one of my first steps was to sell a bunch of the stuff I’d bought with that $35,000. I used eBay, Craigslist, garage sales, and the Amazon Marketplace to sell the things I no longer needed or wanted. The money I earned jump-started my debt reduction.
Another effective way to increase your income is to pursue entrepreneurship. While working to defeat my debt, I started a small computer consulting business. It didn’t generate a lot of income, but it did provide $2,000 a year that I wouldn’t have had otherwise!
Method #9: Educate yourself
Knowledge is power. Personal finance doesn’t have to be a mystery. Subscribe to this site. Read other personal finance blogs. I recommend:
- The Simple Dollar
- I Will Teach You to Be Rich
- The members of the Money Scribes network
- The members of the LifeRemix network
Visit your public library. Borrow money books and self-development manuals. Here are four of my favorites:
- If you’re in debt and can’t seem to find a way out: How to Get Out of Debt and Live Prosperously
- If you’d like to know more about investing: The Random Walk Guide to Investing
- If things are tight and you need to find creative ways to make ends meet: The Complete Tightwad Gazette
- If you want a motivational manual to prompt you to pursue your goals: The Magic of Thinking Big
You don’t have to agree with everything in a book to get something out of it. I read a lot of personal finance books — some are good, but many are not. Even the worst books usually have one or two things I can pull from them. Learn how to read a personal finance book so that you can pick and choose those pieces appropriate for your life.
Final thoughts
Taking control of your finances can be intimidating — there’s so much to do! — but it doesn’t have to be that way. One effective solution is to take a vacation day from work: designate one specific date as your personal “Money Day”. Use this day to finally set up Quicken on your computer, to open a retirement account, and to call around for a better deal on your insurance.
The good news is that you can get out of debt. You can save for retirement. If I can do it, so can you. Best wishes for a prosperous new year!

Note: This is a new version of an article I share every January. I update it annually, incorporating new tools and techniques. Photo credits: Checkbook register by Lemon Jenny, car accident by Incase Designs, gears by Ralph Bijker.
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I’m pleased to see #37/39 because I’m also at that stage: now what? Being debt-free with a large-ish amount banked and earning for me has opened up vistas I’d never considered before. My only expense now is food and rent, plus utilities and gas for my old beater. Maybe I should move somewhere cheaper and quit my stupid job? Maybe I should get rid of everything and go on a 1-year sabbatical to SE Asia like the guy at agonist.com is doing? I could buy a house under $50,000 in some parts of the US, should I do that and semi-retire, taking whatever job I’d need to pay that piddly mortgage?
This is an excellent if broad topic on which to expand. I know yesterday I replied in the negative to your tweet about expanding GRS content, but this is one area that would be really helpful.
I guess the best thing about getting where I am, after two years of intense effort, is that I could be laid off tomorrow and I wouldn’t care. I really dislike my job but it pays well and furthers my goals so I am going to stick with it until it ends; in fact I am counting on being laid off this year, with a nice severance then unemployment benefits, which I won’t get if I quit.
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I’m not “there” yet, but because everything has sort of become a habit, I am interested in what happens next. I sort of feel like J.D. is a couple of years ahead of me in the get out of debt journey, and so I too would be interested in reading about what happens once all of your finances become stable. (Now that I’ve learned things the hard way, I’m trying to learn the easy way – from other people’s experiences).
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J.D.,
I look forward to your easily accessible “archive” project.
The first step towards taking control of ones financial life is the hardest. And it is easy to get overwhelmed with everything you don’t know.
Creating a database of accurate and comprehensive personal finance information will not only give J.D. the freedom to write about other dimensions of people’s financial lives, but it will provide a much needed resource.
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What an interesting discussion! I get just as much out of the discussion as I do the blog. Count me as another one who is debt-free (except for the mortgage), maxes out retirement accountas, has a large emergency fund and wonders what next? My father had a sizable chunk of money in his later years. But I couldn’t get him to buy new clothing or get a bigger room at his assisted-living facility to accommodate his furniture. When he developed a plumbing problem at his home, his solution was to boil hot water on the stove rather than to get the kitchen faucet fixed so that he could get hot water–all because he just couldn’t part with his money. I think he got pleasure watching his bank balances increase each month–at least I hope so. I certainly don’t want to live like that, but I do want to make sure we have enough money to meet our needs in the future. How will I know how much is enough? Will my husband’s company quit contributing to his 401(k)? How much will we need for health care? The uncertainty of the future is what makes me nervous.
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I’ve always been interested in participating in a medical research trial, but I’m worried about how safe it is. Besides Craigslist, how do you find out about those opportunities? Did you contact the university directly?
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Wow, it’s amazing to find my current financial status is right here and I share it with many others. I will say I understand JD’s dilemma of keeping the site interesting to an audience across many stages of personal finance. This is also a business for him and he has to keep drawing readers. I like the idea of finding someway to keep the starting off/get out of debt info easily available and yet tackle that “stage 3″ as Tyler mentioned. The idea that comes to mind for me is posting about Stage 1 on Monday, Stage 3 on Friday, etc.
My husband and I will pay off the last of our debt this year, have an emergency fund, and are comfortable we are saving enough for retirement. I’m wondering about how to make the transition into investing. I’ve got a Money Market Account and now our Emergency Fund is in laddered CDs. I think the next step is to look at investment vehicles for this money that was previously allocated to debt repayment, but what those are I am not sure. There’s a topic idea for you JD
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Lauren @55 – check out the university’s web site and ‘help wanted’ postings. Back before the Web these opportunities were often listed in the staff-oriented free newspaper that was distributed on campus. You can also call up the medical school, psychology department, etc. and just ask them.
re John’s post – it’s pretty bad netitquette, I think, to pop in and say “I’m going to say this and then I’m not coming back/reading here anymore.” It’s getting the last word in and then shrieking NO TAGBACKS!
That said, one of the things I like very much about this blog is that the attitude here is the opposite of the mentality of many other frugal blogs and ‘gurus’; there is no undertone of frugality being a marker of one’s worth as a human being. I think John is kind of making that same mistake. When you pinch every penny, when your life revolves around savings and giving up things you care about, you are still a slave to your money, just as much as the guy who works 50-hour weeks purely to keep up with the amount he spends on gizmos that he really doesn’t have time to enjoy.
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Rubin #31
what if 12 months is not enough. the trick is to be debt free, because when you’re not paying master card, and car payment and other consumer debt, you’re paying yourself and when you’re paying yourself you can build an emergency fund as big as you wish.
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I don’t know if I would go as far as taking myself out of a virtual community such as GRS, if the blog is no longer conducive to my lifestyle. but I personally understand the feeling.
I was listening to Dave Ramsey and other personal finance Podcast daily as well as frequented various PF blogs and the GRS forum they kept me focused while getting out of debt, but once I completed the task of getting out of debt I’ve become less involved. I don’t even jump at my Kiplinger magazine anymore instead I’m looking to get into the Economist and Forbes
I don’t think to look at any PF blogs for what my next goals should be. (I just don’t take well to others telling how to live my life) I rather seek to find how others have accomplished what I’m looking to do for my family.
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Great tips
I can’t wait to see where my money takes me this year. It’s so exicitng since I finally have some freedom!
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Excellent post.
Can you provide some details on what kind of services do you provide on your computer consulting business and how much time do you dedicate to this.
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I’ve put in practice some of the tips since last year, mmost of them are just common sense, and they’ve been working for me.
I have a suggestion for the Method #1, instead of using paid software or paid sites, you can use free software that do the same, like GNU Cash (www.gnucash.org) and save some extra bucks in the way.
Regards
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Who else noticed the clipart illustrating the utter futility of three gears meshed such that none of the three can ever turn?
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Are these in order of importance? Should I pay off my debt before I pay back my IRA?
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I just opened a Quicken Online and ING Direct account because of this post. I tracked ALL of my cash flow for 60 days a few years ago and got out of the habit. It’s stunning what you can spend on lunch alone when you are unaware. Looking forward to Quicken Online.
Thanks JD!
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Hi J.D.,
First, thanks for mentioning both Quicken desktop and Quicken Online as ways to get on top of finances in 2009. Your tips are always really helpful, so to be included among them is flattering!
@Glenn, I’ve personally started enforcing the “take my lunch” rule. It is amazing how much I was spending unnecessarily. One trick that makes it easier for me is packing up a bunch of lunches in advance on Sundays, and bringing them all in Monday. Keeps me from slipping when I run short on time!
Let me know how your Quicken Online experience goes!
- Chelsea, Quicken Online
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J.D.,
I mentioned your tips in the Quicken blog post on the Money Guide we launched last month in partnership with Kiplinger. Check it out:
http://www.quickencommunity.com/quickenOnlineBlog/Announcing-the-launch-of-Money-Guide-on-Quicken-com
Any feedback you have is great, we’re going to add more articles later.
- Chelsea, Quicken Online
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I love this site just found it by accident but have learned so much im proud to say i do many of the tips giving but i did get in that watching every penny stage and feeling guilty for spending any money then i felt like i was missing out on life now. i was saving for a time that might not ever come and not living life now so i started slacking off and got more credit card debit not to much but enough. when i came across this site i was getting to the point to get serious again because of the economy and the fact that i have 2 children now. my biggest obstacle right now is gettin my husband involved. any suggestions we have seperate accounts i have about 4 different accts 3 online and one home base with 4 different accts in that one it helps me to keep everything seperate. right now we split bills i was just wondering what are other married couples doing. i worried this system is not the best the seperate accts i have no problem with but i have an emergency fund if im off for 6 months but what if we are both off or he is off my fund doesn cover that i just want to hear others opinions on this matter thanks
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Great tips, don’t underestimate tip #8, a lot of wounderful things can happen when you start to look for more opportunities.
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i have just recently started my ‘emergency fund’. cant wait to have the credit card paid off and torn up!
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This is a great post! I’ve been living check to check for so long and spending irresponsibly. This change is definitely one that has to start mentally.
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Hi,
This is quite probably the best post on this website. The advice is simple, yet from what I can tell, top notch.
Now I just need to start following it myself. Which is easier said than done.
Kind regards,
Victor
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