The Mighty Power of the Lowly Coin Jar (or, How I Saved $723 in Seven Months Without Effort)
Published on - August 24th, 2011 (by J.D. Roth) This guest post is from Danny Iny, an author, strategist, serial entrepreneur, and co-founder of Firepole Marketing, the program that teaches expert marketing for non-marketers. If you like what you read here, check out his free video course or follow him on Twitter.
In January, I started an experiment, a savings experiment. The experiment was designed to save money for my “emergency cushion” account without feeling the loss from my pocket or budget. I figured I could probably save about $30 to $50 per month — not much, but not peanuts either. In six months, I hoped to save about $250.
Last week, a month later than I’d originally intended, I deposited the money into my savings account. Before I did, I counted it up to see how much I’d accumulated. I had $723. Wow! And I’d managed to save all of that without even noticing.
I’ll share how I was able to save more than I’d expected, but first I’ll explain how the strategy works. The rules are pretty simple.
Rules of the Game: No Paying With Change
How did I save $723 in seven months without effort? The rules were simple.
- Whenever I paid for things in cash, I never used change.
- When I got home, I tossed any change in my pocket into a change jar.
That’s it. That’s my super-secret strategy. It’s that simple.
I expected to save a dollar or two per day, nothing more. But this savings strategy quickly ballooned because I inadvertently turned spending into a game.
The gamification of personal finance is a new hot topic — along with the gamification of pretty much everything else. The theory behind “gamification” is that if you want people to take an action, you need to harness the same mechanics that make games fun and addictive.
So how was this game layer built into my savings strategy?
Here are the key elements:
- Tossing the coins into the jar was like acquiring a handful of points in a video game, complete with the validating “clink” sound-effect to let me know that I’d done a good job.
- Watching the level of the coins rise over time led to a surprising sense of satisfaction and achievement.
- There was variability in the progress that I made, but I could influence that variability.
I think it’s that last part that made the biggest difference. The fact that I could change my behavior to “rack up more points” is what made this really feel like a game. I wanted to “level up”!
Leveling Up the Savings Game
Before I go on, I should make a confession: This didn’t actually start as a savings strategy.
I started saving my change because I was annoyed at carrying it around all the time. I dumped pennies, nickels, dimes, and all the rest into a jar just so my money wouldn’t be so annoyingly heavy. But when the coins in the jar started to rise, all of the game mechanics I described above kicked in.
“Hey, I wonder how much money I could save by tossing all of my change in here,” I thought. “I don’t think I’d miss it, so why not give it a chance?”
So I did. Instead of just the smaller change, I put all of my coins in the jar. And I was truly surprised at the feeling of accomplishment and success I gained when I could put a $1 or $2 coin in the jar. It felt like a real “good progress” kind of day!
That’s when I started to change my behavior.
The first thing I noticed was that I was making fewer transactions via debit or credit, and trying to do as much as I could in cash — all so that I’d have more change left over to toss into the jar. I’d actually feel a loss when I made a credit transaction. If the transaction was for, say, $12.97, then I’d feel like “there goes $2.03 that could have gone into the jar!”
I found myself going even further. For instance, I’d adjust my purchase total so that I could get more change. My standing Starbucks order, which cost $4.54, was down-graded a size so that I would have more change for the jar.
At the same time, I’d sometimes find myself adding something small to a purchase so that instead of a total cost of $19.47 ($0.53 change), for example, I’d spend $20.97 ($4.03 change).
It got to the point that whenever I passed by a Laundromat, I’d hop in, slide a $5 bill into the change machine, and have it spit out more coins. Yes, I know it sounds kind of crazy, but it was fun. The result was more and more change into the jar, and more and more satisfaction for me!
Hacking Your Savings and Growth
Okay, what’s this story really all about?
The key takeaway here isn’t that you could adopt my coin jar savings strategy to save $723 in the next seven months without noticing. (Maybe you could, maybe you couldn’t.)
My message is that whatever your goal, you should find a way to turn it into a game, because whereas we do chores because we have to, we play games because we want to. When we want to do something, we often find ourselves doing more and more of it.
This applies to savings and personal finance, but it applies to a lot of other things, too: waking up early, exercising, controlling your diet, and how much television you watch. Heck, if you’re a business owner, it even applies to getting your customers to want to move through your chain of conversion. (Can you tell I’m a marketer?)
Here are the key things to remember when turning your chores into games:
- There should be frequent opportunities for action, and immediate feedback.
- You should have some way of “racking up points” over time.
- You should be able to adjust your behavior and rack up more of those points.
What do you think? Is there an important gamification element that I missed? How do you trick yourself into saving more? And I’m curious: How much have you managed to save with your coin jar?
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When I was in high school 20 years ago, I was accepted for an exchange program in Japan. My parents agreed I could go, but I had to raise half the money myself. And I grew up in the middle of the country, so the plane ticket was quite expensive! Out of habit and “just because” I’d been depositing my change from my allowance each week, which was primarily used for lunch money, in a jar for several months – maybe even a year. So the first thing I did was count and roll that change and I had saved over $500 dollars! I had very little extra money to raise and did so easily well before my trip. I probably ended up with a lot more spending money as well since I didn’t have to put as much effort toward financing the trip.
It was a great early lesson, of my own devising, in small amounts adding up in a big way!
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WOW ! Lots of discussion all because of one guy’s idea of fun! I say kudo’s to him, and if you don’t agree, don’t do it!
I too save my change…which is a challenge as I don’t carry any money daily – no purse, no ID, nothing. Just me and my lunch bag as I walk to/from work! Anyhoo…I find an amazing number of pennies plus the occasional nickle/dime/quarter every day on my walk, and the occasional beer can/bottle which I turn in. I once found someone’s credit card, and turned it in to the bank – when the guy insisted on giving me something, I took the money and added it to the ‘found money’. For those fewer and fewer places that don’t take debit, I will spend ‘real money’, and then all change is thrown into the kitty. Those amounts are small, but add up. And as I’m Canadian, I can tell you, no one wants to lug around the loonie and toonies ($1 and $2 dollar coins)!
Last year, in just my ‘coins from walking to work’, I had accumulated $70 dollars or so. And all for free! I’m not suggesting it as a long-term savings strategy, a retirement plan, or anything else. Just found money.
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All good tips, thank you. I was able to save $723 just this week, albeit with a little more effort. I make about $2800/week and I usually stop on the way home for dinner and perhaps a drink or two at one of the nicer restaurants in the city which costs me about $100-150 each night. This week I decided to cook for myself each night. Although a lot of effort, I did save $723 this week and now I can invest it in some T-Bonds or low risk mutual funds and watch it grow over time. It will be interesting to see in a few decades what my week of cooking for myself has become!
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Sorry . . . . $103 a month would not go unnoticed by me. The theory is good (I don’t spend change either but I’m in the U.S. so I keep my singles as part of what I can use for purchases) but the practicality just isn’t there for me. It would only make me carry more cash to compensate. I would rather set up an automatic transfer and treat it like I would any other bill.
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JD, I hate the pop-up thing on the side. I keep closing it, it keeps popping back up, it is driving me CRAZY. I also keep getting a message that the page is being re-directed. If it continues, I’d have to go back to reading on my RSS feed and not participating in the conversations, which will really just result in me not reading anymore. I like this site too much to just slip away without telling you why.
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Hi All
Not sure if the comment has been made but we have this similar system using EFTPOS here in NZ with some banks. You can opt to round your purchase to the nearest $1, $2, $5, $10 etc and have it put into a savings a/c. So if you are buying lunch and it cost $12, rounding to the nearest $5 would mean it cost you $15 (with $3 going to savings).
Unlike the rest of the world, we are nearly a cashless society so this works for us.
After recently being in Europe and having to carry cash I am so glad it is hardly used here! We are slowly getting rid of our coins too which is great – we only have $2, $1, 50c, 20c & 10c now and they have all been made smaller/lighter
Can’t wait until cash is completely obliterated from the world…
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I would love a cashless society. 1 card is so much easier than a big thick wallet full of stuff I don’t need.
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WOW! I cant beleive the flak some people put up about what amounts to a piggy bank! I have personaly done this with my change for almost twenty years now and find it a good way to save a tidy sum. I have a small antique cream can that I put all my spare change and some small bills into ($1-$10). In about 6 to 10 months its got around 700 bucks in it. I used to use it to buy my years supply of L.P. gas before the price went through the roof. The point is there is nothing wrong with this little idea. No, I’m not getting intrest on my piggy bank. Checked int. rates on 700 bucks lately? Beleve me this is not my sole savings plan.(SARCASM) I dont mean to be snarky but it just seems that sometimes on this site some people get all excited if something is not done in a certain way. Using cash; for example, is something that seems to astound some people who frequent this site. The thought of carrying cash seems like a foreign idea to some who frequent GRS. Thats fine. But I also think its absured to buy 5 bucks worth of McFood at McDonalds with a CC and I am now seeing people do that. Well, ok then, to each their own. The point is we in the USA have been on a spending spree for the last 30 years or so and now the time has come to pay the fiddler. If we at the GRS family can help each other out with ideas to save then I am all for them. JD has the best website in the world and I want to thank him and ALL of you who contribute. I also want to thank the WWII/GREATEST GENERATION for being a role model in being frugal.
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I brought a massive money tin from the 2 dollor shop, the biggest I could find. When I opened it 8 months later I had over 1500 worth of change in it. I live in Australia, so we have 1 and 2 dollar coins here.
As I had already ad off credit cards
I went and brought a new TV to replace our old 1970s tv that was on it’s last legs!
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I have a slightly different version of this game. I put all small coins in the jar and use it if I want to go out for a night or if the kids want to go to the zoo/park/etc , the quarters go into my cash in hand emergency fund. I keep some as quarters for vending machines and convert some into bills for easier transport. Works well for my family and makes my daily pocketbook lighter to carry.
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I have been doing this for past 2 and half years now. I do not like carrying change so I do most of my transactions using a debit/credit card. However, at the places where I have to do cash transactions, I put the rest of the coins in a coin box. I emptied my jar for past 2 and half years and I managed to get about $75.00.
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I am station in Hawaii right now. My family lives in California mostly. Two of my cousins ages 16 and 13, wanted to come out to visit me, but thier parents couldn’t afford it. I made them a deal. Find the biggest jar that you can and every time you have change, drop it in the jar. Whatever you can save in 1 year, I will match for tickets out. The girls put the jar in the living room and sometimes their parents would drop a little spare change in, but the girls got most of it themselves. I started using more cash to have change for my jar and I know the girls stopped complaining about chores and babysitting their little brothers. They even started doing the recycling and taking it in, which had been their dad’s domain. 11 months later the girls flew out for 10 days with me and I only contributed $50 to plane tickets. The rest of the money in my jar went to fun activities while they were out here. When they got home they told the rest of the cousins (all 27 of them) just how easy it had been to save the money. I am now being sent photos almost daily of steadily filling coin jars!
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I gave this a shot and I have around $100 in my jar after a month. More importantly though I’m paying a lot more attention to what I’m spending on day to day things, which was difficult to track when it was a checking balance that’s never quite up to date and I can only check at my computer or a pocket ledger I would frequently forget to update. The money in my wallet is a good concrete reminder what I have available.
The rounding strategy also amplifies the impact of getting little add-ons, like going from getting a sandwich to also getting chips and a drink isn’t $.99 like the cashier says, it’s another $5 because of how much will get whisked away to the jar as a result.
And yeah this is no replacement for a savings strategy and budgeting. But it’s helped me address the problem of how to handle lunch money.
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