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الاثنين، 27 فبراير 2017

Enter to WIN a Weekend Getaway at the San Antonio Marriott Northwest

It's giveaway time! We're excited to offer one lucky reader a Weekend Getaway at the San Antonio Marriott Northwest. This prize package includes a two-night stay at the San Antonio Marriott Northwest and dinner for two at Asado Urban Grill ($50 credit) — total prize package worth $300! The San Antonio Marriott Northwest just completed a […]

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Appealing Social Security Decisions Online

Was your Social Security claim denied by the Social Security Administration? Learn how to file an appeal online for both medical and non-medical issues.

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Prevent Identity Theft From Affecting Your Taxes

When your identity is stolen, you have so many potential issues to deal with. Learn what to do if you fall victim to tax-related identity theft.

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The Year 2000 Called. It Wanted to Know if You Missed the Nokia 3310

Remember when you would whip out your Nokia 3310 and play “Snake”? Or remember when you would make your own ringtone on it? That was tight back in the day!

Sadly, though, the cute little phone got lost in the shuffle of iPhones and Android devices. Until today, those phones were nothing but little tidbits of sweet nostalgia — I don’t think I’ve seen one since I was in middle school.

In case you haven’t already heard, the iconic Nokia 3310 is making a comeback!

Flippin’ sweet. Here are the details.

The Return Of The Nokia 3310

Finnish startup HMD Global acquired the intellectual property for Nokia products last year, giving it rights to branding and technology.

After surveying consumers about what their favorite Nokia products were, the result was unanimous: the 3310.

And why wouldn’t it be? I don’t care what you say about “Candy Crush Saga.” “Snake” is where it’s at.

As a result, HMD Global has revamped the Nokia 3310 and unveiled it at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on Feb. 27, causing hipsters everywhere to freak out.

I mean, what’s hipper than a vintage cell phone? (Yes, that’s a thing now — what a time to be alive.)

The revamp is pretty sweet, too: The battery will provide up to 22 hours of talk time and lasts up to a month in standby mode. I don’t see iPhones doing that, amirite though???

The new edition will be available in four colors: yellow, red, gray and the original navy blue.

Can we also talk about how it has a COLOR screen now? In addition to that, the screen is polarized, making it easier to read in the sunlight. Talk about fancy.

And, get this: IT HAS A CAMERA AND FLASH.  *drops mic*

OK, OK — it only has 2G connectivity, so let’s not pretend like this baby is fast. If you want to buy one of these things, make sure you understand that patience is a virtue.

Ringing in at only $52, I would gladly have all the time in the world for this phone. I don’t think you can even buy an iPhone case for $52. (I kid, I kid.)

For now, the details are slim. The phone is set to relaunch in the second quarter of 2017, meaning it could come out anytime between April 1 and June 30. It will be available worldwide, but HMD Global has not announced which carriers will offer it.   

In addition to the 3310 revamp, the company released three new Android Nokia models. Check them out here.

I don’t know about you, but I’m gonna go throw my iPhone in the toilet. They’re so “uncool” now.

Your Turn: Will you ditch your smartphone for the modern Nokia 3310?

Kelly Smith is a junior writer and engagement specialist at The Penny Hoarder. Catch her on Twitter at @keywordkelly.

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Race to Outback for a Free Bloomin’ Onion When This NASCAR Driver Does Well

Crispy, sweet, salty, crunchy and not even remotely healthy: Nothing says “Outback Steakhouse” like the Bloomin’ Onion.

Outback’s signature appetizer is a large onion carved to resemble a flower, battered and deep-fried. It hardly matters that this particular dish is not Australian in any way.

Now you can get a Bloomin’ Onion for free when NASCAR driver Kevin Harvick does well in a race.

Here’s how it works:

Whenever Harvick finishes in the top 10 in any 2017 NASCAR race, you get a free Bloomin’ Onion at any Outback on the Monday following the race.

You get this free appetizer with any purchase, and you don’t need a coupon. Just say the magic words “Bloomin’ Monday” to your server, or show them the Facebook announcement to get the deal. (Limit one per table.)

If Harvick does well, you won’t have to wait long to indulge in your free fried onion. NASCAR holds most races on Sundays and a few on Saturdays. This NASCAR season runs through Nov. 19. Here’s the schedule.

Harvick, who is Outback’s sponsored NASCAR driver, is a good bet for any given race. Out of 575 races over his 17-year career, he has 284 top 10 finishes as of the 2016 season.

If you’re not up for personally keeping track of Harvick’s exploits, you can sign up here to get an email from Outback whenever “Bloomin’ Monday” is in effect.

Happy crunching.

Your Turn: Despite the calorie count, would you turn down a free Bloomin’ Onion?

Mike Brassfield (mike@thepennyhoarder.com) is a senior writer at The Penny Hoarder. When it comes to Outback’s “Aussie-tizers,” he’s more of a coconut shrimp kind of guy.

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A Free iPhone From AT&T? Yes, but There Are a Few Strings Attached

The news that AT&T is going to start offering a “free” smartphone has been bouncing around the last couple of days, and it’s bringing on some serious nostalgia.

Remember when we were suspicious of smartphones, and cell phone companies actually had to entice us into signing a contract by throwing in the phone for free (or at least cheap)?

Remember when that all changed, and people started lining up at 3 a.m. in 15-degree weather to pay $650 for the newest model?

Gone are the days of cell phone companies having to lure us in with contract deals and free devices — these days, it’s difficult to find a person who makes their calls on anything but an iPhone or Android device.

And while cell phone companies have made it easier for the average person to carry the newest smartphone by employing special financing plans, nothing really compares to the whole free phone deal of yesteryear.

Wait, a Free Phone?

Is it possible we’re headed back to the era of free smartphones?

Well, it’s a start: AT&T is now offering a buy one, get one deal on smartphones with a qualifying service plan.

But wait. Is a free smartphone too good to be true?

Well, Sort Of

In the announcement, AT&T states customers can choose between “three popular smartphones” — including the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus.

To take advantage of this deal, add a new line (or upgrade an existing one), and purchase both new devices through AT&T’s Next or Next Every Year service plan. Eligibility requires a service plan of at least $70 per month.

And while AT&T will credit your bill up to $695 over the next 24 or 30 months (depending on which plan you choose), you’ll still shell out the first three installments on the “free” phone before the reimbursement kicks in. Plus, you’ll pay all taxes on the phone upfront.

So, while this might be a good idea for anyone nearing the end of a contract or looking to switch providers, it’s definitely not the crazy-exciting “free iPhone” deal it might look like at first glance.

However, if you’re free of a contract and wouldn’t have to pay a lump sum to buy out your device or service, then sure, it might be time to take AT&T up on its offer.

So it’s a good deal, but maybe not a great deal — unless you were already able to tick all the required boxes. In that case, this deal might make sense.

Your Turn: Would you switch to AT&T to score a (mostly) free smartphone?

Grace Schweizer is a junior writer at The Penny Hoarder.

The post A Free iPhone From AT&T? Yes, but There Are a Few Strings Attached appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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3 Legit Work-From-Home Jobs That Pay Well and Have Great Benefits

Working from home has many perks — especially if you know how to avoid the very avoidable expenses.

I do it once a week — big fan.

So if you’ve been meaning to apply for a new job, here’s your no-excuses head start: We found three awesome companies hiring work-from-home employees, benefits included.

1. A Humbly Confident Part-Time Support Rep for You Need a Budget

We wrote about this position way back when (last October). You Need a Budget (or YNAB) is, once again, seeking part-time, work-from-home support reps.

If you didn’t catch the gist from its name, YNAB is a budgeting software. It started back in 2004 and continues to thrive. That’s probably because it strives to treat its clients as good as gold through its customer support system.

And you could become part of that. As a support rep, you’ll help YNAB customers have the best experience possible by answering questions, solving problems, offering advice and being nice.

Quantitatively, you should be able to answer at least 60 emails in a four-hour shift and juggle something like three live chats at once. Bonus points if you’re already a fan of YNAB and have customer support experience.

If you successfully pass the eight-week trial period (it’s paid — $13 an hour), you’ll then work 20 to 30 hours a week and earn $13 to $17 an hour. You’ll do this from anywhere with reliable internet.

Perks include being forced to take vacation (just kidding, but YNAB takes vacay seriously) and options to open a traditional or Roth 401(k).

If you’re interested, read the full job listing and apply.

(Do note that this job is always open and operates on a rolling basis, so don’t feel like you have to skip the gym to apply — though this could be a good excuse.)

2. Customer Support Advocate at Kayako

Here’s another “work from anywhere with internet connection” job!

Kayako is a customer service platform that helps companies improve their customer relationships. If you’re a big fan of customer service, this might be a fit.

Your primary responsibility will be to answer customer questions through chat, email and a community forum. To do so, you should be (or become) an expert on Kayako features.

To succeed, you’ll need excellent communication skills, at least a year of experience in customer support and know a little something about computers (like, what’s a cache?).

My favorite part of the job listing are the benefits: stock options, unlimited paid time off, a pension, private health insurance package (including 50% off a gym membership), all the gear you need, flexible hours and child care vouchers… among other perks.

If you’re interested in learning more, check out the job listing on Go Remote, and apply there.

3. Customer Supporter for FullStory

Want the full story? OK, so technically, this job is offered by The Yeoman, a “community of support experts.” (We wrote about the company when it was hiring agents to work with Vimeo.)

Now, it’s hiring customer supporters for FullStory, an app for websites that gathers customer experience data to see what’s working and what’s not.

The only catch: You’ll work remotely from the Eastern time zone. (You’ve gotta live there.) Also, FullStory gives priority to those who live in Michigan, New York, South Carolina and Virginia.

As a customer supporter, you’ll advocate on behalf of customers with FullStory’s designers, engineers and other stakeholders. To do so, you’ll manage and develop support documentation and processes, and create productivity-improving tools.

Ultimately, you’re there to make the customers happy.

In addition to being empathetic and passionate, you should have strong written English communication skills, previous technical support experience (at least two to four years) and a high school diploma, though some college is preferred.

The benefits are nice: flexible work location, “competitive” salaries and benefits, and a new computer. The company also apparently communicates with a lot of memes and animated GIFs, so that’s cool.

If you’re interested in reading the entire job posting, check it out on Workable. You can apply there, too.

Writer’s note: I emailed The Yeoman for a better idea of what a “competitive” salary is. I’ll update you here when I hear back!

Your Turn: Are you applying to any of these jobs?

Carson Kohler (@CarsonKohler) is a junior writer at The Penny Hoarder.

The post 3 Legit Work-From-Home Jobs That Pay Well and Have Great Benefits appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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We Get to the Root of the Tooth Fairy Economy — Some Kids Get Up to $20

It’s tooth fairy time. As I’m sure you all know, Tuesday is National Tooth Fairy Day.

(Why is Tooth Fairy Day held on Feb. 28, you ask? I have no idea why. Couldn’t say.)

This got us wondering: What’s the going rate for the tooth fairy? What kind of cash is the tooth fairy shelling out for kids’ loose teeth these days?

The answer surprised us. And maybe it says a little something about where we are as a society these days.

The Tooth Fairy’s Insane Inflation Rates

It turns out the tooth fairy has been in business since the 1920s, when she (or he or it) started leaving nickels and dimes under the pillows of sleeping children.

Naturally, as the decades passed, tooth fairy inflation took hold.

When I was little and started losing my baby teeth, my parents — my own personal tooth fairies — would slip a dollar bill beneath my pillow for every tooth I lost. I think I got a silver dollar once.

Now that I’m grown and have wiggly toothed children of my own, this sacred duty has passed on to me. So I tiptoe into my kids’ bedrooms in the dark of night, cash in hand, to spirit away their lost teeth. The first time I did this, I felt like I was being inducted into the tooth fairy Mafia.

For each tooth, I leave behind a crisp $1 bill and a chocolate coin. I guess I’m kind of a frugal fairy. Heck, for all I know, maybe I’m a stingy cheapskate tooth fairy. I decided to do some research on what other parents are paying.

Holy cow. Some of these other tooth fairies are apparently emptying their wallets.

In its 2015 annual survey on tooth fairy rates (not kidding), Visa found that:

  • 1 in 3 American parents give their kids $1 per tooth.
  • 1 in 5 give their kids $5 per tooth.
  • 10% of kids get nothing.
  • 5% of kids get $20 or more per tooth.

Whaaaaat? Twenty bucks? Since when is the tooth fairy some kind of sugar daddy? For some of these kids, the teething business has become quite a lucrative racket.

Children lose 20 baby teeth to make room for their adult teeth, typically between the ages of 5 and 12. At $20 for each of those pearly whites, a mouthful of baby teeth would be valued at $400.

Of course, those are the most well-heeled tooth fairies we’re talking about. Still, the going rate for loose teeth is rising these days.

Last year, the average payout per tooth soared to $4.66 an all-time high — according to Delta Dental, an insurance carrier that conducts something called the Original Tooth Fairy Poll.

Tooth fairy payment rates — is there an app for that? Don’t be silly — of course there’s an app for that.

What Penny Hoarding Tooth Fairies Pay

In the name of research, we asked members of The Penny Hoarder Facebook community group this: What’s the going rate in YOUR home?

“$5 for the first tooth, $1 each thereafter,” said Becky Kemmerer, a mother of three from Pittsburgh.

“We usually do $1 and some loose change,” said Gina Smith, a mother of two in New Hampshire.

“We give $5 a tooth,” said Julie Hotze, mother of four. “All of my kids have savings accounts at the bank and they love taking their money and making a deposit, so it is money well spent.”

“Growing up at our house, the Tooth Fairy also rewarded us for good grades that semester, so it varied,” said Heidi Bryce, social media community manager at The Penny Hoarder. “We’d get up to $10 per tooth — or end up owing her $1.”

Additional Tooth Fairy Findings

Aside from how much cash we’re all forking over for lost teeth, that Original Tooth Fairy Poll has unearthed some interesting tooth fairy-related findings:

  • Mom, not dad, is the tooth fairy three-fourths of the time.
  • Absent-minded tooth fairies! In 35% of homes, the tooth fairy has forgotten to retrieve a tooth. Oops.
  • The tooth fairy typically visits between 10 p.m. and midnight.
  • Instead of just cash, more tooth fairies are leaving behind toothbrushes, toothpaste or floss.

Family Fairy Customs

So there you have it. Some kids get $20 from the tooth fairy. Some get $1 or $5. Some get nothing. You could call it a metaphor for our society, although that’s probably a little heavy.

What you could do is create your own personal tooth fairy custom — some kind of fun and exciting family touchstone that your children will remember long after they get all their grown-up teeth.

Some popular mommy blogs have asked readers what they leave under their kids’ pillows, and we like some of these ideas:

  • A dollar bill folded into origami.
  • A single gold dollar coin sprinkled with glitter.
  • A form from the Department of Dental Enchantment.
  • Clues that lead to a prize.
  • A $2 bill, which you can get from your bank.
  • A bill that’s been rubbed with glittery, shimmery eye shadow, or “fairy dust”

At least we’ve advanced beyond the Middle Ages, when parents buried or burned their children’s baby teeth to keep them from the hands of witches.

Yup, gotta watch out for those witches.

Happy National Tooth Fairy Day!

Your Turn: What’s the going rate for the tooth fairy in your house?

Mike Brassfield (mike@thepennyhoarder.com) is a senior writer at The Penny Hoarder. He’s got two kids. He digs being the tooth fairy.

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Want to Know How to Make Influencer Marketing Work?

The Internet is a noisy, overcrowded place.

Building momentum for your brand is often an uphill battle, and getting your audience to buy in can be daunting.

So, how do you get people to take you seriously?

How can you go from being just a little fish in a vast ocean to becoming a recognizable brand or even a household name?

One strategy that’s proven to be effective is influencer marketing.

The number of brands using this strategy has grown exponentially over the past few years.

In fact, “interest in influencer marketing has risen more than 90x from 2013 to the present.”

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Here are some other stats to give you a better idea of the state of this strategy at the moment:

  • “Influencer marketing content delivers 11x higher ROI than traditional forms of digital marketing.”
  • “Twitter users report a 5.2x increase in purchase intent when exposed to promotional content from influencers.”
  • “40 percent of people say they’ve purchased an item online after seeing it used by an influencer on Instagram, Twitter, Vine or YouTube.”

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The list goes on and on.

I think we can all agree that influencer marketing gets results.

But when you get right down to it, the term “influencer marketing” can be a little nebulous.

There’s a lot of confusion about how exactly to implement it and take advantage of it.

How can you get an influencer to link to your website, share your content, promote your product, etc.?

I’m going to be brutally honest with you. It’s not easy.

There’s a lot more involved than simply cold-emailing an influencer and saying, “Hey, please give my brand a shout out.”

It doesn’t work like that.

However, like with most forms of marketing, there is a formula. It’s worked for me, and it can work for you too.

Let’s get right down to it.

A three-step process

Of course, there’s a lot involved with influencer marketing.

But when you really break it all down, it involves three basic steps:

  1. Finding a suitable influencer
  2. Reaching out to them
  3. Getting them to share your content

That’s how I approach it anyway.

Let’s begin with step one.

Finding a suitable influencer

This is probably the easiest step, but it does require a fair amount of research.

How exactly do you zero in on an influencer?

Well, for starters, you’re probably already aware of at least a handful of influencers in your industry.

For example:

  • Bloggers with sizable followings
  • Popular YouTubers
  • Industry experts
  • Writers who regularly contribute to popular publications
  • Celebrities

But if you need a little help or want to know how likely a particular person is to share, I recommend using BuzzSumo.

One of the features I love there is “View Sharers.”

Let me show you how it works.

First, I enter a subject relevant to my industry/niche. In my case, it’s “content marketing.”

Here’s what pops up:

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Next, I choose an article and click on “View Sharers.”

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Here’s what pops up now:

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Just like that, I get a list of people and companies that shared that particular article.

I can also tell:

  • How many Twitter followers they have
  • Their retweet ratio
  • Reply ratio
  • Average retweets

These metrics are important because I can determine if they could potentially be an influencer that I would like to connect with.

I also know what the likelihood of getting a response from them would be. And I can easily follow them or tweet to them for instant interaction.

Other tools worth considering, besides BuzzSumo, include Traacker and Little Bird.

I also suggest checking out this post from Kissmetrics for other ideas.

I’m not saying you have to use a tool for finding influencers, but it does streamline the process substantially.

How big of an influencer should l target?

A common question marketers new to this concept have is whether they should target a macro-influencer (e.g., Tim Ferris or Seth Godin) with hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of followers or a micro-influencer with say 15,000 followers.

I’m a proponent of starting small and working your way up.

From my experience, micro-influencers tend to be more receptive and much easier to get in touch with than major players who may get bombarded with thousands of emails every day.

But feel free to take the path that makes the most sense to you.

Reaching out to influencers

This is hands down the most difficult part of the process.

You have to somehow figure out a way to:

a) get in touch with an influencer and

b) build rapport with them.

You can accomplish this in several ways, but I’m a fan of simply sending an email or using the contact box on their website.

Most influencers (unless they’re huge celebrities) will have some means of contacting them. Do your research until you find an efficient means of doing so.

If you absolutely can’t find their contact info, move on to the next potential influencer on your list.

How should I approach them?

The specific request you have will dictate the template you use.

For instance, there’s a:

  • curation template
  • influencer mention template
  • guest blog template

and others.

I recommend checking out this article from Entrepreneur. It will provide you with five basic templates so you’ll know what to say when making contact.

Here’s their initial outreach template:

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The key to getting a response is to be authentic, personable, and honest.

Just remember that you need to make them an offer they can’t refuse (using my best Vito Corleone voice).

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You may want to give them a shout out on your blog, send them a sample of your product, or maybe even compensate them if the situation calls for it—whatever you think would tickle their fancy.

However, I would tread lightly with compensation because it can make you come across as being insincere. But it’s definitely an option to keep in mind.

Now let me say this.

It’s ideal if you interact with an influencer on at least some level before hitting them up out of the blue.

For example, you might regularly comment on their blog for a month prior to asking them for a favor.

I know that I’m more receptive to requests from loyal blog readers than to someone “off the street.”

Have thick skin

There are a couple of other little pearls of wisdom I would like to share with you.

First, you should be prepared for rejection.

It’s not realistic to expect the first influencer you contact to immediately respond and cater to your every whim.

Most of these people are busy and already have their inboxes flooded with similar requests.

No matter how charming or charismatic you may think you come off, you’re probably not going to get many responses.

Don’t take it personally. It’s a numbers game.

That’s why I recommend creating a list of at least 10 potential influencers to get going. However, the more, the merrier.

If you expect to have success, it’s going to take perseverance and patience.

Just keep at it until you finally make a breakthrough.

And here’s another tip.

Use a free email tracker, like this one from HubSpot, so you’ll know who opened your emails and who didn’t.

It’s a simple way to see what type of activity has happened after you hit “send.”

If you don’t get a response from someone who most definitely opened your email, I recommend sending them a follow-up email after a few days or so.

Don’t be a pest about it, but a polite follow-up may get an influencer to take notice of you and get you the response you’re looking for.

Getting them to share your content

Finally, you need to ensure that what you’re delivering is genuinely providing them (and their audience) with value.

For instance, if you’re asking an influencer to share a blog post you’ve written, you’d better make sure that it’s top quality and highly relevant to their audience.

If they’re willing to let you guest-post on their blog, it needs to be A+ content. Nothing less will suffice.

In other words, you need to follow through and prove to them that they’re making a good decision by helping you out.

This is obviously integral to building a solid relationship and could potentially lead to other opportunities down the road. You never know.

Conclusion

Influencer marketing seems simple enough on paper.

Get in touch with someone influential, get them to promote your brand in some fashion, and boost your exposure.

Of course, it’s never this easy, and there are a lot of twists and turns along the way.

I’ll be the first to admit that influencer marketing is a tricky process.

But it’s definitely something you can do successfully, provided you take the right approach and have enough persistence.

And once you actually get it to work, it will boost your confidence, and you’ll feel much more comfortable with the process.

At that point, you can rinse and repeat to grow your brand even more.

Have you ever experimented with influencer marketing? What are your results?



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Calling All Ye Travel Experts: Apply To This Work-From-Home Job Today

Are you passionate about traveling on a budget?

Do your friends ask you about the latest travel hacks and cheapest days to fly? (Spoiler: It’s Tuesday and Wednesday.)

Do you scour the internet before purchasing your own ticket? Do you plan vacations based on the cheapest travel fares?

Most importantly: Do you know some good pirate puns?

Travel Pirates rounds up the best travel deals, and it’s hiring full-time, work-from-home travel deal hunters and editors.

How You Can Become the Next Travel Deal Hunter

Are you ready to hop aboard with all hands on deck? (Ugh, I keep reading this in the pirate voice from “SpongeBob SquarePants.”)

Anyway, as a travel deal hunter, you’ll research the best travel products online, as well as create and develop articles to help readers. And there’s a lot of them: Travel Pirates has nearly 8 million Facebook followers.

If you’re interested, there are some planks you must walk first. Perhaps most importantly, you should know how to research travel deals. (Hi. You can always use The Penny Hoarder as a source.)

You should also have a keen sense for details. Think about all the fine print and asterisks involved in travel deals. You also should have some experience in online editorial work, though the posting doesn’t disclose a specific number of preferred years.

Although the online startup is based in Berlin, the group of 180 employees operates 11 websites from 37 countries in seven languages. Its U.S. headquarters are in East Cambridge, Massachusetts.

But don’t get discouraged if you’re not in the New England area. Travel Pirates strongly encourages anyone — no matter your landlocked location — to apply for these jobs. Remote candidates will work from home on a freelance basis.

I reached out to the pirates to find out more about pay and benefits, so I’ll update this once I hear back.

Until then, all you swashbucklers, get yer booty in gear (not the treasure kind), and draft a cover letter outlining your experiences with travel research tools. Then submit this simple, straightforward application.

Fair winds, my friends.

Your Turn: Will you apply to be a travel pirate?

Carson Kohler (@CarsonKohler) be a junior writer at th’ Penny Hoarder. After recently completin’ graduate sword fightin’ academy, she focuses on savin’ doubloons — ’n survivin’ th’ move back in wit’ her parents.

The post Calling All Ye Travel Experts: Apply To This Work-From-Home Job Today appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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This Free App Analyzes Your Spending and Tells You Where You’re Screwing Up

It’s happened to the very best of us.

In fact, I even have a name for it: The “Monday Morning Face-the-Music Moment.” (Hey, I didn’t say it was super catchy. We’re talking about Mondays, after all.)

You know exactly the moment I mean.

And it’s not the startled response to the alarm clock going off for the first time in two days… although that sucks, too.

It’s when you sit down, grit your teeth and check your bank account, forcing yourself to once again reckon with the financial consequences of your weekend choices.

It all seemed like such a good idea at the time. But on Monday morning, Saturday night has rapidly-diminishing returns.

Those margaritas cost how much? And you had how many? They weren’t even that good!

And the pain of your bleeding wallet is only doubled when you once again face that undeniable fact. (And by “you,” I mean “I”).

I kind of suck at money.

Still. Even though I’m almost 30. Even though I’m a personal finance writer.

Money Management is Really Hard, But This App Can Help

No, we’re not personal finance geniuses. I mean, it’s not exactly focused on in American schools.

But we don’t have much of an excuse anymore. This app is going to help us get our financial (stuff) together and learn better money habits.

In fact, it uses the same technology you’re probably already using to perform that fateful Monday morning audit in the first place. (*Shudder.*)

Clarity Money is a free iOS app that helps you see, organize, and control your finances.

The way it works is simple. You just download the app, connect your existing accounts, and get ready to learn more about where your money’s disappearing to… and how to keep more of it, instead.

Clarity analyzes and uses your spending history to provide budgetary insights. It’ll show you exactly how much you spend in different categories, like bars and restaurants, as a percentage of your total expenses.

Clarity (Gently) Teaches You How to Do Money Better

But it’s not just a recap of your weekend spending with pretty graphics.

It also gives you the tools and information you need to start making better financial choices. And they’re all super-easy to use, and accessible right inside the app.

For example, Clarity will show you a list of your monthly recurring charges, and does the math to show you exactly how much each costs you over the course of a year.

Then, it offers you a single-tap way to cancel that long-foregone gym membership or the magazine subscription piling up on your end table.

The App Will Even Negotiate Your Bills For You

Clarity also takes advantage of discounts you might not know you’re eligible for to help you negotiate existing bills for stuff like cable… without going through the headache of calling customer service yourself.

(As an ex-Comcast customer, I know from experience how those phone calls might inspire you to buy enough alcohol to offset your savings, anyhow.)

If Clarity successfully negotiates a bill for you, it charges you 33% of that savings — but only once, and only after those savings have gone into effect.

You can also take advantage of a totally-free, FDIC-insured Clarity savings account to help you reach your financial goals and crush them.

The app automatically socks away the amount you set, from the account you choose, with whatever regular frequency works best for your situation (for example, $10 from your checking account every Tuesday or every 17th of the month).

You can designate a specific purpose for the savings or simply use it to (finally) start your emergency fund. Pause or withdraw whenever you see fit; you’ll see the money back in the account it originally came from within three to five business days.

Basically, it’s like having a financial advisor in your pocket telling you how much you can actually afford to spend on brunch this weekend — all while silently slipping spare change into your piggy bank before you have the chance to blow it.

… And suggesting 0% interest credit cards and other financial goodies leagues better than the ones you’ve stumbled upon yourself.

… And granting you free access to your credit score.

… And who does it all for free.

How to Use Clarity Money to Learn Better Money Habits

If you’re eager to avoid the Monday morning blues, it’s easy to get started with Clarity.

Even if you decide it’s not for you, you have nothing to lose: It’s totally free and secured with firewalls, VPN technology and 256-bit encryption. You can also close your account at any time.

Just download the app and start connecting your financial information. The system is pretty user-friendly, and the support team is available via the in-app chat feature should you encounter any problems.

Unfortunately, Clarity is only available in the U.S. and for Apple devices. An Android version should be available mid-2017, per its website. (A waitlist is available if you want to be first in the know.)

So go ahead, say it with me:

I kind of suck at money. And that’s totally OK.

Your Turn: What financial goals are you slowly sabotaging each weekend?

Disclosure: Here’s a toast to the affiliate links in this post. May we all be just a little richer today.

Jamie Cattanach (@jamiecattanach) is a freelance writer who is bad at money. Her work has been featured at Ms. Magazine, BUST, Roads & Kingdoms, The Write Life, Nashville Review, Word Riot and elsewhere.

The post This Free App Analyzes Your Spending and Tells You Where You’re Screwing Up appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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Motorists face 'crazy' £100 insurance hike

Car insurance premiums could rise by as much as £100 a year as providers are forced to increase the amount they pay out on serious claims.

Car insurance premiums could rise by as much as £100 a year as providers are forced to increase the amount they pay out on serious claims.

The warning comes after Lord Chancellor Liz Truss and the Ministry of Justice announced changes to the Ogden rate.

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Here’s How This Family of 3 Lives Well on a Single Income

Parents in America face a lot of hard choices regarding family leave and child care. My husband and I are no different.

Like any young couple, we discussed our plans for a family from the very start. We always agreed when we had kids, I’d become a stay-at-home mom for a few years until the children went off to kindergarten.

However, this dream seemed almost impossible. Could a family still manage to live on one income in the 21st century? That was the question we had to answer

Our first (and only, for now) child was born in 2013, but we started planning to transition to one income when we got engaged in 2010.

We’ve now been living the one-income dream for three years. Though I can’t speak for everyone, I can tell you how our small family is flourishing on a public school teacher’s salary, which averaged about $56,000 in 2013.  

Living on One Income

A lot of time, effort and planning went into making it possible for us to live on a single income. We accomplished our goal by doing the following:

1. We Planned Ahead

We were both working full time when we purchased our home, but we knew I’d stay home one day.

We bought accordingly, selecting a house and mortgage well below what the bank offered us.

We also had a target number in mind for all housing-related monthly expenses, one we knew we could pay on one salary. The mortgage payment, homeowner’s insurance, property taxes and HOA fees all had to come in below this amount.

We showed restraint, but we were still able to buy a brand-new home.

2. We Paid Down Debts

There’s no way I could stay at home if we were drowning in debt.

Before I quit my job, we paid off my husband’s student loans ($250/month) and both our car loans ($480/month) for a total budget reduction of $730 a month.

I also paid off about $3,500 in credit card debt after our daughter was born by picking up extra classes as an adjunct professor.

We aren’t completely debt-free – we still have my student loans and the mortgage – but we’re on our way.

3. We Shopped Around

We shopped around and switched our car insurance, homeowner’s insurance, cell phone and health insurance plans in order for me to stay home.

The savings really add up.

4. We Budget

We make a budget each month and use an app called Goodbudget to track our spending.

Since we pay most of our bills automatically, we only create three envelopes in the app: groceries, gas and incidentals, which covers haircuts, oil changes, prescriptions, birthday presents and other randomness.

We both have the app, which syncs regularly so we can see our spending in real time.

5. We Make Sacrifices

I know many women want to work full time and many other women have absolutely no choice but to work.

That being said, sacrifice is part of the equation for every stay-at-home mom I know.

For our family, this means driving older cars, going out much less, taking fewer and shorter vacations, searching for free entertainment, and planning and saving for anything that’s not a necessity.

How We Thrive on a Single Income

It isn’t all work, no play at our house. Here’s how we keep the fun going with less money.

6. We Have Supplemental income

We actually live on about 1.25 incomes.

When I was working full time, I made $41,000 per year. I now work 10-15 hours each week teaching and freelance writing. This supplemental money — about $10,000 per year —  is usually gravy to our budget.  

The “wiggle room” lowers tension and keeps our worries at bay (as does our emergency fund).

7. We Use Co-op Babysitting

We trade babysitting services with another couple to lower the cost of going out.

They watch our daughter once a month for free. The next month, we babysit their kids for free. We also use our parents and siblings whenever we can!

8. We Have a Date Night Envelope

During the 10 months I was pregnant, we asked for gift cards to restaurants and the movie theater for every birthday and gift-giving holiday.

By the time the baby was born, we had an envelope filled with enough gift cards for us to go on a date each month, and we continue to add to the envelope.

We get some peace of mind knowing the dates will come and they’re already paid for. We can look forward to alone time together without having to worry about stretching our budget for date nights.

9. We Joined the YMCA

Joining our local YMCA has been one of the best things we’ve done.

We pay full price for a family membership ($79 a month). It’s a bargain for what we receive in return: access to the gym, a variety of fitness classes, computer lab and a pool. I challenge you to find another place offering so much for so little!

Additionally, our daughter can be in the Kids Zone for an hour and a half each day while we’re there. This means I can take her for quality play time with new toys and new friends — and I can get some “me” time whenever I need it.

This has done wonders for my sanity as a stay-at-home mom.

10. We Have Personal Fun Money

In our marriage, money is combined and we make money decisions together.

But we also budget for what Dave Ramsey calls “blow money.” The amount changes depending on our expenses, but my husband can do whatever he wants with his fun money without consulting me, and I can do the same without consulting him.

We feel this gives us the best of both worlds: We’re on the same page as a couple about our financial future, but we individually have an outlet to spend autonomously and blow off steam.

Living on a Single Income was an Adjustment

I’ll admit, there was a little bit of financial culture shock the first year I stayed home.

It was hard to adjust our lifestyle at first, but now we’re thriving in our “new normal.” We appreciate each dollar more and make wiser decisions.

Whenever we feel like giving up, we refocus on the prize of experiencing day-to-day life with our little one.

And we’re excited about the idea of continuing to live on one income once I go back to work. Then we can use most of my salary to achieve some big-picture financial goals, while adding a few more luxuries back into the picture.

Most importantly, we’ve learned we can work together and make our money work for us to create the life we want.

Your Turn: Has your family ever lived off one income? Share your experiences in the comments below!

Leah Baacke is a stay-at-home mom, adjunct professor and freelance writer. She is a Florida native and currently lives in the Tampa Bay area.

The post Here’s How This Family of 3 Lives Well on a Single Income appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.



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Questions About Treasuries, Beards, Market Peaks, Camping, and More!

What’s inside? Here are the questions answered in today’s reader mailbag, boiled down to summaries of five or fewer words. Click on the number to jump straight down to the question.
1. Morality of government treasuries
2. Several loans with equal interest
3. Leaving New York
4. Camping or glamping?
5. Journal suggestions?
6. Frugal beard care
7. Worried about market highs
8. Cheap or free fitness suggestions
9. Getting paid less than others
10. “Chaining” no-spending days
11. Advice on trying vegetarianism
12. Podcasts on better financial choices

I get these really weird mild winter colds sometimes. They don’t drag me down into feeling miserable, but they just deliver one or two really annoying symptoms into my life.

I had one earlier this winter that was nothing more than a sore throat that stuck around for several days. Other than that, I felt fine.

This time, I have one that’s just an endless runny nose. Other than the fact that my nose is running like a leaky faucet, I feel fine.

I can’t wait for summer.

Onward to reader mailbag questions…

Q1: Morality of government treasuries

I have been a 60-year-old retiree from government employment for a year now. My retirement income is rather small and is from a previous employer (I’m plan to withdraw that small pension when I am eligible at age 62); so, I’m having qualms about whether or not I should withdraw the money I have in the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) sooner rather than later.

My main concern is over how my money in the least risky G Fund is invested, as follows (from www.tsp.gov website):

The G Fund assets are managed internally by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board. The G Fund buys a non-marketable U.S. Treasury security that is guaranteed by the U.S. Government. This means that the G Fund will not lose money.

I invested this way because of my age and the fact that I figured that my investment was being put to best. In other words, it would not be used by companies who are pro-abortion and/or who don’t care about protecting the environment; however, the people at TSP don’t seem to be all that knowledgeable when I asked them as to where the money in this fund actually goes.

Do you know if the money in this fund is put to good moral and environmentally responsible use? If I learn that where it goes is against my principles, I can’t, in good conscience, leave it in there and thus will be compelled to take it out now.
– James

The G Fund that you describe here is invested in the federal government itself, not in businesses. In essence, the investments in the G Fund help cover our national debt.

Each year, the United States spends more money than it brings in via taxes. It has to make up for that somehow – it needs to bring in more money so it can keep paying the bills, right? The way it does that is by issuing treasury notes of various kinds. These are essentially promises from the government that they’ll repay you a certain amount of money at a certain time.

For example, a ten year treasury note is an agreement with the government that they’ll pay you a certain amount of interest every six months and then pay you the value of that treasury note in ten years. So, for example, you might be able to buy a ten year treasury note with a face value of $10,000 and interest payments of $100 every six months. The price of that note actually varies, and that’s what might make it a good investment. You might pay, say, $9,500 for that note, and then every six months for the next ten years, you’ll get $100, and then at the ten year mark, you get $10,000. The government gets $9,500 immediately to pay the bills and you get more in return over the next several years.

So, basically, the G Fund just buys a lot of those treasury notes (and variations on that idea, but they all boil down to more or less the same thing). The G Fund basically enables our country to pay down its debt.

Now, here’s the thing: those investments are very important. They provide a very secure place for people to put their money. Since they’re guaranteed by the US government, they’re about as safe as humanly possible. It is very important for the US financial system that the US government continues to issue such investments, and they’d likely continue to issue them even if we weren’t in debt (they’d find some other use for the money, I’m sure).

So don’t think of them purely as “financing the US debt.” The reality is that treasury notes just help our government meet its budget, and they’d do so even if we were bringing in enough taxes to cover our budget because the financial system of the United States needs those kinds of ultra-safe investments. Our nation would find other ways to spend that money, I’m sure.

Is that an ethically sound investment? Really, you have to make the call on that one. I personally feel that, as the ethics of investment options go, treasury notes are pretty ethical. I would not have any personal objections to owning such investments.

Q2: Several loans with equal interest

We are trying to pay off my wife’s school loans and regularly pay double our monthly amount due. We received a bonus this year and will most likely continue to receive that going forward if she stays at her current job. We would like to start putting this bonus $ toward the school loans every year to knock them out even faster. So my question is – does it make any difference, other than psychologically, how we apply this extra payment? Context: My wife has several loans with different balances but the same interest rate of 6%. Does it matter if we put all of the bonus $ toward a larger balance loan or completely knock out some of the smaller loans? Since they are the same interest rate does it make any difference at all?
– Sam

If they’re all of equal interest rate, the best route is to knock out the smaller loans.

The reason is simple: if you get rid of smaller loans, you reduce the minimum monthly payment you have to spend each month. In other words, if things became difficult in your life, you would be facing a smaller slate of monthly bills.

That doesn’t mean you should start budgeting in that way. The best thing for you to do is to not reduce the amount you’re paying in total towards your student loans, and instead convert that extra amount (the amount you would have paid toward student loans that are now paid off) into an extra payment on one of your remaining loans – ideally, the one that now has the smallest balance.

Keep knocking them out like this and you’ll be debt free in no time.

Q3: Leaving New York

I work a location independent job and recently found out that if I were to move, my salary wouldn’t change. I live in a very expensive suburb on Long Island and I feel like I am wasting a ton of money by staying here. New York’s taxes are famously absurd, plus the cost of virtually everything is inflated because that too is taxed. Moving to a state with no income tax would immediately save me over $10k/year, and although those states tend to collect taxes in other ways, all of those taxes are lower than what I’m paying now.

My wife and I are of the mindset that the grass is greener virtually everywhere other than here. But is it? We are concerned that moving would actually cost us money. We moved into our house four years ago, and closing and moving costs were close to $30k, moving again, especially a long distance, would be another ~$10k in closing and moving costs. The house has definitely appreciated since we moved in, but the best I could hope for is breaking even if I sold today.

We also just had our first baby and plan to have a couple more fairly quickly. School districts are going to be a very important factor going forward and I wouldn’t want to move somewhere to save money, only to have to spend that money on private school.

In my head, I feel like I’m looking for this utopia where cost of living is low, taxes are low, schools are great, there’s plenty to do, and we all live happily ever after. It also has to be close enough to a city that I can find work if I ever need to change jobs, and have a major airport nearby because I travel for work.

The bottom line is that we think we should leave NY, but we’re not sure if it’s truly worth it.
– Noah

I am one of the loudest advocates you’ll ever meet for the virtues of the upper Midwest. My opinion is that when you say “this utopia where cost of living is low, taxes are low, schools are great, there’s plenty to do, and we all live happily ever after,” you’re basically describing Minnesota and, to a lesser extent, the states surrounding Minnesota. With 100% complete seriousness, if I were able to choose myself where I could live, I’d choose to live just outside of the metro area on the north side of Minneapolis-St. Paul. It pretty much checks every box you’ve listed there, in my opinion. Honestly, my second choice would be “just outside the metro area on the north side of Des Moines” – and that’s where I happen to live right now.

So, do I think you should move? Yes. If there’s no particular family or social constraint holding you back, pack up the vehicle and get out of the area.

The real question, though, is should you move? I think you need to simply clarify what it is you’re looking for and then start doing some research regarding that. You can start by looking at a comparative list, like this one from US News and World Report. You’ll see both Des Moines and Minneapolis ranked quite high on that list (for good reason, in my opinion), but there are a lot of other options, too.

If you’re unhappy with the total equation of where you are right now, move. If you’re not sure where to move to, figure out what it is that you really want the most – or the handful of factors you want the most – and start doing research.

And then move to Des Moines or Minneapolis. You know you want to.

Q4: Camping or glamping?

I’m a 31 year old who has been dating a 28 year old for two years now and have been considering marriage. I go camping two or three times during the summer in national parks, usually with a base camp that I return to each day after exploring but with some overnight backpacking. I make my own meals over the campfire, etc. but I do rely on some items from my car, so it’s not as “roughing it” as it could be but it’s far from glamping.

This summer is the first time that our schedules line up well enough so that my girlfriend can camp with me. She seems on board with it, but I’m beginning to see that she’s kind of a spender. She wants to “upgrade” all of the camping gear and buy a lot of extra stuff and she’s hinted at the idea of staying in a cabin or some resort instead of tent camping.

All of this deletes the reason this trip is fun and it’s also massively increasing the cost of it. I want just a simple camping trip in my tent where I spend almost all the time just exploring and hiking and building a fire and cooking food over it. I don’t want to stay in a cabin or hotel; that stuff is fine, but it’s not what camping is for me.

How do I address this without causing a big fight? And should I be concerned about the costs and what that might mean for our married life?
– Tony

It seems to me that your girlfriend has a very different idea of what camping should be like than you do. That doesn’t mean that either one of you is “right” or “wrong,” but that you have different visions of what a “camping vacation” actually is. Clearly, your girlfriend has an image of something that involves more creature comforts than what your vision is. That’s okay – neither one of your visions is wrong.

My suggestion would be to simply ask her to let you lead on this first trip. Tell her that you want to show her what it is that you love about these kinds of camping trips, and then plan it in a way that you think will wow her regarding the best of what you like about it.

Keep her in mind when you plan, though. She’s clearly a bit reticent about some of the rougher edges of camping. Don’t plan any super-difficult hikes. Consider what will make your campsite as comfortable as possible. Maybe choose a park intentionally that will be very comfortable and have some amazing views on low-intensity hikes. Push yourself to make some delicious meals around the campfire. Pack along a bottle of wine and drink it around the fire (if that’s her thing). Take along extra precautions for keeping bugs at bay. Basically, plan a trip like you normally would, but add some flourishes that will make this whole thing sparkle for her.

If it’s not her thing, that’s okay. You don’t have to like all of the same things. You might want to consider letting camping be a personal thing for you in the future and allow her to have some personal adventures, too, but that you have other adventures that you share.

Q5: Journal suggestions?

You’ve mentioned a few times in the last year that you journal daily. What specific journal do you use? What do you write about?
– Eric

My preferred journal is just a blank one. I’m not really picky about what kind that I use, but I like it to have reasonably thick paper so that ink doesn’t bleed through to the other side and I can use any kind of pen on it. Quite often, I use gifted journals for this. I also have a pile of gifted (and a few purchased) notebooks from Baron Fig that I use for this, too. To summarize, just use a blank journal.

I haven’t really found that “pre-organized” journals really click with me. I’ve received several as gifts and the only one that has worked well for me is the Best Self journal, but it’s mighty expensive and I can’t really convince myself to buy more. I could see myself getting hooked on them if I had more of them, as they only last for 13 weeks. Most other pre-organized journals just don’t click with me.

Most of the time, I just write about whatever things are weighing heavily on my mind at the moment. I write about what that concern is in as much detail as I can, and then I burrow into it. I ask myself why I’m feeling this way about it, and then I spend a bit of time thinking about that, and then I just write down my “why” thoughts. I’ll often repeat that a few times. Almost always, I wind up reaching some deeper understanding of the situation and that usually points me to something I can do to improve that situation. I don’t always take myself up on the solution, but I do so often enough that I find real value in the process. Sometimes I’ll do journaling “exercises” that I find, but I usually just go back to writing about a problem or concern and hitting it with a series of “whys” until I find some kind of satisfactory conclusion.

I think that journaling has massively improved my life over the last several years as I’ve really figured out how to do it. Journaling is a lot more than just listing the events of the day. It’s really a tool for reflecting on one’s life.

Q6: Frugal beard care

I started growing a beard after the holidays and didn’t really think about caring for it. I figured I could just trim it with scissors or something. It’s starting to look unruly but decent beard trimmers seem real expensive and then there are tons of other things people suggest buying. How do I do this frugally?
– Marcus

Unless you plan on trimming your beard daily and expect near-perfection with every single beard hair being absolutely the same length, you’re going to be fine with a very low-end beard trimmer. You’ll be just fine with whatever beard trimmer is on sale at nearby stores. If you’re looking for a model to target, I can specifically say that this beard trimmer does a really good job. You’ll still need to use a razor to trim around the edges, though.

So, what about things like beard oil and soaps and stuff? Simply put, you don’t need any of it unless you start to have skin irritation or other issues that actually bother you. Don’t waste your money on it unless you actually need it. That’s not to say it’s not useful for some people, but it’s very much on a case-by-case basis. (Note that things like this do make nice gifts, though.)

Basically, just get an inexpensive beard trimmer unless you plan to be an every day beard-must-be-perfect trimmer, in which case there might be a reason for a higher-end trimmer. When I had a beard, I trimmed it weekly with a cheap trimmer and it was all good.

Q7: Worried about market highs

The stock market appears to be at or near a long term high. Should people “buy low and sell high” and start selling now? Trying to figure out what to do with retirement.
– David

You should almost never make a stock investment move in response to what the market’s current value is. I’d say “never,” but I’m sure someone will come up with an odd case for it, but timing the market like this definitely isn’t one.

If you happened to have a perfect crystal ball and knew the exact moment when it was at a peak and then would also know the exact moment when it reached the bottom, then, yeah, it might make sense to move out of stocks at that very peak and move back in at that very bottom.

The reality is that you don’t know when either situation is going to occur. No one does. Today might be the peak, or it might not hit until June, or it might not hit until 2020. If you move out of stocks into something safe and we have three more years of a bull market, you’re losing a lot of money. The same thing is true at the bottom. If you keep your money somewhere safe because you think the market is still going to go lower, you’re not only probably missing out on the real bottom, you’re also missing out on the dividends that you’d get by being in stocks during that period.

Here’s the truth: if you’re in the stock market for the long haul, meaning that you’re not close to retirement and you’re planning on that money for the backbone of your retirement savings, you should leave it in the stock market and keep buying shares and collecting dividends as it inevitably corrects itself. You’ll earn a lot of dividends on the way down, buy shares as they decline in price, and you’ll be fully in the market when it hits the bottom and you can keep buying and reinvesting dividends the whole way up.

Now, if retirement is getting close, you should probably be considering a move of at least some of your money into something safer, but that switch should not be driven by the current state of the stock market. It should be driven by your evaluation of how much you want to lower your volatility.

Q8: Cheap or free fitness suggestions

So here’s my situation. I want to get in better shape and I have been thinking about joining a gym. My favorite exercise by far is to walk and do light hiking kind of like you do. I don’t like doing “body weight exercise” at home and I talk myself right out of doing stuff like push-ups or squats. I don’t mind jogging but jogging isn’t making me stronger. I think a coach might help motivate me. Do you have other suggestions before I drop the money?
– Jim

My honest suggestion is to try rucking.

Here’s what you do. Get an old backpack that you have lying around the house and fill it up with heavy things. Old textbooks are great. Water bottles are great. A brick wrapped in an old towel is great. Try to get ten or fifteen pounds in it at first; you can up the weight later.

Then just go walking with that backpack on. Go on a long distance walk. What you’ll find is that going at the same pace as usual is hard and will get you out of breath. You’ll also find that your legs and many other muscles are sore when you get home and sore the next day from the extra work.

Over time, gradually up the weight. Don’t go beyond 35 pounds or 10% of your body weight, though, whichever is less.

I’ve found this to be just about my favorite exercise. It seems to combine strength training (my legs feel way stronger as do many of my back muscles) with cardio training (I sweat like crazy and I get out of breath), but it boils down to doing the thing I already love to do, which is walking and hiking.

Plus, it’s super cheap.

Give it a shot and see if it clicks for you.

Q9: Getting paid less than others

I work in an office with several other people doing almost exactly the same jobs. We do a lot of claim processing. I was the first in my group to be hired and it was during a period of a lot of turnover in the HR department so almost all of us were actually hired by different people.

I had a benefits question the other day and went into the HR office and a person was looking at my employee records. She told me quietly that I wasn’t getting paid very well and that they had been openly hiring people for my job at a salary that’s about 10% more than what I’m making with no experience required. I’ve been at the company for four years now.

I am trying to keep calm about this and find the right way to handle it, but I am really angry right now. I could understand new employees making a little more than I did when I was new, but there’s no reason that I’m making less than them with four years of experience and good reviews.
– Pete

First of all, you do not want to bring this up at work when it’s got such a strong emotional impact on you. If you’re going to get emotional or angry when talking about this or thinking about this, you should not bring this up. (However, I will say that if you’re struggling getting this under control, you should look seriously at your ability to keep your emotions in check, as that is a very powerful skill to have.)

Your first step should be to figure out who is in charge of wages at your organization. Who sets the pay? If you don’t know, go to the HR office and ask a few questions. That’s the person you should be talking to.

Schedule a meeting and present your case. Simply state that you’ve had conversations with your coworkers and looked at job postings and you’ve learned that, after four years of experience and positive job reviews, you’re getting paid less than someone freshly in the door and you’re getting paid less than many of your coworkers. Your goal should be to have pay that’s reasonably commensurate with your relative experience and history compared to an entry level employee, so what a new employee might be earning with standard raises over four years.

If they won’t reasonably meet you on this demand, then I would begin looking for different work. Freshen up your resume and start looking for employment elsewhere. If the starting wage is an industry standard, you’ll make more money by leaving anyway.

Q10: “Chaining” no-spending days

Wanted to share with you a strategy for cutting spending that’s really worked well for me this year. I have been “chaining” days where I don’t spend any money together.

Basically, what I’ve been doing is trying not to spend a dime for as many days in a row as I can avoid it. I’ll pay all of my bills and stock up on groceries and that stuff all on one day and I’ll buy a 30 day metro pass and so on and then I will see how many days I can go while spending nothing and living on what I have.

I’ve found that I don’t waste nearly as much money as I used to because on the days where I can spend, I am spending a lot on needed things like bills and food and a metro pass and usually one or two carefully planned fun things and so I don’t feel much need to splurge, and then I don’t splurge at all on the “no spending” days.

Thought I’d share a strategy that’s working for me! Record: 16 days!
– Tammy

This actually seems like a really smart and really fun way to approach overspending.

Sarah and I sometimes do money free weekends and even money free weeks and this just seems to take that and add the “chaining” concept to it by making it into a game to see how long you can make the streak.

Good idea! Perhaps other readers can use it effectively, too!

Q11: Advice on trying vegetarianism

I’m thinking of trying to become a vegetarian for health reasons and money reasons. A vegetarian diet seems pretty healthy and I like a lot of vegetables but I just normally eat meat for my diet. Any tips?
– Amy

A vegetarian diet can be super cheap, but as with any diet, it can be as expensive as you make it. I find it easy to be a cheap vegetarian because I already loved rice and beans. I will seriously eat rice and beans two or three times a day, so switching to being a vegetarian wasn’t really very hard for me. (I was encouraged but not required by my doctor and a dietitian to try it for unrelated health reasons, so I gave it a shot.)

My advice to you isn’t to go strict vegetarian unless there’s a specific additional reason to do so. If your primary motivation is frugality and health, I recommend sticking instead to a well rounded diet made up of inexpensive foods, but stick to staples and fresh foods rather than prepackaged and processed stuff. Buy uncooked rice and uncooked beans and eggs and fresh produce and, yes, even fresh meats, particularly poultry (chicken really is a bargain). Peanut butter is good, too, especially when the only ingredients are peanuts and salt.

Learn how to prepare lots of meals from that basic stuff. Trust me, there are a lot of things you can do with those cheap staples without just endlessly repeating things, especially if you have a lot of herbs and spices and learn how to use them. For that, I recommend this wonderful guide from The Kitchn.

Q12: Podcasts on better financial choices

I listen to podcasts while commuting every day and I find that they influence my thinking a lot. Do you have any recommendations for podcasts that really encourage smart financial thinking / spend less than you earn / financial independence thinking?
– Brad

Here are three that immediately come to mind.

Radical Personal Finance hosted by Joshua Sheats is probably the best purely financially focused podcast out there, in my opinion. Joshua speaks well, treats his topics with care and thoughtfulness, keeps it entertaining, and has a lot of great guests, plus I’m very much in agreement with most of his financial perspectives. If I ever did a podcast again (I made a mediocre attempt many years ago), I’d hope it could be half this good.

The Dave Ramsey Show distributes its full show as a podcast. Dave is an absolute master of the audio format and presents his ideas well. I don’t fully agree with Dave on a lot of things – for one, I think he’s overly optimistic about investments – but he’s extremely strong at feeling like a “coach” encouraging strong day-to-day financial choices.

The Voluntary Life hosted by Jake Desyllas is probably my favorite all-around podcast. It does not have anywhere near a strict personal finance focus – it’s more of an all-around self-improvement show. However, Jake addresses a lot of important life topics that run parallel to financial improvement and discusses them so thoughtfully that I consider this to be an essential listen for anyone addressing their money or their life with a thoughtful attitude.

These three shows – and their archives – should give you a ton to listen to going forward.

Got any questions? The best way to ask is to follow me on Facebook and ask questions directly there. I’ll attempt to answer them in a future mailbag (which, by way of full disclosure, may also get re-posted on other websites that pick up my blog). However, I do receive many, many questions per week, so I may not necessarily be able to answer yours.

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Neil Woodford: interest rate rise not on the cards for next couple of years

An interest rate rise will not happen anytime soon, according to star fund manager Neil Woodford, despite inflation being predicted to reach 3% by the end of 2017.

An interest rate rise will not happen anytime soon, according to star fund manager Neil Woodford, despite inflation being predicted to reach 3% by the end of 2017.

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Want to Travel Full Time and Run a Business? This Woman Shares Her Secrets

Stat of the month: 11 buyers chase every property

A drop in the number of properties on the market, combined with a rise in the number of house hunters, meant that, on average, there were 11 buyers for every property in January, according to new research.

A drop in the number of properties on the market, combined with a rise in the number of house hunters, meant that, on average, there were 11 buyers for every property in January, according to new research.

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Energy switching hits six-year high: check if you can save £100s

Energy switching has hit a six-year high with 7.7 million gas or electricity switches taking place in 2016 – 1.7 million (28%) more than the previous year.

Energy switching has hit a six-year high with 7.7 million gas or electricity switches taking place in 2016 – 1.7 million (28%) more than the previous year.

It’s the highest level of switching since 2010, according to energy regulator Ofgem. 

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