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Saving Archives - SISIKUNMI https://www.sisikunmi.com/tag/saving/ Live. Learn. Inspire Fri, 21 Feb 2020 08:22:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.sisikunmi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/cropped-cropped-cropped-wp-1604087001228-1-32x32.png Saving Archives - SISIKUNMI https://www.sisikunmi.com/tag/saving/ 32 32 Money talks || Cures for a lean purse – II https://www.sisikunmi.com/lifestyle/money-talks-cures-for-a-lean-purse-ii/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=money-talks-cures-for-a-lean-purse-ii https://www.sisikunmi.com/lifestyle/money-talks-cures-for-a-lean-purse-ii/#comments Fri, 01 Nov 2019 00:48:32 +0000 https://sisikunmi.wordpress.com/?p=291 Hi money-minded peeps! Happy new month!!! Hope you’ve made some personal finance assessments and adjustments since we discussed the first two cures for a lean purse? If you have, awesome! If you are yet to, you’re still on track because now that you have the knowledge, all you need now is the ginger to implement. Here’s something Arkad has to say to you on that note – ‘Wealth, like a tree, grows from a seed. The first copper you save is the seed from which your tree of wealth shall grow. The sooner you plant that seed the sooner the tree grows. And the more faithfully you nourish and water that tree with consistent savings, the sooner may you bask in contentment beneath its shade’. This is the ginger you needed. Oya gbera and get to it ASAP! We’re continuing the discussion on the cures for a lean purse. In case you missed when it was first discussed here, I’ll reintroduce you to what the cures for a lean purse mean. They are a set of rules concerning personal finance outlined in the richest man in Babylon. These rules were narrated by Arkad, the richest man in Babylon who started from nothing in the rich city of Babylon. The rules are said to have guided men in those days towards acquiring and retaining riches. If you are yet to, kindly subscribe to this blog so you can get each new post delivered directly to you. You wouldn’t want to miss any of it. #3 ‘Make thy gold multiply.’ ‘Gold in a purse is gratifying to own and satisfieth a miserly soul but earns nothing. The gold we may retain from our earnings is but the start. The earnings it will make shall build our fortunes.’ Arkad. Saving is not enough. The Yorubas’ say ‘owo la fi n wowo’ meaning ‘it is money we use to look for money.’ This is investment summarized. You can’t be working while your money is chilling in one corner of your cupboard. You have to put it to work! Putting your money means putting your money into investments which will add value to your money. There are various ways to go about this and you don’t have to be earning a whole lot before you start. Building the habit now is a good way to sustain it and be more knowledgeable when the big bucks come. Investing can be low-, medium- or high- risk, depending on how much you are willing to part with and how secure your capital is. Some investment types I’ve come across are money market funds, treasury bills, agricultural investments, legal bonds… Also investing in a start-up or a business. Always remember to sign an agreement with the other part, even they are family/friends. You can check out Subomi Plumptre’s site, where she has a column on investments. #4 ‘Guide your treasure from loss.’ ‘Every owner of gold is tempted by opportunities whereby it would seem that he could make large sums by its investments.’ Arkad. We’ve spoken about how money saved needs to be invested in order to yield more increase. However, it would be an oversight if we do not expound on securing said investments against loss. It is very easy to be swayed by the high returns of investment (ROIs) and get carried away. Investments can be really tricky sometimes. Arkad advises against taking on investments where the capital is not insured however, most investments with high ROIs come with the risk of losing the capital. This is where knowing your level of investment risk comes in. It is determined by your level of income, and personality among other things and it can change over a period. Here’s a calculator I found online to calculate your personal level of risk-taking. It is also recommended that you seek sound investment advice before embarking on any investment. Money business is serious business. ‘A man’s wealth is not in the coins he carries in his purse; it is the income he buildeth, the golden stream that continually floweth into his purse.’ Arkad. I’ll include the 5 laws of gold, from the same book, here as I believe it talks majorly about savings and investments. Five Laws of gold: I. Gold cometh gladly and in increasing quantity to any man who will put by not less than one-tenth of his earnings to create an estate for his future and that of his family. II. Gold laboureth diligently and contentedly for the wise owner who finds for it profitable employment, multiplying even as flocks of the field. III. Gold clingeth to the protection of the cautious owner who invests it under the advice of men wise in its handling. IV. Gold slippeth away from the man who invests it in business or purposes with which he is not familiar or which are not approved by those skilled in its keep. V. Gold flees the man who would force it to impossible earnings or who followeth the alluring advice of tricksters and schemers who trusts it to his own inexperience and romantic desires in investments. That’s the end of today’s lessons. We have 3 cures to go and I hope we’ve started applying these lessons to our finances? See you next Friday as we continue the series!

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Money talks || Cures for a lean purse I https://www.sisikunmi.com/lifestyle/money-talks-cures-for-a-lean-purse-i/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=money-talks-cures-for-a-lean-purse-i https://www.sisikunmi.com/lifestyle/money-talks-cures-for-a-lean-purse-i/#comments Fri, 25 Oct 2019 12:40:17 +0000 https://sisikunmi.wordpress.com/?p=239 Hey people! Hope you’ve been well since our last post? In the debut money talks post, I promised to share some tips on savings and investment over the next few weeks. Most of the principles I’ll be sharing are gotten from the time-trusted book, The Richest Man in Babylon by George S. Clason. Babylon is said to have been the wealthiest nation in its time, with lots of wealthy persons inhabiting it. It is also home to one of the seven wonders of the world, the hanging gardens of Babylon. Although I’ve been guided by most of these principles way before I read the book, everything was really broken down here, explaining financial concepts using storytelling. If you want to go deeper than I’ll do in this series of posts, then I’d recommend that you read this book (you can finish it in hours – it’s that short and interesting). In today’s post, we’ll be talking about the cures for a lean purse. The cures for a lean purse are a set of rules concerning personal finance outlined in The Richest Man in Babylon. These rules were narrated by Arkad, the richest man in Babylon who started from nothing in the rich city of Babylon. The rules are said to have guided men in those days towards acquiring and retaining riches. I’ll be sharing some of these rules, expounding a bit on them and how they can be applied to us in this modern day. According to Arkad, there are 7 cures for a lean purse and these will be discussed in bits over the next few posts. If you’re yet to subscribe, kindly do so you wouldn’t miss out on anything. #1 Cure for a lean purse: ‘Start thy purse to fatten.’ How do you fatten your purse? By putting money in it, simple. The idea is to set aside some money at intervals, essentially for savings. As explained in the book, you can see this as paying yourself just like you pay the tailor, restaurant and all others. The way to make this work well is to ensure that you pay yourself first, before any other person. As Arkad tells us in the book, a part of all you earn is yours to keep. Also, rather than setting a particular amount, it’s always better to set a percentage. This helps you adjust the actual amount to suit your income level. For instance, if you’ve been saving 5,000 naira monthly from a 50,000 naira salary when the salary jumps to 100,000 naira, you might find it difficult to adjust your mindset to increase your savings amount and stay at 5,000 naira. However, if you are using a percentage system, it becomes easier to increase your savings. A minimum savings of 10% of your income is usually advised but this can go higher depending on your personal preference. Saving has gotten easier in this age as there are now various platforms which one can use to automate savings. Here is one of such you can check out. You can automate your savings so that you don’t have to worry about forgetting. You also get interests on your savings. I already talked a bit here about the benefits of saving on this kind of platform as opposed to a wooden piggybank or the likes. #2 Cure for a lean purse: ‘Control thy expenditure.‘ The next thing after saving is to ensure that you do all you can to avoid dipping into the savings. This is where budgeting comes in. Some might even argue that budgeting comes before saving. Budgeting is basically controlling your money, telling it where to go and how much can go there. If you don’t control your money, it can go haywire. Once again, the easier way to budget is to set certain percentages of your income rather than having fixed amounts. The 50/30/20 rule of allocating funds is usually advised. I’d rearrange this to 20/50/30 in order of importance. This means 20% of your income goes to savings and investment, 50% goes to your needs (housing feeding, clothing, etc) and the remaining 30% goes to your wants (eating out, games and the likes). You can always determine what your wants and needs are as what can be a need for me might just be a want for you and vice versa. Also, you can adjust the percentages to suit what you want to achieve. There are other ways of budgeting such as spending what is left after saving and putting different amounts in different envelopes. I think all stem from the percentage rule which is still the best in my opinion. Keep this in mind when budgeting – Expenses expand to meet income, so if you’re not careful you’ll lose control over your money. ‘What each of us calls our ‘necessary expenses’ will always grow to equal our incomes unless we protest to the contrary… All men are burdened with more desires than can be gratified.’ Arkad, The Richest Man in Babylon. To make your budgeting easier, you have to know what you spend on which can be done by tracking your expenses. You can decide to track your expenses for a week or more before committing to a fixed budget. Tracking your expenses also helps you plug any leakage in your finances, readjusting your spending to suit your income. There are several applications out there which help with tracking expenses. Some people also use excel spreadsheets to track theirs. Those are the 2 cures for today. I hope this has inspired you to take your personal finances more seriously. Check back next Friday for the next 2 cures, or subscribe to get notified instantly when the post goes up. Just before we sign out for today, here’s something Arkad has for us: ‘Enjoy life while you are here. Do not overstrain or try to save too much. If one-tenth of all you earn is as much as you can comfortably keep, be content to keep this portion. Live otherwise according to your income and let not yourself get niggardly and afraid to spend. Life is good and life is rich with things worthwhile and things to enjoy.’ Arkad, The Richest Man in Babylon. So while we should save and plan for the future, let’s remember to live now, enjoy life. As my friend would say – Chop life, no let life chop you! Do you already follow some of these principles? How has it been? Do you have some tips to share? Let me know in the comments section below. (Your comments add a spark to my day so I’d really like to hear from you!)

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Money Talks || Why you shouldn’t save in a traditional piggybank. https://www.sisikunmi.com/lifestyle/money-talks-piggybank/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=money-talks-piggybank https://www.sisikunmi.com/lifestyle/money-talks-piggybank/#comments Fri, 11 Oct 2019 10:49:51 +0000 https://sisikunmi.wordpress.com/?p=241 Hey there! Do you save part of your income? How do you do that? Do you save in a traditional piggybank? Whatever your answers might be, just read on, I have gist for you. Before getting into the post proper, I’ll be sharing some backstory about how this idea came to be. Stay with me. Over the past few weeks, I’ve been struggling with whether or not to delve into writing about personal finance. The idea was particularly inspired by a message I received from an old classmate reminding me of when I helped her save money back in secondary school. I had contemplated starting this series a while back, but somehow I couldn’t bring myself to. I didn’t want to feel like a fraud because although I follow most of the principles I’ll be talking about, I’m not as diligent/consistent as I would love to be. But I guess talking about it and encouraging people to adopt it might give that extra push I need, abi? After a lot of back and forth, I decided that sometimes you just have to do what you have to do! Ready or not. So while I might not be a ‘finance girl’ or an expert on money matters, I sure do have some things I’ve picked up over the years which I feel could be useful to more people beyond my friends and those on my contact list. I’m also praying (and doing my own part) that my account cooperates and blossoms even as I share these tips. Because how awkward will it be if I stay broke while sharing money tips?? Too awkward. Enough pre-gist. Let’s get into the main gist of the day. In this introductory post, I’d be talking about saving inside wooden piggybanks aka ‘kolo’ and why it’s not an ideal set up. A while back, I saw a tweet about a woman who saved N3,000 daily over a period of 14 months. It was an impressive sight, seeing her sitting with her one thousand naira notes all around her. (I understand that she might have had her personal reasons for saving this way. I’m only using this as a case study for educational purposes.) My first thought was that this woman allowed her money to sit idle for too long – I’ll explain further about that in this post. That was actually my second thought. My real first thought was how she managed to have the money intact, with the different stories of money ‘disappearing’ from such wooden piggybanks going around. People say this happens, never happened to me though (I’ve never really had one). I decided to ask if people really fancied seeing their cash as opposed to having it in a bank or some sort of investment. I got this response below. Later during the week, I saw a post about an interview with Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest businessman. He stated in the interview how he once withdrew 10 million dollars just to believe he had money. But here’s the thing about Mr Aliko, he put the cash back where it belonged – in a bank working for him. The reason why I had qualms with that lady’s method of saving is that she could have earned more if she had put the money to work. At an interest rate of as little as 10% per annum, compounding daily, she would have had more than she saved. But since she didn’t put the money to work, she got just exactly what she saved. Saving in an interest giving platform rather than a kolo also helps preserve your money against inflation. The value of N1,000 this year, is most likely less than what it was a year or 2 ago. So if you’re saving in kolo, the 2 million naira saved over 2 years may have a lesser value at the time of use. Saving on such platforms also makes money available for investments and other profitable actions which wouldn’t have been possible with the money docile in a piggy bank in your room. So, you’ll be helping the economy as well, not just yourself. I hope I’ve been able to enlighten you about why saving using an interest giving platform is better? In case you want to start saving on a different platform, here’s an online saving and investment platform which makes savings easy and fun. People have had good experiences using it. You can check it out here. There are other platforms out there as well which you can explore. Over the next few weeks, I’ll be sharing more tips concerning saving and investing. Kindly subscribe to this space so you don’t miss any of the posts. Did you find this post enlightening? Educative? Fun? Will you like to see more posts like this? Please let me know in the comment section. P.S: To be honest, I sometimes have issues coming up with an appropriate opening for my posts, and seeing as this is a new kind of post on here it made it sort of harder. I decided to go with hey there! Kinda like calling your attention to this post. It worked right? Right! 😊

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