100/0, 80/20, 60/40….and eventually better. What do these numbers describe? These are a spending-to-savings ratio that we currently have or want to get to. If you have a 100/0 then you spend 100% of what you make and save 0% of what you make.
First Goal: Spend Everything! (Within your income)
That’s Right! Spend everything you make but only what you make. This is probably the silliest advice for someone that is past this, but hey, why give successful people advice? This of course is directed at people you may know or maybe even yourself. If you currently spend more than you make, if your budget requires you to pull from your savings every month…. well, then this is for you.
So, if I am over 100/0, with 105/-5, how do I get it to 100/0. This of course is going to be similar advice to use throughout all of your personal finance endeavors. By using a mixture of increasing earnings, reducing expenses, and reducing debt you can achieve any percentage you want.
I know because I figured out how to grow my income by over 500% in the last 15 years, and 300% of that was in the past 8 years. I am not doing this to brag and I use percentages for people to relate to each other. While raising my income, I also lowered my expenses, cutting out extras that we weren’t using to reduce the overall. Did I cut my cable, do I live a bare-bones lifestyle…oh gosh no…but keep it as an option if you are in serious financial trouble and want out. Lastly, some of the expenses were monthly payments that came from debt. So, I systematically took out those as well, but the trick is not just to pay off debt, it is to limit the debt you have to a little or nothing.
Income
How to do this? Use the potential that you already have. The quickest and easiest way to increase your income is to ask for a raise (discussed here), get a second job, or a higher paying job. Some people recommend selling stuff, however in my experience if you haven’t done it before, or don’t have the time, your return for the time you spent isn’t as justified.
If you have a big ticket item that you are willing to part with such as an extra car, fancy jewelry or more liquid items like those, that might be an idea to obtain some quick results. Regardless of the method, raising income, accelerates your results. Looking at it from a business perspective, which would you rather be a business making $100 earnings per share or $1000 earning per share? So, be confident stand up tall and earn to your potential.
Expenses
Another step is reducing expenses. Starting out you may have to cut all non-critical expenses to make ends meet. What is non-critical? Easy, what would you be concerned about with kids…food, shelter (including clothing), and heat (A/C where it is hot). These are just examples, but as you can see, critical is what keeps you alive. In this phase, minimum payments on debt may be necessary, worse yet, not paying unsecured loans may be necessary; more on this in a minute. Other ideas, such as roads are free, you don’t need a gym membership run out side, or come take care of my kids, they will where you out. Expenses that you keep is what you decide is important to you, but the goal is to get to 100/0 or better.
Debt
Here we go, the subject that I have seen so much hate posts on the internet for. If you are a “no debt-er” you chastise anyone that would ever think of taking on debt. If you want to use debt for certain purposes, you advocate that there is “good debt.” And lastly, if you have no idea, or realized too late that you weren’t initially responsible enough for debt you have “bad debt.” As I mentioned before, do I like debt? No. Do I have credit cards?
Yes, paid off every month. Will I take out a loan? Depends, on the purpose, the amount and the type of debt. For many, I recommend a no debt strategy. For the responsible and accountable, I recommend good debt as long as it fits into your 80/20 or 60/40 mix, has no interest or very low interest, and is used on an something that you can liquidate to pay off the loan.
Another aspect as discussed before is settling some of your debts. If you can’t afford to pay everything to feed your family, then don’t pay unsecured debt (i.e. credit cards) versus your home loan or to put beans and rice in your stomach. Do call the creditor and discuss your situation, and try to stop interest accrual, arrange a payment plan, or see if they will settle on the amount. If they do any of these, keep all records…this is important as it can come up years later on your credit report as something you owe. If you can afford to actually pay down all your debts, then do so.
Let me make this clear, your NAME, your SIGNATURE, are tied to your WORD; if you signed a contract, I always recommend you fulfill your obligation. I have never walked away from any debt, I have never been foreclosed on (another story). I have had to shut down credit cards and then arrange a payment plan, however I paid what I owed. Here are some debt payoff methods:
Debt Avalanche
With current debt there are different ways to pay it off, here are some of the most common ones. Financial planners often recommend “debt avalanche”. With this you write out all of your debts and pay down the largest interest rates first. Then take that amount and put it into the next one. This “saves the most on interest.” The downside is that large loans take a while to pay off and someone could get distracted.
Debt Snowball
Another version is the “debt snowball”. Effectively take everything again and write it out smallest to largest amount and then again take what you paid before and put it into the next one. Upside on this is that it can emotionally help you get excited about paying off debt to give you the “small wins.” (If you set percentage or amount remaining goals with the “debt avalanche” you could get this similar emotional win.)
Debt Snowman
Why when talking about debt is everything related to snow? Not sure, probably because it feels could if you are on the wrong side of it. Here is another method, lets call it the “debt snowman.” This is the way I used to pay off my debts and the way I recommend. First, categorize your debts into unsecured, secured, and important secured (important secured is usually something you intend to keep and may or may not pay off in this process [i.e. house or car with 0% interest rate]).
Next, pay what you can on all minimums and extra to the secured with the highest interest rate or lowest payment. Yep, use either of the “debt avalanche” or “debt snowball” thought processes. Again, after it is paid off then move on to the next applying everything extra to the debt. After secured is unsecured, and of course lastly is the important secured. If you want no debt, pay it all off. If you don’t care about having “good debt” then just make sure the debt you keep is on exceptional terms, such as 0% interest. The important thing is when making these choices, they are yours, not someone else’s. You have more invested if you agree with the process.
Getting past the 100/0
Getting past the 100/0 keep everything above in mind and continuing your path. The next step is to ensure to mitigate your risk, increase your savings and investments, and diversify into additional sources of active and passive income.