Thursday, December 20, 2007

The One Action That Will Change Your Financial Life

When I counsel with people who are in financial difficulty, I find one consistent theme. People who are in financial trouble and have no idea as to where their money is going each month or if it is a debt problem usually understand very little about the details of that debt.

I want that to change for everyone. Financial organization is the one step anyone can take that will start the process of getting finances back on the road towards prudent stewardship.

So what does financial organization mean? It simply means knowing the current state of your finances as well as where the money goes each month. Most people don’t know how much they’re spending. What’s worst, there is a lot of spending that goes on behind the other spouse’s back.

There are two keys to successful financial organization. First, you have to be willing to put everything on the table about money and communicate. When you have two people working under the same finances, both individuals need to be on the same page. Tracking your spending is the second key. Your finances would drastically change if you were to take thirty minutes each week to write down your expenses and put them into an expense category and then an additional thirty minutes each month to analyze and discuss.

Now, here is where the problem occurs. First, money is probably one of the hardest things to talk about in a marriage. Second, it is all about finding the time.

Well, I would agree with you about the first challenge. Communication about money is a tough one. However, there are ways to work through these issues. We are going to spend a great deal of time next year talking about this very issue. Second, I can’t buy into the time challenge. When you commit to something, you find the time.

When the clock strikes 12 on December 31st, you will have 525,600 minutes to get things done in 2008. I am talking about committing to 1,920 minutes next year to make a huge difference in your life. That amounts to 0.36% of your time. Now, it almost seems sort of ridiculous that one could not take 0.36% of his or her time to take the steps to make huge differences with their financial life.

This is a process of baby steps. What I am talking about today is the first step, which is to just commit to taking that time. The rest we will talk about next year.

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