Saturday, December 29, 2007

Blockbuster Great Gift Giveaway Good Till 01/14/08

A great way to get free coupons from Blockbuster. First go to the website and fill out your info to sign up (make sure to uncheck the 'receive offers via email' box). Then you will receive a free coupon for rent one movie get another free. You will get this every day if you visit the site everyday up until the 14th of January. Also, you will have a chance everyday to receive these really cool prizes.

http://www.bbgreatgifts.com/

ONLINE RULES BLOCKBUSTER® GREAT GIFT GIVEAWAY ONLINE GAME OFFICIAL RULES NO PURCHASE OR PAYMENT OF ANY KIND IS NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN THIS GAME. A PURCHASE WILL NOT IMPROVE YOUR CHANCES OF WINNING. By Entering, You Agree To Be Bound By These Official Rules. The BLOCKBUSTER Great Gift Giveaway Online Game (the "Game") begins at 12:01 AM (ET) on 11/13/07 and ends at 11:59:59 PM (ET) on 1/14/08 (the "Entry Period").


Grand Prize #1: 5-night trip for two to the Sheraton Keauhou Resort & Spa on the Big Island, HI (ARV $4,800).
Grand Prize #2: 5-night trip for two to the Sheraton Kauai in Kauai, HI (ARV $4,800).
Grand Prize #3: 5-night trip for two to the Westin Maui in Maui, HI (ARV $5,000).
Grand Prize #4: 5-night trip for two to the Sheraton Waikiki in Waikiki, HI (ARV $4,300).
First Prize: (7 winners) 10,000 Starwood Preferred Points certificate (ARV $700).
Second Prize: (200 winners) 52-week Blockbuster rental card (ARV $223.08).
Third Prize: (100 winners) 1-year Blockbuster VIP Game Pass (ARV $263.88).
Fourth Prize: (100 winners) 6-month Blockbuster VIP Game Pass (ARV $131.94).
Fifth Prize: (25 winners) 1-year Blockbuster Total Access VIP online rental membership (ARV $215.88).
Sixth Prize: (25 winners) 6-month Blockbuster Total Access VIP online rental membership (ARV $107.94).
Seventh Prize: (450 winners) 3-month Blockbuster Total Access online rental membership (ARV $53.97).
Eighth Prize: (350,000 winners) Single package of Orville Redenbacher's Microwave from Blockbuster (ARV $.99
AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

$100 for opening an options trading account with OptionsXpress

Fund your new account with $500 by Dec. 31st, 2007 and get $100 deposited to your account

No option trades needed whatsoever. Pretty easy and can be funded using the typical ACH, check or wire transfer methods. $100 will be credited on or before January 10th, 2008 which in my opinion is fairly quick.



AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

$50 free for opening a Sharebuilder account

$50 free for opening a Sharebuilder account and executing one trade. Simply use promotion code “HOLIDAY07″

Link to sign up for a Sharebuilder account

In order to clear the bonus, which will be credited in about 4-6 weeks, you must execute one trade. Price for executing a trade of 1001 shares or less is $9.95 +$0.01 for every share over 1001.

Deal expires 1/15/08
Happy holidays



AddThis Feed Button



AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

What if You Had to Live Off of Social Security?

A lot of us younger folks are so disillusioned by our government that we don’t expect Social Security to even be around when we turn 65 (or likely 75 by that time…). But the fact is that today millions of people rely on Social Security as their primary - if not sole - source of income. Taking into account that the average benefit is only $963 a month, that’s not very much.

AARP asked retirees who rely primarily upon Social Security how the manage financially, and reprinted a selection of the responses. I enjoyed reading them, as they gave me a glimpse of what obstacles they face, and it showed many different ways they deal with them. Being on a fixed income and having a limited ability to make more money due to disability or illness would be very frustrating to me. Here are some excerpts, which I have organized by the major spending categories:

Housing

We built our own house on a lake stick by stick, or we wouldn’t have a house on a lake. It took us two years. Our son helped with the framing, and my son-in-law did the painting, but my husband did a fantastic job, only contracting out the roofing. [..] We planned ahead and paid off our house before retirement.


We put our home into a reverse mortgage several years ago, and I will realize very little if I sell. I have no children within 130 miles but can’t afford to sell because of the dwindling equity.

[I] live in a Section 8 apartment. In this area, a one-bedroom apartment is $700 to $1,300 per month. I cannot afford this and was lucky to get on Section 8. I must share the apartment with two roommates.

The largest portion of your income will be taken up with rent, utilities, phone, and maybe an auto (I had to get rid of mine), so be certain to apply for government-subsidized housing as soon as possible, as there is likely to be a lengthy waiting list. I waited 3 years! Previously, my rent alone was higher than the current total expense for rent, utilities, and phone.

Healthcare

[…] Our biggest expenses are the cost of our HMO, our Medicare and our medications. My $511 monthly pension pays for that. Our medications, although prescribed by HMO doctors, weren’t on the HMO’s formulary, so the cost wasn’t covered. Since we don’t live too far from Canada, we used to buy our most expensive medications through a Canadian clinic. However, now they will no longer serve Americans, so we did what others do on limited incomes—we just quit taking our two most expensive medications.

[I] go to hospital clinics for treatment. There is often a two- or three-hour wait at the clinics to see a doctor, or more typically a student intern. But, private physicians do not take my Medicaid insurance. Some take Medicare and then bill you for the copay.

If you are a veteran, be sure to contact the VA for any medical or prescription help you may need. I definitely cannot afford civilian medical insurance!

Food and Nutrition

We know what is healthy to eat, and we can eat on $2 a day. A typical day’s menu would be:

Breakfast: Orange juice (frozen), oatmeal w/brown sugar, half a banana, coffee

Lunch: Tuna fish sandwich (on whole wheat bread from a wholesale bread outlet), carrot sticks, second half of banana, tea (made from tea purchased for 1 cent a bag from Wal-Mart)

Dinner: Baked potato w/chili topping, coleslaw, half-cup ice cream, tea (made with the same tea bag as used for lunch).

I can some items at home to supplement my food supply. I raise my own apples and have enough ground to plant a garden, but my age makes a garden difficult.

[I] spend no more than 30 dollars a week for food. I have just eliminated meat from my diet and gone vegetarian because I cannot afford meat or fish. In addition, I belong to a clubhouse that has a food co-op and provides meals for a dollar. I can get 30 dollars worth of groceries from the co-op for two dollars. Most of the food comes from a local food bank, and the food is expired. I have gotten spoiled food from the co-op, and also infested food, but must take the risk because I cannot do without it.

General tips

My best advice for managing on a small income is to “think small.” Small house, small yard, small car, small stove, small refrigerator, small TV. Americans are programmed to buy things that are too large and consume too much energy.

Of course, another one of my responses to reading these stories was a strengthened resolve to have the financial means to avoid dealing with some of these issues. Some of the respondents seem to be content, but definitely not everyone. Also, I should really explore getting better disability insurance!

Via Mymoneyblog


AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Read more!

Online Banks Dropping Their Interest Rates, Thanks Fed

In the past week or so, several online banks have responded to the Fed rate cuts with drops of their own, including:

ING Direct went from 4.20% to 4.10%. APY.
HSBC Direct went from 4.50% to 4.25% APY.
Emigrant Direct went from 4.75% to 4.65% APY.
Chasing Higher Yields?

Countrywide Bank has a Savingslink savings account that pays 5.30% APY for balances over $10,000 (4.0% for under $10,000). They also have a 3-month CD paying 5.50% APY.
Everbank has a promotional 5.51% APY for 3 months on their FreeNet checking account.

I still use my Washington Mutual Free Checking / 4.75% APY Savings combo as my core account, and I’m happy the rate has not dropped since going staying at 5% for a long time. Read my WaMu review for details.



AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Woman Sells Breastmilk in Local Town

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - A woman who doesn't want her breast milk to go to waste has taken out a newspaper ad in hopes of selling it. Martha Heller, 22, of Tiffin, took out the ad in The Gazette, offering 100 ounces of her breast milk for $200 or the best offer.

Heller said her freezer is overflowing with breast milk that she has pumped since August. Her 4-month-old daughter won't drink from a bottle and the supply is piling up.

Heller now donates to the University of Iowa's Mother's Milk Bank, but the 100 ounces of milk she wants to sell was pumped before going through the screening process for the bank and cannot be donated.


Linda Klein, a lactation consultant at Mercy Medical Center in Cedar Rapids, said breast milk can generally be stored in a freezer for up to six months.

Heller said she researched laws regarding the sale of breast milk and couldn't find any in Iowa.

Don McCormick, a spokesman for the Iowa Department of Public Health, said he was not aware of any laws in Iowa restricting the sale of breast milk, but that state health officials advised against it.

Heller said she hasn't received any legitimate calls about her ad.

"There was one prank caller," she said.

Via Morningcall

AddThis Feed Button



AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Stay Away From Holiday Debt

Please Follow these tips for Holiday success
1.) Never spend more than 2-3% of your salary during the holidays.


2.) NEVER open up a 0% interest rate credit card.


When you’re vulnerable financially, it’s the worst time to open up new lines of credit


3.) Pay off your bills in three months.

“Don’t slip into saying, ‘Oh, next summer, or next fall, I’ll have a garage sale and pay off these debts,’ because before you know it, Christmas will be here again, and you’ll still be in debt from the year before,”

AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Friday, December 21, 2007

Getting Your Financial Hard Wiring In Order

Take care of your needs first!

Find out who you owe ( pull a credit report)

Pay it all off via monthly payments ( do not go by the minimum payments, go overboard to reduce interest)

Although, I do not like budgets, just track your spending, (hint: do not spend more than your paycheck, avoid the credit card) Your credit card is not an extension of your paycheck, remember, every time you use it you are taking out a loan.

Rule of Thumb:

To get out of debt:
Spend less than you earn, use the excess money to throw at your debt


To build wealth:
Spend less than you earn, use the excess money to throw at savings/investments


Simple, just reverse the process!

So why everyone is not out of debt and building wealth... Discipline, Delayed gratification, family illness, job loss, car repair, dental, health bills, divorce, etc. I can go on and on.

Life happens! Try to minimize emergencies by having a cash cushion.

Find out the biggest mistake you made with money and what caused you to get deep in debt with money and learn from that. It could be a car payment, dining out, impulsive shopping, whatever! Find out the symptom!

Via Moneymonk

AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Monday, December 17, 2007

Dont SPEND 0% Money People, Just Borrow and Save it

"I have $40,000 in credit card debt, but it's at 0%"

What's the difference? you still have $40,000 in credit card debt ! Get a clue. I mean what exactly does that mean when you say at 0%? As if I suppose to say that's smart. YOU HAVE DEBT! Regardless at what price you are still overspending.

It just kills me when I hear people talk like that as if they are justifying their overspending. I overheard someone say while we were on vacation, "I put this trip on my credit card that have 0% interest." CRAZY.

I can kinda-sort-of understand if you are doing credit card arbitrage and you are trying to gain something from a 0% card. But to just to carry cc debt from month to month because it's at 0% and you are not gaining anything from it, is silly ! YOU still owe the money. You are only fooling yourself.


Thanks moneymonk!

AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Today's Career Seeker

In a world where jobs no longer last forever, the only constant in your career is you. So instead of relying on the brand of your company to define who you are, you have to rely on your own brand.


That's not easy, though. Think of all the brand managers who have had their hands on Nike or Apple. The brands people adore and really connect with are brands that are consciously developed and well cared for every day, even in bad times.


Admit It -- You're Special


That's how you have to treat yourself. It's true that you'll never be as big a brand as Nike or Apple, but your brand is much more important than theirs, because your brand is what will feed you and clothe you and keep your life stable. And just as specialized brands are always the most successful, specialists have the best careers.


Think about it: The people who get the most job offers are the ones known for doing something very well. They have an area of expertise and they have a reputation for being great at it. The stronger your specialty is, the more opportunities you'll have for career moves; and the more opportunities you have, the less likely that the inevitable bumps in the road will throw you off course. That's how branding creates stability.


The way to build a brand is to know what your strengths are, why they're special, and what you like doing with them. If you're unclear of what personal branding is, here's a great definition from personal-branding blogger Dan Schawbel. And if you're unsure of how to build your own brand, here are three steps to follow:




1. Know what you're very good at.


This isn't about what you like to do. We all like to do a lot of things, but that doesn't mean we stand out for them. You also don't need to get paid for what you love to do most. After all, you may love food, but you probably don't get paid to eat, right?

So pick something you love but that makes sense to get paid for, which means it should pay enough to support you and whoever depends on you. Also, pick something in an area you've done work in that people have told you is exceptional.


Each of us can only be fantastic at a few things. One of the big tricks to career success is to find what you do better than almost everyone else, and then let people know that that's what you do. For most people, the search for what makes them special takes years and years, and includes a few wrong turns.


2. Know what people think of you.


This is hard to do. For example, most people think they're more well-liked than they are. And most people think they're more essential to a team than they are. A great way to get an assessment of how people think of you is to ask yourself if you have the five traits of a likable person.

Another approach is to think about traits that likable people have and work on those, because the traits you consciously focus on are ones you can generally improve. Branding blogger Adam Salamon writes that there are some things you should always want to convey, for example that you're interested in other people and that you have a positive attitude. These are things everyone should think about.


But being likable is only part of brand building. You need to be not just liked, but known for what you're good at. Do people know what you're good at, or do they just know that you're nice? You want both.


3. Meet the right people.


Not every brand is relevant to every person. Understand the kind of people who'll connect best with you, and surround yourself with them, at least to get started. That way you can focus on presenting the parts of you that are most relevant to your brand.

This shouldn't seem extreme. The younger the workforce gets, the more mainstream the idea of personal branding becomes. Travis, a blogging entrepreneur at Young Go Getter, describes his community as a place where people write about what they want to be known for and share ideas to connect with people who think like them.


You need a community like that. Because in the new workplace, no one can take care of you but you -- not your boss, not your company, not the economy. It's all up to you, and it's hard to do alone, so figure out what you're great at and then let people know. Start with a small community and let it get bigger and bigger. This is where true financial security and job safety come from.

Via Yahoofinance.com

AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Hilarious Story of the Homies Figurines

HERCULES, CALIF. -- Ten years ago, David Gonzales created a hit with "The Homies," 2-inch plastic figurines depicting characters from the barrio, complete with bandannas and baggy pants. Inspired by the homeboys he grew up with, they were sold, quarter by quarter, in gum ball machines in mostly Latino neighborhoods.

Gonzales was lambasted by police and prosecutors, who said the impish images exploited gang life for profit. Naturally, they then sold better than ever: more than 120 million to date.

The 47-year-old Gonzales, now a father of three children in college, lives in an elegant two-story Spanish-style house overlooking San Francisco Bay, just down the road from the flinty central Richmond neighborhood where he grew up.

"I call this house 'the house that the Homies built,' " he said.

Gonzales has been featured in national magazines, including Rolling Stone, and rubbed shoulders with celebrities. His characters have adorned back-to-school folders, lunchboxes, breath mints and beach towels. The Pasadena Museum of California Art is hosting an exhibit on his Homies, and Nintendo will soon release a Homies video game


Yet there has been a gnawing feeling of unfulfilled goals and unmet expectations. He wanted to hit the big time with an animated TV show -- something that would really leave his imprint. Oil paintings by Gonzales, often with religious themes, hang on the walls of his home -- a reminder that the artist created the toy maker, not the other way around.

He felt harried by a sense that time was slipping away, sounding curiously like someone stuck in his own plastic bubble. Sometimes, he bared his soul to a priest.

But not just any priest.

Gonzales, one of five boys in a family scraping by in a tough neighborhood, grew up intense, artistic and studious. He asked his parents to take him out of a Roman Catholic school and enroll him in a public school because the latter had an art program.

"I knew David was going to be an artist," said his mother, Agnes.

His brother Robert, younger by a year, hung out with a rougher crowd. He got into fights, burglarized homes with his friends and landed in jail. He dropped out of high school.

The brothers were close, but their paths kept diverging. David enrolled at California College of the Arts in Oakland. He drew a comic strip for Lowrider magazine with characters familiar -- for better or worse -- to just about anyone growing up in Mexican American barrios. Robert moved to Nevada to work in the Job Corps.

One day in 1980, David got an urgent call from a hospital in Reno.

Robert and some friends had scuffled with a group of young men on the side of a desert road. Someone had hopped into a car and gunned it in Robert's direction, pinning him between two cars. His right leg had to be amputated below the knee.

When David and their mother reached the hospital, a priest told her that Robert must have been pulled from the grave by a guardian angel. The priest also remarked that Robert was highly spiritual, a comment that surprised his family.

David went back to college and Robert returned to his parents in Richmond. But even in a wheelchair he was rebellious, blowing insurance money on a lowrider and partying harder than ever. He moved out but soon felt lonely, isolated and miserable. He drank a lot.

One day, Robert returned to Richmond and found David in their parents' garage. If anyone could understand him, Robert figured, it would be David.

Robert wept. He told his brother he wanted to come back home. But he felt ashamed. What Robert really seemed to crave, David thought, was forgiveness -- penance.

"The prodigal son spends his riches and comes home. He rejects his parents' love and direction," David said, recalling what he learned in church and Catholic school. "A lot of people screw up in their lives and leave, and their parents slam the door in their face when they come back."

But David knew that would not happen to Robert, even if his brother had doubts. "Just speak to Mom and Dad," he told him. "They'll understand."

So Robert spoke to them.And they welcomed him back.

In the ensuing years, David made money designing T-shirts and selling them at flea markets and liquor stores. One of his first bestsellers featured Barturo, a barrio version of Bart Simpson who asked: "¿Qué pasa, dude?" Another successful shirt featured the Virgin of Guadalupe.

He took a job as an artist with the Postal Service in Oakland to support his wife and children. He painted a huge mural titled "Journey of a Letter" in a post office lobby in Fremont but eventually quit so he could pursue the T-shirt business full time, refining his barrio creations.

Then a manufacturer called him about making plastic figurines of his comic strip characters.

Meanwhile, after his garage chat with David, Robert patched up things with his parents, enrolled in vocational school, graduated with honors and took a job at a savings and loan. But, as David would feel years later, Robert sensed something was missing in his life. There had to be, he decided, a reason he survived the attack. One day, he called his parents into the living room and announced that, at age 24, he wanted to become a priest.

"He was the last person I expected to be a priest," his mother said. "When you think of a priest, you think quiet and studious. Robert was so rebellious."

In 1989, the year the Homies figurines made their debut, Robert took his religious vows and a new name, Masseo, after one of St. Francis' followers. When Robert was ordained as a Franciscan priest seven years later, David read a speech.

"Knowing Father Masseo . . . I'm sure he'll be dealing with a lot of problems facing young people, such as drugs, gangs and teen pregnancy," David said. "He'll be an important part of a lot of baptisms, first communions and confirmations. Those will be his children."

Soon enough, David would need Masseo for his own talk-in-the garage moment.

He was making lots of money. By most accounts, Homies were the best-selling character brand in vending-machine history. But police and prosecutor complaints were wearing on him. Many stores stopped selling Homies, and lots of people thought he was glorifying gangbangers and profiting from it.

The Homies, with names such as Chuco, Joker and Poco Loco, were just his humorous tribute to a subculture of Latino life, he said. "I'm not going to stop gangs, and I didn't create them," David said, sounding slightly exasperated. "They exist. Just like they exist in the regular Hispanic community, they exist in the Homie world."

David fired off a frustrated e-mail to his brother, saying that he was thinking of going back to the Postal Service. He found it hard, David said, to accept that "God blessed me with all this . . . artistic talent for that job in life."

"God didn't give you this talent for nothing," his brother replied.

The priest also reminded him that even a toy maker had a larger responsibility. Not every Homie had to be vato, a dude in the barrio.

So David kept at it. He created El Paletero (the ice cream vendor), who works to bring his grandchildren from Mexico. And Officer Placa, a rotund, doughnut-loving cop who "worked the barrio for about 20 years and knows all the Homies by name."

Robert suggested he create a figurine of a homeboy in a wheelchair -- a common sight in gang-afflicted neighborhoods. Willy G. became the most popular Homie ever. Soon, David got calls from the Special Olympics and from people who coached youngsters with disabilities.

He also created a homeless man, a young student and an activist. But no character would have a life of its own, and bind the two brothers, so much as El Padrecito ("the little father") -- a Franciscan priest with robes, sandals and stylish sunglasses who "acts like a second father to many of the Homies" and looks a bit like Robert.

The Padrecito turned out to be more than just a figurine. Masseo adopted him as his personal logo and found that the Homie helped him reach young people in need. Robert created El Padrecito's Online Church, where he fields questions, offers upbeat advice, counsels the troubled and sometimes delivers a religious message in rap.

"My life would probably be a lot more boring without the Homies," the priest said.

Robert talks optimistically about his dream of opening a monastery in the town of Guadalupe and reaching ever more people through the cyber-church.

To help Robert along, David sold him the rights to El Padrecito for $1 and gave him permission to use all of the Homies in his religious efforts. And last year David created Santos, a line of figurines of saints and religious figures, such as Pope John Paul II. David also donated $20,000 to his brother's growing cyber-church.

Last year, a young woman from Houston e-mailed El Padrecito to say she was about to earn her college degree. She wanted to thank the father for helping her cope with the execution of a family member on death row years before.

"Crazy as it sounds," she wrote, "if I hadn't written to you so long ago, my life may have turned out differently and I could have been just another statistic, just another face on the welfare line."

Could the priest have reached out to the young woman without El Padrecito? Probably, but the Homies certainly made it easier, Robert said. And the priest brought the artist a measure of redemption as well. "He helped the Homie family stay on the right path," David said. "It was reaffirming for me, and it let me know that I had not gone too bad."

And who would have ever expected that from the creator of Chuco, Joker and Poco Loco?
Via LaTimes

AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Make 1/4 of a Million Dollars Playing Free Online Games

Playing free games online can be a profession. A number of sites are giving out cash prizes and the size keeps growing. It first started with modest amounts, like $100, to attract gamers, but now payments balooned to $250,000. It might be good to note that you can't register for cash games if you reside in specific states.

Here is a list of free games you can play and win fat cash prizes:

Scrabble
Bejeweled 2
Family Fued
Luxor
Big Money
Solitaire


AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Thursday, December 13, 2007

My Plans To Improve the Money Generating Capabilities of This Blog

I was just browsing over at Nichegeek.com and i came across a post about his strategy on how he generates income through blogging with ad-affliliate programs. I am making it my new years resolution to implement this strategy and see where it takes me, beginning next week:

Get this – even if you don’t finish reading this post and don’t click a single link, I’ll still make 10 cents off you. That’s because the post has eCPM of a little over $100, meaning I get hundred bucks for every 1000 impressions (as long as most traffic comes from US). I’ve actually tested this post for two weeks on my other blog that deals with weird business ideas and eCPM there was in the $96-$112 range. When you are done reading this post (it's rather long), you'll know more about making real money with blogs than most so-called experts.
It all started when I read that if you make money with AdSense, you can make 10X as much, if you add affiliate links. This blog makes me $20-$30 in AdSense revenue every day, so 10X would be $200-$300 a day. That ain’t bad, considering that this is just a hobby blog and my other online businesses (PickyDomains.Com, Deprice.Com and a few others) are my primary income source.
So I started reading some books on affiliate marketing. I’ve read Online Marketing Success Stories: Insider Secrets, from the Experts Who Are Making Millions on the Internet Today, Street Smart Internet Marketing - Tips, Tools, Tactics & Techniques to Market Your Product, Service, Business or Ideas Online and Affiliate Millions: Make a Fortune using Search Marketing on Google and Beyond.
The good thing – these books are awesome. The bad thing – for some strange reason the act of reading a smart book about how people get rich online did make me all that smart or rich for that matter. More over, after some testing I found out that the traditional affiliate marketing model doesn’t work all that well. The traditional model says – here, sell this crappy e-book for 100 bucks and we’ll give you 50. The problem is that nobody buys all that crap. People are reluctant to buy even good things from trusted vendors. Fifty percent from nothing is still nothing.
So, if you want to make good money as affiliate marketer – don’t sell stuff. Confused?



Great. Here, click this link called Shawn Casey's Business In A Box (if you live outside US, you’ll be rerouted, sorry about that – there is nothing I can do).
As you see, it’s a free e-mail course on marketing (pretty good one, too). While most people probably not very interested in internet marketing and don’t know who Shawn is (a marketing genius), my site is about internet marketing, so my opt-in rate is very high. One in very eight people who click the link do register and I get $1.30 for every registration.
So here is your first lesson – do find affiliate offers that don’t require selling but pay per lead (lead is usually free sign up or registration) that match the topic of your blog. Here are some other examples of what offers convert well on blogs similar to the one you are reading – how to turn $60 in $1000 flipping domain names and the list of low cost franchises (guess how much this one pays per registration – over six bucks, because it’s so specialized, and this one pays even more - $35). Another example of getting paid for not selling anything is this - I get $25 for every person who becomes publisher or adversiter.
How do you get access to those affiliate campaigns that pay for NOT selling stuff? I’m going to tell you shortly, but I first want to stress the difference between getting paid for lead and getting paid for sale.
Merchants who pay you a percentage of the sale are lazy. They don’t want to take any risks. Essentially, they are saying – if you bring me 10 bucks, I’ll let you keep 5. Let’s say a person is selling 20 dollar widget that costs $10 to produce. So his or her profit is $10, right? So your affiliate commission is likely to be $5 max. Otherwise, there isn’t much profit left. The risk is all yours. If you drive good traffic, but the offer is bad, you get nothing.
Lead based commission works differently. Let’s say a person is selling that very same $20 widget. Let’s say it’s some iPod accessory. Lead based marketer knows that a customer is his major asset. So he sells that accessory and puts the customer on his mailing list. He knows that, statistically speaking that customer is likely to keep buying for two years, make X transactions and generate Y dollars in profit (much more than $10 made in profit from the very first transactions).
So lead-based marketers make more money, they know what their customer is worth to them and they can pay you more. He knows that just a name on the list is worth $3 to him, so he'll pay you $2 per name and address of any person who owns a particular model of iPod. It’s a concept pioneered by Jay Abraham and described very well in Lead Generation for the Complex Sale, so my advice is to stick with campaigns that pay for lead, not sale (be careful, some merchants label their campaigns as pay-per-lead, when they really pay for sale). There are some exceptions to this rule, as you'll see in this post.
Ok, so where does one go for pay-per-lead campaigns? CPA networks. I’ve worked with a number of them and the two I am working with right now are Copeac and MaxBounty. Not all CPA networks are created equal. For example, Commission Junction hasn’t made me any money, while it’s probably one of the most famous and well respected CPA networks. Copeac made me over $10K right away. Why the difference? I have no clue. CJ just doesn’t convert. Amazon pays measly 6-8% (my monthly Amazon earnings are just a little over $150 a month, even though I do promote their books heavily, since I am an avid reader myself).
A rule of thumb is that you should be able to make money with CPA network within the first week, after trying 30-50 different campaigns. If you don’t – move onto a different network. I highly recommend that you only join CPA networks that have referral programs (also known as two-tier programs). Both Copeac and MaxBounty do, one 2%, another 5%.
Referral programs are very important. Currently, 50% of my affiliate income comes from actual leads I generate and 50% comes from referrals (it does take a long while go get to that point, it took me almost six month). The way I fight referrophobia (avoidance of clicking ref links) is that I help my affiliates. If they register with the links I gave, I’ll see their ID. So they can send me a question with their ID and I’ll give them the answer. The only change that I’ve made after getting several hundreds affiliates to register under me is that I require people to first do some testing on their own. I do, however provide a list of tested offers that convert for me.
Now, I’ve earlier given you examples of affiliate campaigns that make money on blogs that write about making money online. How about generic blogs? For generic blogs two types of affiliate campaigns work well – contests and free giveaways.
My two contest winners are getting paid for playing Scrabble online and $1000 prize for writing the best short poem.
As far as freebies go, my money makers are 250 free business cards, free $500 grocery card and free health product samples.
So, if anyone asks you if it's possilble to have $100 eCPM for a blog page - this blog is the living proof that it is. Sure, I had to cramp in a shitload of affiliate links and put in several weeks worth of testing which pay-per-lead offers work best. But honestly, I'm proud of myself.
What’s a big deal about $100 eCPM? There are people who sell Rolls Royce’s on the Internet and their eCPM must me astronomical. 100 arab sheiks visit the site, 2 of them spend half a million dollar each – boom goes eCPM into the stratosphere.
Here is the difference (you’ll appreciate it, if you do business online). If you are a Rolls Royce guy doing online advertising, you have to bid only on certain keywords that are directly related to Rolls Royce. There is just no way you can bid on ‘Britney Spears’ and make sales. Not gonna happen. But suppose you did? You’d be just burning your cash, essentially. Wasting money.
This isn’t the case with this very blog post that you are reading right now. I’m going to make 10 cents from every reader no matter what (statistically speaking), so as long as I buy traffic for less then 10 cents, I make profit.
This is a very important difference in two advertising models. The more money Rolls Royce guy spends on his ads, the less profit he makes. The more money I spend on ads the more money I make.
Let me give you a quick lecture on PPC ads. Just to be fair – all I know about making money from PPC ads I learned from Perry Marshall. There is a lot of free information on the subject on his website scattered around – or you can just buy his book on Amazon, it’s less then 17 bucks and has more information than $200 PPC training courses that some of you may have bought. The only thing that I did not learn from Perry is the three cent secret which is the PPC Coach thing (it’s a company that specializes in PPC ads for affiliates – essentially they show you how to stop losing money with PPC ads and start making money with PPC ads).
Essentially, there are two ways you can set up your PPC ads when it comes to affiliate marketing. Let’s say your niche is adult dating (my winner here). You bid on keywords like ‘adult dating’, ‘adult personals’ may be some brand names like, Ashley Madison. And your ad reads something like:Adult DatingWorld’s Biggest Adult DatingCommunity. Join Now For Free!
Looks familiar, doesn’t it?
You make $2.50 per free registration, your conversion rate is 1 to 10, your keywords are really expensive, so pretty soon you start losing money. Why is that? Because your ad is keyword dependent. But after you get coached by PPC Coach you get smart. You write an ad that saysOne Night Stand Only!No Marriage, No Relationship, I Just Want“It”. The More Kinky The Better.
Now you can run this ad on the content side of Google. You can bid on names of country music singers. Your ad will appear on sites where men are. Or you can bid on Nascar racing related terms. And your ad will appear on sites are. All of a sudden, you don’t want to be found on search engines, because your ads aren't very relevant to the keywords you are bidding on. Now you want your ad to be run on AdSense network. People will read it and the ad, not keywords will be the qualifier. If it resonates with them, they'll click. If it does not - they will not.
This is a rather critical distinction because now you understand that the ability to make money comes from your ad writing skills.
By the way, if you are totally new to ‘Google Cash’ way of making money (promoting affiliate offers via PPC), let me tell you what’s going to happen to you. First, you’ll read about it and you’ll be excited. Then you’ll try it. You’ll be writing dumb keyword-dependent ads and losing money. Most of you will give up here.
Some will get smart and learn to write keyword independent PPC ads and use Google’s contextual side (AdSense) to its full potential. All of a sudden, your ads will be breaking even and – get this – EVEN MAKING YOU A LITTLE BIT OF MONEY!
Then ‘It’ will happen. You’ve added 100 new PPC campaigns. 90 of them generate no traffic whatsoever. Two or three makes you a few bucks a day. Some lose you a little bit of money. And then one campaign starts making you over a hundred bucks a day (for me, it was this campaign from Omaha Steaks which now produces less then 5% of what it used to. It's one of the few pay per sale campaigns that worked great, probably because Omaha Steaks is such a great brand).
You start jumping. Holy shit! Google Cash does work! I’m going to get rich! I’m going to get rich. You can see yourself making six figure income online. Maybe even a million dollars. Or more. But then all of a sudden, you start getting less and less money and then it your winner campaign stops working at all.
Sorry, such is life. If you have a working ad, doesn’t mean that you have a working business. By no means do I mean to discourage you from using Google Cash method. I still use it. But it’s kind of like Forex. There are successful Forex traders. And they make money. George Soros made over a billion dollars with Forex in a few months, when he crashed British pound. But that was a one time event.
It’s the same thing with your ‘winner campaigns’. They’ll make you money (sometimes a lot of money). But when something changes or campaign is cancelled – that’s it, you are screwed.
Don’t sweat – there is a solution to this as well. Just like it’s possible to make your ad keyword independent, you can become independent or lesser dependent on particular affiliate campaign. This very post is an example how this is done.
There are some advantages to linking your PPC ad directly to affiliate campaign, skipping your own landing page. Conversions are usually better. However, you don’t have any control over other people's landing pages. Offer stops producing and you no longer make any money. The solution is to create your own landing page (like the one you are reading right now).
Listen carefully, guys. The only reason for creating your own landing page is TO MAKE MORE MONEY and become OFFER-INDEPENDENT. That’s it.
This page is 100% under my control. That page isn’t. Let’s say I run a PPC campaign with ‘make money online’ theme. Can I increase profits from this page? Sure I can. I can add more affiliate links. Or more AdSense blocks. Or a new service that I created. I could start selling links. I could start promoting some sort of guru consulting services, like Brian Tracy's. Sell real estate related products. And if one offer suddenly stops working, I could easily replace it.
Not so with that page. There is nothing I can do with it. It’s not under my control.
When you create your own landing page, you should be OBSESSED with the idea of making it more and more profitable. And it’s not because of greed. This page makes me 10 cents per visitor. So I can pay Google 5 cent per visitor and still profit handsomely. But if it made 15 cents per visitor (and believe me, I’ll tweak the hell out of it so it eventually does), I could pay Google 10 cents. That would mean a hell of a lot more traffic and a lot more profits.
That’s how the game works. After you learn how to make your ads keyword-independent, you start learning the art of creating profitable landing pages. Let me give you a few pointers just like I did with pay per click ads.
You’ve got to understand that NO MATTER WHAT YOU DO, 90% of folks who read your landing page will do NOTHING. It’s the same for this post as well. Heck, this far into the post, I’ve lost most readers. And it’s not my fault or anybody else, for that matter. It’s just the way it is. The profitability of your landing pages that you create in the hands on the 10%. Remember that.
So the first thing that you should do is duplicate your best converting links, like I did with Shawn Casey’s free internet marketing course. You might have noticed this on your own – sometimes, when you come across the link, you don’t click it. But if you see it again, you decide to click it for some reason. It’s weird, but it’s true. I told you that I have several online businesses. My first one was Deprice.Com – selling downloadable shareware online (I could tell you about that business as well if you’d like). You’ll see that I have two Download and Buy links for each product. Why? Because sales increase by 12% if I have two links.
The second important concept is pre-selling your links. Pre-selling is simply explaining your reader what’s going to happen when they click the link or what the offer is about. Let me give you an example.
There is a site called e-Poll Surveys. It’s rather old and well-known. What they do is they pay with Amazon coupons and free prizes for you to take surveys. You’ve really got to be bored out of your mind, because it takes several dozen completed surveys to get a free book or a free CD. But unlike other survey sites this one is real, legitimate, proven and has great reviews from Epinions.Com.
I’ve promoted e-Poll on MadConomist.Com with and without explanations (pre-selling). Difference in conversions – 400%. It does pay to explain.
If you want to be a successful marketer, you need to learn the art of ‘long copy’. Get a hold of every book on direct mail and copywriting you can get (especially Dan Kennedy’s stuff), read John Carlton’s Blog and most importantly, read salesletters and one page websites for expensive products sold online – here is a great example that you can use as a blueprint.
The long copy concept is very important and it’s based on results, not theory. A long time ago direct-mail copywriters noticed a weird thing – a two page sales letter had twice the conversion of one page sales letter. And four page salesletter outperformed a two page sales letter by a factor of two. It doesn’t double forever, usually it stops at doubling at eight pages, but some very well known copywriters have written thirty seven page sales letters in order to get best results.
Clearly, it’s not just the length of the text. As David Ogilvy said “You can’t bore anyone into buying”. And it’s truly so. The reason those sales letter are long (as well is this page) is that they have to be that long. When you analyze the structure of all these different long sales letters, they are remarkably similar. It usually starts with a big promise, then there are details, then there are examples and proof and then there is closing.
Equally important is what happens behind the scenes, so to speak. If you are going to become a serious affiliate marketer, make it a rule to study business models of various merchants whos offers you are promoting. Why are they paying you a buck thirty for simple e-mail registration? Why are they selling a six dollar item and give you a nine dollar commission – that makes no sense? What happens after people fill out forms?
The best way to study various business models is to buy stuff (if you have money) and if you don’t, sign up for free offers and learn first hand what’s done to recoup the costs and make some profit.
Here are some frequently used business models.
Model one – Free Gifts.
Click this Boca Java offer. As you see, if you purchase 4 packs of coffee for $19.99, you’ll get free TimeMag. (And I’ll get $24 in affiliate commissions). How is this economically feasible? You get 20 bucks from a customer and you pay 24 to an affiliate?
Boca Java uses membership model (pioneered by Columbia House). A person pays $19.99, gets his coffee and a free mug. He is now a member of the club. Each month he’ll be billed $19.99 and get more coffee. Some people will cancel their “coffee subscription” right after they get a free gift. But others will stay members for months or years. The lifetime value of a member is easily calculated and is probably in the low hundreds, guessing from my experience.
Model two – The Drip System For Sales.
This is a fairly popular model among internet marketers. If you want to get a great marketing lesson for free, go ahead and enter your e-mail here (you may not want to use your primary e-mail but do use a real e-mail address, as you’ll need for free activation).
This is how the drip system works. It is highly unlikely that a person will make a purchase right away, unless that person came to a website already planning to buy. So marketers try to capture e-mail addresses of people who visit their site. In order to do that, they usually give away free e-mail courses (some courses are outstanding, by the way). When you register, you start getting the material you requested every day or every other day or once a week. Beside study material, each course usually contains a mini-ad for a product or products. This is called ‘the drip system’ and it’s based on the fact that people are much more likely to buy from you after several contacts. It’s not uncommon to triple sales right away, when you switch from “if you want to buy it, click here” to e-mail drip system. Oftentimes sales pitches that come with free courses are so effective that you can learn more about sales and copywriting by subscribing to these courses, rather than reading a book on advertising.
Model three – Email Flip.
How do you flip e-mail address? First, you create an outlandish offer, something like, if you want a free $1000 Mexico vacation for two, simply enter your e-mail. After you enter the e-mail, almost the very same second you start receiving what’s basically legal spam (other offers).
A regular person would never want to leave an e-mail address, but a marketer should (just make sure you create a special account, don’t use your primary e-mail). Why? Because you’ll learn about the world of ‘co-regs’ and there is very little information about it.
Co-reg means co-registration. When you entered your e-mail for that free Mexican vacation (which you’ll never get, because there are so many conditions you have to meet to be eligible), you’ve agreed to receiving e-mails from “partners”. The co-reg company paid once to acquire your e-mail and now it keeps reselling it to its clients over and over again. You have to understand that it’s perfectly legal. Everything is CAN-SPAM compliant and you’ll stop receiving messages when you unsubscribe. However, by the time you do that, co-regs will already make their profits. Because of CAN-SPAM act, the legal lists of e-mails are hard to come by and co-regs is one of the few venues where you can get them.
Why do I recommend getting a separate e-mail account in order to sign up for co-reg offers? You see, for spammers e-mails are basically free. You can buy a database of millions of e-mails for 50 bucks. Spammers don’t care about conversions.
Companies that sell through co-reg channels do pay every single time they rent a list and they pay a lot (it’s their single biggest spending item). So the most profitable, best converting offers often show up in co-reg channels first. Basically, if you have an e-mail account devoted to co-reg emails exclusively, you’ll always know what’s hot in advance. Here are several co-reg offers from the biggest and the best players in this niche (one, two, three).

Via NicheGeek.com



AddThis Feed Button



AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Kensington Wireless Mouse-MINI $7.99 After Rebate at Circuit City

Right now Circuit City is offering the Kensington Wireless Mouse-MINI $7.99 After Rebate. This mouse is perfect for laptops and has the mini wireless. It costs 22.99 up front, and it has to be purchased in store, but you can still place the order online for pick up. Im already in it for one!! Enjoy
Here is the link to the mouse

AddThis Feed Button



AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

After My App-O-Rama: How Do I Repair My Sunken Credit Score?

Q: What is Bumpage?
A: Bumpage is the process of pulling your own credit report repeatedly, and in the process generating a lot of soft pulls, which can knock the hard pulls off of your credit report, Thereby increasing your credit Score.

Q: Why do I care?
A: Having inquiries lowers your FICO score, and makes it less likely that you will be approved for new credit cards. This is particularly important when doing a multi-year App-O-Rama, since the inquiries stay on for two years, but you will want to do another AOR round after one year. Some CC companies have been known to cancel cards after approval because of too many inquiries (FNBO).

Q: Does this work with all of the credit reporting agencies?
A: No. It only works for TransUnion and Equifax . Experian is YMMV.

Q: How long does it take?
A: For TU, around 60 inquiries. For EQ, around 100. For EX, YMMV 100+.

Q: Wouldn't the credit reporting agencies catch on to this?
A: Yes, they know about it. See this thread: Truecredit.com Targetted survey - interesting question Why they haven't plugged this up yet is harder to answer.

Q: Can anything go wrong?
A: Yes, credit report bumpage choppage splittage concern. NEED HELP EXPLAINING HOW TO AVOID THIS
choppage = losing tradelines (usually bad if they're positive) OR losing soft inquiries. CLARIFICATION NEEDED.
split file = two files and no way to tell which a creditor will see (usually bad, or at least inconvenient). Can be corrected.

Also, if you get a new hard inquiry in the middle of the process, it might "reset" your bumpage, soyou would have to basically start over to get the rest of the hards off. TrueCredit question -- Anybody else having problems with bumpage from Equifax?

Q: What resources are available to do this and how much does it cost?
A:

1. AMEX Credit Secure Direct Link or direct link. $11.99 a month. Must be an AMEX cardholder. Daily pulls (calendar days) available after 30 days.
2. National City. FW Thread $9.95 a month, $14.95 a month for you and spouse. 24hr + 1 minute pulls.
3. Key Bank. FW Thread $8.95 a month, $14.95 a month for you and spouse. 24hr + 1 minute pulls.
4. True Credit via Wal*Mart affiliate link direct link $11.21 a month. 24hr + 1 minute pulls.
5. Chase Identity Protection - direct link $11.99. Chase cardmembers. When canceled, last month's fee is refunded. Need Offer ID to sign up online. You can call 800-901-7616, and they will give you one over the phone.
6. Privacy Matters - $1 for first 7 days or 30 days, depending on the deal you got, then $29.99. Might get lucky when cancelling and get a cheap 1 year subscription. Very YMMV.
7. Citi Identity - no daily pulls, only monthly,
8. Privacy Guard - unless grandfathered, no more daily pulls, only monthly.
9. IdentityGuard (discount through Costco) - no dialy pulls, only monthly.

Q: Does any type of soft pull help b*?
A: Yes, some credit limit increase buttons(AMEX, some Citi), some "check for offers" (HSBC, BofA). Any soft pull that goes on your report will help, no matter where it is from.

Q: Can I use more than one service at the same time?
A: Yes, and this will likely speed up your results.

Q: Why is it sometimes called b*?
A: Beats the hell out of me. It's what the kids are calling it these days.

Q: How is this related to credit score monitoring?
A: Same services provide both. See the following FW thread: Credit Score Monitoring


AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Solving 6 Money Dilemmas

Via - Cnnmoney
6 money dilemmas
Pay your mortgage or invest? Buy or lease a car? Take Social Security now or later? For the answers, Money Magazine's Janice Revell runs the numbers.
As you invest your money, shop for a home or tackle any one of the many financial decisions you have to make over your lifetime, do you sometimes wish you'd paid more attention in math class? Do you find yourself having to "run the numbers" and wondering how?

To help, we've taken six common financial quandaries and done the math for you. As you'll see, the solution isn't always black and white, and the "right" answer may depend on things that you can never know for sure, like your tax bracket in 2020 or how much your investments will grow.

Plus, at times emotional considerations may tip the balance. Even if the math favors buying stocks over prepaying your mortgage, say, you may simply sleep better being out of debt. So this guide will walk you through the caveats as well as the calculations. Use it to navigate some of your financial life's trickiest questions and come up with your best call.

Pay off a credit card OR fund your 401(k)


You should do both. If you can't, pay off the plastic first.

In an ideal world, you'd wipe out your costly debts and save for retirement. But in the real world, you may not have enough cash to do both at the same time. Of course, you must pay at least the minimum on your credit card every month. So the question is, Do you put the rest of your available cash in your 401(k) or devote it all to your credit card?

Strictly by the numbers By paying off credit-card debt, you get a guaranteed rate of return equal to your interest rate (the average is 14 percent today). But if your employer matches your 401(k) contributions, that's a 50 percent return (assuming the typical 50¢-to-the-dollar match on the first 6 percent of your salary).

Hard to beat. Or is it? The 50 percent match is a one-time gift; the 14 percent interest will compound every year. At some point the cost of that interest will overtake 50 percent. So if you have a big credit-card balance, attack that first.

Here's how that could play out if you're deciding what to do with $250 a month. With a $5,000 credit-card balance at a 14 percent rate, your minimum payment is $125 a month.

Suppose you put the rest in your 401(k). Because you don't pay taxes on that contribution, you can actually invest $174 a month (assuming a 28 percent tax rate). Keep paying $125 a month on your credit-card balance, and you'll need 55 months to wipe it out. During that time if you earn 8 percent annual returns and get the standard 50 percent match you'll amass $17,271 in your 401(k).

If you ignore the 401(k) for a while and instead plow your entire $250 toward the credit card, you'll pay it off in just 23 months. Then you could devote all your spare cash to your 401(k). By the end of the original 55 months, you'd have $18,515 in your plan. The one-at-a-time approach beats splitting your money because 55 months of paying 14 percent interest outweighs the 50 percent match.


• But wait Suppose your credit-card debt isn't that big, and you can pay it off in just a couple of years even if you split your cash. Great. Go ahead and fund both goals. You'll get the benefit of the 50 percent match.


• You do the math To see how long it would take you to pay off your credit cards, use the calculator at Bankrate.com.


• Beyond the math Good savings habits are important too. If by putting off funding your 401(k) you'll never get around to it, work on both goals at once.


• The bottom line If you have a big credit-card balance, wipe it out before you open a 401(k).

Save in a Roth 401(k) OR a regular 401(k)
Don't miss this new chance to lock in tax-free retirement income.

Wish you could forever shelter your retirement savings from taxes, but you make too much to contribute to a Roth IRA? With the recent arrival of the Roth 401(k), you may have, or may soon be getting, a second chance at tax-free income.

Grab it. With a traditional 401(k) you invest pretax dollars and pay taxes when you withdraw your money; with the Roth version you pay taxes on what you put in but nothing on your withdrawals.

About a quarter of employers have rolled out this option, and a majority of plans will likely offer it by 2009. Unlike a Roth IRA, which is off limits in 2008 once your modified adjusted gross income hits $169,000 (as a couple), a Roth 401(k) has no income caps.

Strictly by the numbers Let's say that you contribute the maximum of $15,500 to your 401(k) and you're in the 28 percent tax bracket. Assuming an 8 percent annual return, you'll end up with $72,245 tax-free in 20 years with a Roth.

If you go with the traditional 401(k) instead, you'll also end up with $72,245 in 20 years, but you'll pay taxes on the withdrawals. At the same 28 percent tax rate, you'd be left with $52,016 you could actually spend.

When you fund the traditional 401(k), however, you shelter $15,500 from taxes. But even if you invest that $4,340 tax savings outside your plan, you'd have to earn well in excess of 8 percent a year to equal your Roth total after taxes.


• But wait Won't your tax bracket drop once you're no longer working? Don't count on it. If you're just starting your career, you'll almost certainly be earning more in 40 years. Even if you're mid-career, you can't assume your tax bracket will plummet.With federal tax rates currently at their lowest levels in decades and the federal deficit growing, it's not hard to imagine Congress raising taxes between now and your retirement. Assume a lower bracket only if you're near retirement and know your tax rate will fall.


• You do the math Use the Roth 401(k) calculator at Dinkytown.net.


• Beyond the math A regular 401(k) has one thing going for it: the up-front tax break. That's why you'll see your disposable income shrink if you switch to a Roth. But for the regular 401(k) even to come close to the Roth as a savings vehicle, you'd have to invest the extra cash that it put in your pocket. Would you?


• The bottom line Unless you are on the verge of retiring and know your income will drop, the Roth wins.

Lease a car OR buy a car
Buying costs less if you own your car till it drops.

With leasing, you always drive a shiny new car, and your monthly payments are lower. So why would you buy?

Strictly by the numbers A 2008 Toyota Camry will run you just under $27,000 (including taxes and fees). Buy one and finance it with a no-money-down, five-year loan at 6.9 percent (today's average), and your monthly payments will be $526. Over five years, you'll spend $31,560. Say you instead pay $1,000 up front for a five-year lease. Your monthly payment will be $415. At the end of five years, you'll have spent $25,900.

So leasing wins? That's not the full story. If you buy a car, it'll be worth something once you've paid off the loan. Your Camry would fetch about $10,000 after five years, according to estimates by Edmunds.com. That cuts the out-of-pocket cost to $21,560.


• But wait What if you really want a new car? In that case, the gap narrows. Take out a three-year loan on the Camry and your monthly payments would spike to $821, for a total of $29,556. If your three-year-old Camry sells for $14,000, your net cost drops to $15,556.


If you leased, though, your payment would be $485 a month, putting an extra $336 in your pocket compared with the loan. Invest that $336 in a money-market fund paying 4.5 percent, and you'd earn $589 after taxes in three years, assuming a 28 percent tax bracket. Factoring that in, your total lease cost would be $17,871.


Also, the Camry holds its value well. With models that don't, the manufacturer often sweetens the deal by inflating the car's assumed value at the end of the lease term. If you buy the same car, you won't make that much when you sell it, which could tilt the scales in favor of leasing.


• You do the math Use the calculator at Edmunds.com.


• Beyond the math Leases come with mileage restrictions, typically 12,000 miles a year. Plus, if you ding a leased car, you'll get dinged with fees.


• The bottom line Over the long term, buying costs you less.

Prepay your mortgage OR invest
The feel-good choice isn't necessarily the smart choice.

When some extra cash comes your way, it's tempting to put it toward your mortgage. You'll save on interest and pay off your house earlier. Buying stocks, on the other hand, feels like a risky leap into the unknown, especially now.

Strictly by the numbers Paying off your mortgage or any loan is an investment, and your return is essentially the interest rate on the loan. If you have 25 years left on a 30-year mortgage with a fixed rate of 6.2 percent and you deduct your interest payments on your taxes, you'll earn 4.5 percent by prepaying the loan (assuming you're in the 28 percent tax bracket).

Now let's say you invest your spare cash in stocks instead. You'll pay a 15 percent tax rate on your long-term capital gains and dividends. So to beat the 4.5 percent return you'd get from prepaying your mortgage, you'd have to earn just 5.3 percent a year on your stocks before taxes.

The odds of your doing that over the 25-year remaining term of your mortgage are excellent: Historically, a portfolio of 80 percent stocks and 20 percent bonds has returned 7.5 percent a year after taxes.


• But wait Paying down the mortgage earns you a risk-free 4.5 percent. That's as good as you'll do with Treasury bonds. True, and if you are investing for a near-term goal and don't want to take any risk, you can make a stronger case for prepaying your mortgage. But if you are investing for a goal that's more than a decade away, you can and should take more risk for a chance at a higher return.


• You do the math To run the numbers on how much money you could end up with by investing, use the savings calculator at CNNMoney.com. To see how much interest you'd save by prepaying your mortgage, use the payoff calculator at Dinkytown.net.


• Beyond the math Of course, all that mortgage debt may be keeping you awake at night, especially if you are worried about losing your job or you're approaching retirement and hope to live on less. You'd be grateful to be rid of that major monthly bill sooner. In that case, prepaying your mortgage starts looking better.


Remember, though, that by prepaying your mortgage, you are reducing your liquid assets. If you suddenly need money, it's easier to sell a mutual fund than it is to pull cash from your home, and you can always pay off your mortgage later with the money you invest now.


• The bottom line Investing wins.

Buy a home OR rent a home
Even in today's crummy market, buying can beat renting if you're in for the long term.

You're relocating, or you're downsizing so you can harvest some real estate wealth. Do you buy right away or rent and wait out the housing bust? To get your answer, consider your monthly expenses, what you'd do with the profits from your old home if you didn't buy and your time horizon.

Strictly by the numbers If you plan to stay put for at least a decade, buying wins, even if your monthly cash flow is more flush with renting. Over time, rising prices reward home ownership.

Let's say you're 65 and own a $350,000 home in Edison, N.J., mortgage-free. You're moving to the warmer climes of Albuquerque, where similar homes go for $175,000. After commissions and closing costs on both sales, you'll net $152,000. Buy a fixed immediate annuity with that money, and you and your spouse will get $10,500 a year for life.

What if you instead decided to rent in Albuquerque? With the $329,000 you'd clear on the sale of your New Jersey home, you could buy an annuity that pays about $23,000 a year. Even after spending $6,500 a year more in rent than you'd pay in property taxes and upkeep, you'd be ahead by $4,250 a year after taxes.

But if you had bought a home, you can cash in on any future price gains. If you stayed in the new house for 10 years, the price would have to increase by 3.3 percent a year for buying to beat renting (assuming you invest the extra money you would have spent on rent). That's a low bar considering that home prices nationally increased by an average of 6.4 percent a year between 1963 and 2005, according to the research firm Winans International.


• But wait What if housing prices keep tanking? No question, that could happen. That's why you need a long time horizon to ride out the ups and downs. Between 1963 and 2005, the worst 10-year home-price return was 2.5 percent.


• You do the math Use the Rent vs. Buy calculator at Finance.cch.com.


• Beyond the math Owning has other benefits: the comfort of knowing that you'll never be forced to move by your landlord; the freedom to redo your kitchen in any way that strikes your fancy. On the other hand, renting can spare you the onerous upkeep that comes with maintaining a home.


• The bottom line Buying is best as long as you're confident you'll be staying put for several years.

Take Social Security early OR late
Most retirees should hold off four years for the bigger payout.

Collecting Social Security at age 62 cuts your annual benefit by about 25 percent compared with what you'd get if you waited until full retirement age that's 66 if you were born from 1943 to 1959, or 67 if you were born in 1960 or later. To do the math, you need to consider whether you expect to live a long life.

Strictly by the numbers Say you've just turned 62 and qualify for $17,280 a year now or $23,772 at 66 (in today's dollars). Start early and you'll have collected $69,120 by the time you reach 66. Wait, and higher payments will make up for those missed years in 10½ years.

If you live until at least 76½, postponing your benefits was worthwhile. The odds are in your favor: According to the Social Security Administration, the typical 62-year-old man should live until 80½, while the life expectancy for a 62-year-old woman is 83½.

But wait When you collect a Social Security check at 62, that's $17,280 you won't have to withdraw from your IRA. Add in the extra tax-deferred growth (assuming 5 percent returns), and your break-even point moves out by three years to age 79½. Even then, odds are you'll live that long.

The math can get even more complicated if you're married. According to new research from Boston College's Center for Retirement Research, the best strategy for many couples is for the wife to take Social Security at 62 and the husband to wait. The reason is that men, on average, earn more and die younger. In this scenario, a wife would take her benefit at 62 and inherit her husband's larger check later.

Finally, waiting to take Social Security assumes you can. Surveys show that 40 percent of retirees are forced into early retirement, through either downsizing or health issues.

You do the math Get a more precise handle on your break-even age with the Social Security Administration's Quick Benefits calculator at ssa.gov/OACT/quickcalc/.

The bottom line If you're healthy and don't need the cash, wait.


AddThis Feed Button

AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Free Energizer Batteries at Your Local CVS!!

Found this little coupon for five dollars off a pack of batteries that cost 5.29, so its almost free. This week CVS in Michigan (maybe valid is ALL US). has Energizer batteries for $5.29. AA, AAA 8 pk., C, D 4 pk. or 9 volt 2 pk.5 ECB bucks when you buy for 5 dollars.So here is the match. Buy 1 at 5.29 each = 0.29. I will try it this afternoon and update on whether or not it worked.

here is a link to the coupon

here is more info on getting 5 bucks back from buying 3 packs


AddThis Feed Button


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Friday, December 7, 2007

Couple From Hell Win Halloween Lottery

HELL, Mich. - Life in Hell just got a little easier for John and Sue Wilson.

The couple, who live in the unincorporated town 45 miles west of Detroit, were blessed with a $115,001 windfall from the Michigan Lottery.

They won the big prize in the Fantasy 5 drawing held Wednesday -- that is, Halloween.


"How cool is that?" said Sue Wilson, 43, a teacher's aide. Her husband is an electrician.

The couple said they plan to use their winnings to pay off bills, make some home improvements, buy a video game system for their 13-year-old son and possibly visit relatives in Georgia.
Via the morningcall.com


AddThis Feed Button

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Read more!

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Credit Card Advice

Just some food for thought that i live by:
"Use credit only when you have money: If you believe that credit cards are for when you don't have money, you are more likely to be a slave to debt." -Jeffrey Strain

Thats perspective for everyone out there!

AddThis Feed Button

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Read more!

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

What I Want For Christmas This Year: Microsoft Surface

Well it was only a matter of time before Microsoft had to make an attempt to compete with any and all new competition out there. In this case now they're trying to one up Apple's use of Itouch technology. If anyone feels the need to buy me a gift this year, and if you have deep pockets, please let it be the Microsoft Surface. Check out the video teaser below. Then make sure to check out the sarcastic gamer.com's parody of the teaser, as both are excellent! Cheers!


Here is Sarcastic Gamer's view on it. I have to agree with his take on it.



AddThis Feed Button

AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

How One Man Hauls in Big Bucks

Jerry Toste of Scotts Valley is only 21 and seems to have a perpetual smile on his face. He should — his low-tech startup, Cheap Hauling, is on everyone’s lips: Those trucks are everywhere.


Toste is grossing $800,000 per year after 1½ years in business, not bad for a guy who decided that “college and I just don’t mix.” Toste started hauling, instead.


What’s next? More Cheap Hauling trucks and a new business, Cheap Tree Service.


In a couple of years, he expects to launch Cheap Concrete, and later, Cheap Construction.


Toste’s an entrepreneur with at least one idea whose time had come.


“I tried to start two companies,” Toste said. “Both failed.”

This time, he invested $1,000 in an old truck and some signs. It worked.


“I figured if I got a second truck, I would double the revenue. That happened, so I doubled the number of trucks to four and revenue doubled again,” he said.


He kept expanding until the company had 51 trucks, which double as rolling billboards. His plan is to reach 250 trucks in Santa Cruz and Santa Clara counties.


His fleet is stocked with 20-year-old pickups, and Toste runs them hard. “We beat ’em up pretty good,” he said, “so I have a full-time mechanic on staff, and he keeps ’em running.”


At any time, Toste has 18 to 25 employees doing the hauling.


The other trucks are parked at strategic intersections, reminding potential customers of his phone number. The same was true a couple of years ago with 800-Got-Junk’s new blue trucks, but “we drove them out of Santa Cruz,” Toste said with a smile. “I based my rates 10 to 30 percent lower than theirs, and we’re competitive with the single-truck guys.”


Toste lives with his parents, working out of a granny-unit office. His mother, Mary, does his payroll, as she does for his father, Geno, owner of Geno’s Landscape Service.
“My entrepreneurial spirit came from my dad,” Toste said. “He has 18 employees and 20 years in the business.”


But Toste will soon move his headquarters to San Jose. He has bought an office with a warehouse and yard to store the trucks. The granny unit will remain as the Santa Cruz County branch office.


His newest enterprise, Toste Tree Service, has white trucks with green signs, instead of the familiar Cheap Hauling yellow. Knowing that tree work requires more training than hauling, he has enlisted an experienced partner, Sam Jonas, who will manage the business and train personnel.


“It’s a great brand,” Toste said. “I want to take Cheap Hauling statewide in another year. Eventually, we can be the Wal-Mart of the service industry. Sam Walton is one of my heroes.”


Toste, a product of Catholic schools in Santa Cruz and Salinas, enrolled at Cabrillo College, but that lasted only “one or two semesters,” he recalled.


If a college degree isn’t a necessity for business success, what is?


“If you want to be good at something,” Toste said, quoting Thomas Edison, “it takes hard work.” via pressbanner.com



AddThis Feed Button

AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Read more!