Be Forever Debt Free Giveaway

June 2nd, 2009

Your Credit Score

Wise Debtor and Be Forever Debt Free are giving away 5 copies of “Your Credit Score” by Liz Pulliam Weston to 5 lucky individuals on June 10, 2009.

To enter simply click here, you will be taken to www.beforeverdebtfree.com, our partner site.  Fill out the form at the top, enjoy the free videos, and viola you are entered.  Pretty simple if you ask me.

Looking to win even more stuff.  Check out the contest at Christian Personal Finance.  To celebrate their 2nd birthday they are giving away a Nintendo wii and an ipod.  Hurry though, their contest ends Thursday, June 4 2009.

You will learn a lot at wisedebtor.com, but if you are truly serious about getting out of debt then visit www.beforeverdebtfree.com or call 1-877-MY-DEBT-0 (693-3280)

What is Cash Flow?

April 13th, 2009

When it comes to finance of any kind, a term you must be familiar with is “Cash Flow”.

So, what is Cash Flow?

According to Wikipedia, cash flow is:

the movement of cash into or out of a business, or project, or financial product. It is usually measured during a specified, finite period of time.

Simply put, cash flow is the difference between what comes in, and what goes out. Ask any business owner. Even if a business is profitable, has great sales and a great product, if cash flow is ignored, that business isn’t long for this world.

For example, Let’s say I run the Wonderful Widget company. I make the best widgets in the world. I also have the greatest sales team selling my widgets. We just had a huge sales push and received a record number of orders for my widgets, but making widgets costs money.  I have to:

  • pay my employees
  • buy the materials to make the widgets
  • pay for my widget wharehouse, and my widget making machines
  • I have packaging and distribution expenses
  • As well as a host of other expenses associated with making my wonderful widgets

Now, I went out and sold all those wonderful widgets, but it may take up to 90 days for that money to roll in.  If I don’t have some cash on hand to pay all my expenses, I’m finished before I ever get started.

Even though my business is doing great, if I don’t pay attention to my cash flow I’m in big trouble.

It is the same for personal finance as well. We need to pay close attention to the difference between what we spend and what we earn.Cash flow can be Positive: we have more money coming in than going out…GOOD. Or, it can be Negative: more going out than coming in….BAD

Cash flow is dependent on time also. If I measure my cash flow for just this month, I may be negative, because the car broke down, the dog swallowed the baby’s toy, or college tuition is due. But, if I stretch my analysis out over say 12 months, after all my income comes in and all my expenses go out, I might be positive.

If you constantly have more going out then coming in, then you’ve got a real problem on your hands. Remember positive cash flow = GOOD, Negative cash flow = BAD. No entity, business or person, can last long in a negative cash flow situation.

What are some ways to increase cash flow?

Simple, spend less, make more.  Ok, not very helpful, but that is the concept. To increase cash flow, whether monthly, quarterly, or annually expenses must be reduced and/or income must be increased.

For most of us reducing expenses is easier than increasing income, but there are always ways to do both. In my next article, I will be going in depth about ways to increase cash flow, by both cutting expenses and increasing income. If you have any unique ways to increase cash flow, please share them with us by leaving a comment.

Borrowing

Lastly, if cash flow becomes a problem, and you can’t cut expenses or increase income, there is only one solution left…Borrowing.

Borrowing money can be a way to temporaily solve a cash flow problem. As one who hates debt of anykind, I also hate this solution, but realistically in order to keep food on the table and a roof over your head, borrowing is sometimes a fact of life.

Borrowed money can come from many sources.

  1. You can borrow from yourself by tapping into savings
  2. Take a loan from your retirement account
  3. Borrow from friends or relatives
  4. Borrow from the equity in your home
  5. Borrow from Credit cards

As you can see, none of these options is really all that appealling. In fact the later two are pretty much responsible for our economic situation right now.

It goes like this: 

Families get into trouble, meaning they have a cash flow problem, so they borrow money from their homes or the credit cards, and the cash flow problem doesn’t get fixed. Instead the situation gets worse and they have a pile of debt to boot.

Borrowing money to fix a cash flow problem is never a good solution, and should always be a last resort.

The best offense is a good defense. Keep your debt low, if not zero, watch your expenses and spending, and save.

Remember, you must keep an eye on cash flow. It’s the life blood of your personal finances. Without it, your financial heart will stop beating.

Debt Payoff – Cash Flow is King

April 10th, 2009

I answered a post today on a financial forum in response to a question about which debt the poster should pay off first. Since I handle this sort of thing with my clients every day, I thought I might also share my recommendations with you, my readers.

Getting out of debt takes a commitment, but more than that it takes having a plan. Part of that debt free plan should include what debts you have and in what order you are going to pay them off. Most people think paying just a little bit more than the minimum payment to each debt is the best strategy. While that works, it will also keep you in debt a lot longer than you need to. I doubt that is the desire of very many people.

So what order should you pay you debt? Actually it’s not that hard. You see the key to getting out of debt quickly is to free up positive cash flow and then apply that cash flow to paying down debt. Your goal should be to pay down the one debt that will free up the most cash flow the fastest. In other words which debt will get me the most positive cash flow bang for my buck.

To figure this out, try the following exercise:

  1. Write each of your debts down the left side of a piece of paper.
  2. Make three columns to the right of your debts.
  3. In the first column write down the outstanding balance on each of your debts.
  4. In the second column write down the monthly payment.
  5. Divide the monthly payment of each debt by its outstanding balance (ie outstanding balance = $10,000, Monthly payment $500…$10,000/$500 = 0.05)
  6. You will get a number with a decimal point, now move the decimal to the right two spaces and write this number down in column three (0.05 = 5.00)
  7. Do this with each of your debts, the debt with the highest number in column three is the debt you should focus on paying down first.
  8. Once the first debt is paid off, take the increased cash flow you now have and apply it to the second highest number in column 3, and so on down the line.

If you apply this technique (the same technique I use to coach my clients) you will start to see your debts melt away. It might be slow at first, but once that first debt is paid off, and then the second, you will see the rest of your debt wiped out very quickly.

Lastly, notice I said nothing about interest rate.* Why, because I don’t care. When it comes to quick debt elimination, cash flow is king.

*Interest rate is only important if it is at 0%.  Unless you are in a serious cash flow crunch, there is no need to pay off a 0% debt early since it isn’t costing you anything.

Your guide to Personal Finance, Debt Management, and Debt Free Living

April 6th, 2009

Welcome to my first post on the newly created Wise Debtor Blog.  Please come back often, as this site promises to be your one stop shopping for all matters relating to personal finance, debt management, becoming debt free and living a debt free life. 

Feel free to leave comments and suggestions for future topics.