Posted on Monday, September 24th, 2007
Filed under Geeking, Trends and culture |

I’m periodically fascinated by how people view online life, and the differences in the boundaries that they set (or perceive) on the internet, versus that “other” life with the blue ceiling and the third dimension.
My curiosity was piqued again this weekend when one of my posts here attracted a totally unrelated comment asking a Flickr support question.
I’m astounded that someone managed to take a path from my recent occasional stints helping out on Flickr’s support forum, all the way to this place which (save for occasional posts where my personal interests or life experiences overlap with work) is totally unrelated to my place of employment.
I can very well imagine the route they took – they saw my posts on the forum, followed them to my profile, and followed the link from there to here before posting. But…
Permalink
Posted on Saturday, September 22nd, 2007
Filed under Finance, Financial Planning, Thinking |
This is the ninth (and final) part of a series on setting up a financial plan.
The beginning of the series is here.
The previous article is “Financial Tools: Budget Tracking/Planning“.
So here we are, all set up with the right tools to build a better financial future. Hooray! But now that the initial hard work is (mostly) over, it’s time to step back for a moment and get some perspective.
All the plans, account setups, expense reductions and general thinking about money I’ve done in the past few months has changed a lot of my perspectives.
I don’t walk into a store and blindly buy things I want right now any more, because every dollar I spend is a dollar that could be working for me elsewhere. And I’m truly grateful for the change, because it will have a marked positive effect in the future.
But like all new interests, obsessions and endeavours, it’s easy to get carried away and become single-minded about them – checking spreadsheets every 30 minutes, and vowing never to spend a red cent on anything ever again – because it could be invested.
Being obsessed has been good for a few months – I’ve put in a lot of spadework and made a lot of decisions which set me on the right path. But now it’s time to let those decisions and tools work for themselves, and think a bit more philosophically about how my life and my finances mesh together.
For me, the quintessential point to base this thinking around is my snowboard.
Permalink
Posted on Friday, September 21st, 2007
Filed under Finance, Financial Planning, Thinking |
This is the eighth part of a series on setting up a financial plan.
The beginning of the series is here.
The previous article is “Financial Tools: Net Worth Planner/Tracker“.
The next (final) article is “Finance: A Little Perspective (and some snow)“.
One final financial tool that I’m finding invaluable – a budget tracker.
One of the things I’ve realised over the last couple of months is that I’ve often spent money without really taking note of where it’s going. This was most apparent when I was trying to estimate my weekly expenditure for my Net Worth Planner. I knew pretty much what I spend, but I had no detailed idea of what on.
The only way to find out was to start detailing my spending down to the last cent, in a way which allows me to review it, and trim any unnecessary outlays. You could do this with a spreadsheet, but that quickly became cumbersome, so I turned to dedicated software for the task.
Permalink
Posted on Thursday, September 20th, 2007
Filed under Finance, Financial Planning, Thinking |
This is the seventh part of a series on setting up a financial plan.
The beginning of the series is here.
The previous article is “5 Accounts, #5 – 401(k)“.
The next article is “Financial Tools: Budget Tracking/Planning“.

Apologies for the slight hiatus – one day I’ll find the “sweet spot” combination of lifestyle, organisation and motivation to write on a regular schedule. Until then… sporadicity rules…
Last time I posted on personal finance, we wrapped up my summary of the 5 types of account I think I’m going to need for my nascent plan.
With that done, it’s time to look at the tools we’ll need to build and execute that plan.
Today, it’s the turn of the Net Worth Tracker and Planner.
What’s a Net Worth Tracker?
Put simply, a Net Worth Tracker is a spreadsheet, website or application that you can use to track your Net Worth. I like to think of it (somewhat macabrely) as the sum total your beneficiaries would get if you accidentally fell off a cliff tomorrow.
Your “Net Worth” includes every major financial balance in your life – the value of any cars, the equity you have in any homes, the sums of your retirement accounts, savings, checking accounts, wallet, investments and so on; as well as your debts – credit cards, loans, mortgages, etc.
A Net Worth Tracker is an invaluable tool in getting a better grip on your finances because it’s a (maybe sunny, maybe brutal) “quick sweep” overview of your current financial health, and a great way, by filling it in week-to-week (or month-to-month) of reviewing progress towards your financial goals, or seeing the effects of missteps.
Permalink