The Dog Ate My Wallet

The Dog Ate My Wallet

Personal Finance in a World of Excuses

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Replacing an Appliance

Ever since we bought this house, 6.5 years ago, C and I have wanted to replace our refrigerator. It is small and not fabulous. But every time we looked at replacing it, we would realize that we could only replace it with another refrigerator exactly like it because of the height issue. The over the fridge cabinets come down far enough that there is only one model of refrigerator that will fit in that space. If we wanted to replace our fridge, it would be with one exactly like it except newer. That wasn’t what we were looking for, so never saw the point in spending the money.

In the next week or two, we will be replacing the refrigerator. Now it isn’t because we want to but because it needs to happen. The fridge has started freezing things kept in the back while barely keeping things up front cold. The door doesn’t always close all the way, even with nothing blocking it, and part of the seal has started to rot away.

However, just because we have to replace it, it doesn’t mean that we want to get an identical model. We want a slightly larger refrigerator. We want one with a bottom drawer freezer. We don’t need side by side doors, but the bottom freezer is something we really want. But whatever we get, it means we have to make some modifications- because the space hasn’t changed size.

In this sense, our previous desire to replace the fridge is paying off. We know not only the new refrigerator we want, we also know what we need to do so that it will fit. Our summer of creating shelving in the basement means that we actually have the ability to clear out the over the fridge cabinets and take them down.

We’ll still have to find storage space for some baking goods (flour, sugar, etc), but I think we’ll be good to go. With any luck, this weekend  J will help us take the cabinets down and we’ll head off to the store for a new refrigerator. It’s kind of sad how excited I am about this.

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Sunday Evening Post #65

Day

Amount

Place

Category

Monday

$23.00

safeway

groceries

Tuesday

$54.75

steam

allowance

Wednesday

$25.00

SODA

pets

Thursday

$32.25

olive garden

eating out

Saturday

$15.00

contest entry

allowance

Not a whole lot of spending this week. This is our first weekend getting back to the every other week CostCo run, and while there are things we’re low on, we’re definitely fine not having gone. I will be going to Safeway every Monday for the little things that we purposely don’t stock up on, but that’s never very expensive.

C bought his new game on Tuesday. We officially became members of the group that maintains one of our dog parks on Wednesday. We certainly get more than $25 worth out of the park in a year. Thursday was the day I had to finalize budget for 2013, and the direction coming from our VP was right down to the wire, so I made us go out for dinner. Saturday I paid for a fiction contest entry. (If my piece is selected for publication, I’ll get $700. If it wins one of the prizes, it will be over $1,000.)

This has been a lovely weekend. We went to the dog park Saturday morning with a friend and since then, I haven’t left the house. It has been so nice, I need to try and plan another weekend like it.

 

 

We are over half way through 2012. I revised some of my goals because life took some turns I wasn’t quite planning on when I came up with them.

1)      Be paid for publishing one piece of fiction

Submissions so far: 4

Responses: 1 rejection 1 acceptance, 2 pending

The anthology I had a piece accepted to is now available to buy on Amazon. It’s called Conquest Through Determination.

2)      Pay All Adoption Expenses in Cash & Still Pay for C’s College Out of Pocket

We’re doing good here. This was helped tremendously by getting 3x as much in life insurance from the MIL than expected. Our savings is still growing, and we’re in really good shape.

For those who have been looking for an update, we’re waiting to get some paperwork back from the state of Nevada, where we all used to live. I am hopeful that we will have all paperwork submitted and just be waiting on official confirmation of the foster license by the end of the month.

3)      Attend FinCon12. Pay for the trip with money from allowance/side projects saved/earned BEFORE the conference starts. Goal: $600

FinCon was awesome. Not all of the money came from allowance/side projects, but it was still easily affordable, so I’m calling this a win.

4)      Become a member of Yakezie (6 month anniversary is Jan 21)

Yesterday I linked to Paula’s post over on Afford Anything about goals. I am not certain this is still the right goal for me to be going after. I love what the Yakezie network stands for, but I don’t care that much about getting my Alexa under 200k. It’s pretty stable around the 275k mark. Maybe I can convince Sam to create a Friend of Yakezie badge/category, for those of us who don’t feel like being permanent challengers.

Anyway, it’s something I’m pondering.

Current ranking: 275,086

Back down a bit.

5)      Make money from my blogs.

AdSense earnings: $29.82 at the end of September, with $0.10 made so far this month. (They won’t send me any money until I hit $100.)

Amazon earnings: $0.00

One of the things that FinCon really brought home for me is that I’m not actually in this for the money. For now, I’m leaving the AdSense blocks up, but they’re getting moved further down the page. I’ll keep tracking, but making money isn’t why I blog.

6)      Be healthier

I’d been at the same weight for 3 weeks in a row, so this week, I added riding our recumbent bike for 30 minutes 3 times a week to my routine. While I’m not a huge fan of getting up before 6am, the bike riding is going well. I listen to Flogging Molly while I ride because all of their music (even the slower songs) has a really good beat that keeps me moving.

I still walked at work, enjoying the last of the sunny weather. I need to bring my poncho into the office so that I can keep walking in the rain without getting soaked in my work clothes.

Food wise, this week we had a lot of beef barley soup and chili. Now I need to think of a new type of soup I want C to make. Any suggestions?

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What I’m Reading: Celebrating the Weekend

This weekend, I’m all about celebrating the good in my life. Next week at work is going to suck, because we will be announcing layoffs. But I don’t have to think about that just yet. Instead, I am celebrating budget season being over. I am celebrating starting today with a trip to the dog park with friends. While it’s wet out, we really didn’t get rained on that much in the hour we were there. I am celebrating that after that trip to the dog park, I have no plans to go anywhere else this weekend. That’s right. We got back home at 11:30am on Saturday, and I fully intend to not leave my house again until 6:45m on Monday morning. Plus, C & J both have plans this afternoon, so I get a few hours with the house and doggies all to myself. Heaven I tell you, heaven.

Right now, all three dogs are curled up on the bed asleep. I’m trying to decide if, after this post is written, I join them on the bed for napping/bad TV, or if I play WoW. These are the types of decisions I can handle.

 

Speaking of decisions you like making, Jennifer Lynn over at Broke-Ass Mommy recently received an offer from Discover card- get a new card, spend at least $1,000 by a certain point, get $100 cash back. She took advantage of the offer to buy a Gold Angel. That’s right, she just got a $10 discount on an asset that will appreciate. Definitely a decision she can live with.

When it comes to good deals, Shannyn of Frugal Beautiful is the Princess (in the Diana/Kate mold). This week, she presents us with her Frugal Feature: Top 10 Thrifty Tips for Trendsetters. You want to look good? You want to not break the bank looking good? Shannyn is your guru.

Over at Broke Professionals, Elizabeth tackles one those questions we don’t like asking ourselves- What’s More Important: Who You Know or What You Know? . My answer to that is both. Because the people I know wouldn’t recommend me for anything if they didn’t have confidence in what I know and the skills I bring to the table.


If you haven’t figured out that Average Joe of Average Joe’s Money Blog over at the Free Financial Advisor is one of my favorite bloggers (and people) by now, then I’m telling you straight out. I’d totally recommend Joe for just about anything he thought he might be qualified to do. (Not that I’m anyone someone would list in the “who you know category.) This week, Joe asks us How Do You Stay Inspired? Since I’ve had some struggles lately with motivation due to stress at work, his list (especially the goal of getting stuff done before Friday) really speaks to me.

And to go along with that, Paula at Afford Anything reminds us this week that Chasing Goals can be Detrimental. She’s not saying we shouldn’t have goals, but that we need to make sure our goals are actually moving us forward, and not something we’re doing just because we said we were going to. In operations management, that’s like measuring something just to have a measure. If what we’re measuring isn’t actionable, if knowing that measure won’t help us meet the overriding targets, then there’s no point. Make sure your goals are actually moving you toward the target you set.

And that brings us to our new to me blog of the week. The latest Yakezie Challenger is Frugal Rules. My favorite post is most definitely How Budgeting is Like Potty Training, especially the observation that budgeting can be messy. I think we might be able to say that about most parts of life. But the mess is part of what makes the end product so rewarding.

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5.5 Years Investing with Prosper

Last August, I wrote about our experience investing with Prosper. At the time, we had had money invested there for 4.5 years. Given that that is still one of my most popular posts, I thought that maybe it was time for an update. Hence, this post.

On some level, not a lot has changed since last August. We have not added any new money to the account. No notes have been paid in full since then, and none have been charged off, either.

At the time I wrote the last post, we had 3 active loans. We now have 5 active loans. All are current, though one is new enough that the first payment won’t be due for another week. The oldest note is due to be paid off in November 2013, with each of the others coming due at a rate of 1/yr after that. (These are a mix of 3 and 5 year loans.)

So, since I’m still at 28 notes paid in full and 26 notes charged off, and only 5 active loans, what can I tell you?

It’s pretty much all good news. All 5 of my loans are current, so right now, we’re not looking at any more charge offs, at least not any time soon.

We’ve earned enough in interest from the three active loans we had last year to invest in two more loans. In fact, the value of our loans and cash today is $172.50, up from $135 last year. That’s an increase of 27.75% year over year. No complaining there.

Now, we’re still down money from when we started investing in 2007. But since we made money this year, instead of being down 10.67%, we’re only down 9.5%. Still an overall negative return on our investment, but getting better.

I feel like I’m in a Monty Python movie –

The Dead Collector: ‘Ere, he says he’s not dead.

Large Man with Dead Body: Yes he is.

The Dead Body That Claims It Isn’t: I’m not.

The Dead Collector: He isn’t.

Large Man with Dead Body: Well, he will be soon, he’s very ill.

The Dead Body That Claims It Isn’t: I’m getting better.

 

Last year, I also made the comment that I was considering only investing inHRloans from now on. So what about the two new loans since then?

One is actually a B rating, so a pretty safe loan overall, given our payback rates. And it’s a B that comes with a 17.45% yield over 5 years. But that 17.45% yield is the second lowest of all the loans.

Only the A rated loan (the one due to be paid off in a year) has a lower projected yield at 10.15%. With only a year left to be paid off, we’re still short about $15 from what we loaned. At the same time, a D rated loan (I know, bad risk, but this was one we invested in before I ran the analysis last year) which is scheduled to be paid off in Jan 2014, is only $5 short of us making our original investment back. The final projected yield on that loan is 26.75%

The other new loan we made only last month. It is at an HR rating, with a projected yield of 30.77% over 3 years.

 

I’ll admit Prosper isn’t as fun as it used to be. But given that we have much less money invested (and due to the adoption process are choosing not to invest more at this time), we’re only making new loans ever 7-8 months, so the addictive feeling of searching for the perfect loan to make isn’t really missed.

I would like to up our investing in Prosper again. But right now, we have a bit too much uncertainty with the MIL’s estate still in probate (almost done) and the adoption process. Soon though, I’d like to put some more money in and see what we can do.

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What’s Your Financial Nemesis?

Over at Debt Black Hole (where personal finance and geek culture meet- is it any wonder I’m a fan), Dave does a monthly post on his family’s financial nemesis- eating out. Having done our 3rd quarter budget review last week, I had to wonder, do we have a financial nemesis?

Searching for Clues It used to be eating out. I won’t lie about that. When the MIL lived with us especially, we ate out a lot, but while we are a little over our eating out budget for the year, it’s not by much. That is a monster we have faced and beaten.

The other thing that looks to be way over budget is groceries. Is food in general our financial nemesis? Again, I don’t think so. There are some expenses that I had planned on pulling out of this category that I didn’t, including dog food. And pretty much everything we buy at CostCo ends up in this category, even when it’s new doormats. If you look back at 2011’s budget, I allowed for $450/month on groceries, knowing pet food costs and random CostCo purchases went into that category. I tried to lower it for 2012, claiming I’d be better at separating those things out. Obviously, my nemesis in this case is not financial but organizational.

Finding the Path No, the more I look at the numbers, from both this year and last year, the place where we clearly overspend is in allowance. I will admit, I am much worse about this than C. But the thing is, there isn’t one thing I overspend on. I stopped getting my nails done on a regular basis a couple of years ago. I get my hair cut about every 6 months. I buy clothes and shoes when I need them (and often spend a good amount of money on them when I do), but it’s not a regular thing. I occasionally go to a conference or convention. The things I buy are expensive, but not regular. There isn’t any one thing that could be called our financial nemesis, unless we just say it’s me. (Which wouldn’t be a completely invalid argument.)

C, however, does not spend is allowance like I do. He’s happy as a saver. He hoards cash so that he has it when he needs it- at the few places that don’t take cards, or to buy my gifts, so I don’t have to know exactly what they cost. However, recently, he’s started spending more and more of his allowance- to the point where he’s over for the year, too. And unlike my random spending, his is going to very specific targets- Kickstarter and Steam.

First Glimpse of the Villian Video games in general are our financial nemesis. Remember only a week and a half ago when we bought the newish War in the North game- collectors’ edition for the cloth map of Middle Earth? And how I talked about how we both have started playing World of Warcraft again? Besides the initial cost of the game and the expansions (C purchased Mists of Panderia. I haven’t yet, but I almost certainly will), there are also the monthly subscription costs. For the moment, we each signed up for only one month. We’ve been playing enough- and playing together enough –that I suspect we’ll each re-up after this first month for another three.

Henchmen C has backed a number of Kickstarter projects for games he would buy when they came out anyway, including FTL (which has been released and both C and J are playing). He always gives enough to get the game when it’s finally released. If there’s an option to get a map (especially a cloth map) for a reasonable amount more, he’ll fund enough to get that, too. After all, these are games he will play when they come out. But that also means we’re preloading costs for video games we don’t actually know will ever exist. It may be years before he gets a game for his money, if ever.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, there is Steam. If you play video games on the computer, you almost certainly know what Steam is. If you don’t, let me explain. It’s an online store for video games where you never buy a physical copy, not even a download. You buy the right to play the game through Steam from anywhere you can log into their site. (There is some downloading of files required, but you aren’t limited to how many computers you can have those downloads on, since you can only play while logged in, and you can only be logged in on one computer at a time.) Buying a game on Steam is pretty much instantaneous. You can pre-order the hottest new games, just like elsewhere, but you don’t have to go to the store to pick it up or wait for Amazon to deliver it to your doorstep. You just log onto Steam and start playing. If you need to download files first, you can generally start that hours before the game is actually available for play, meaning that the second the clock reaches release time, you’re playing. (I know this because last night at midnight eastern, 9pm pacific, XCom Enemy Unknown was released. By 9:01pm, both C and J were playing and yelling across the hallway about what was happening in their individual games.)

The other thing Steam does is have sales- and I mean really amazing sales. Buy a game that was released only a couple of months ago (and retails for $50+) for $5. That’s how both J and C started playing Crusader Kings II this summer. It was something they had heard of, thought they might like, and then Steam offered it for $5 or $10.

Facing the Boss Monster So yeah, video games are definitely our financial nemesis. Now I have to decide how hard I want to fight back against them. I should work on my own impulse control. We have yet to play War in the North- though the map is handing from the mirror directly over our mantle. But unlike a meal out where you eat it and it’s gone, video games, at least good ones, have staying power. We will get our money’s worth out of WoW. The boys certainly played enough Crusader Kings this summer to justify picking that up on sale. And considering that the original XCom was released in 1994(!) and C will still play it today, and that he played the new XCom for almost 9 hours straight after downloading it last night (That’s right, he started playing at 9pm. He came to bed at 5:44am. My alarm goes off at 5:45am.), I can be reasonably confident we will get our money’s worth out of it. Best guess is that in the end, it will cost us less than $0.01/minute.

But whether or not the video games end up being a good value, we do need to cut back on our allowance spending. This year it hasn’t had a major impact because of the extra money that came in from MIL’s estate. But next year? When there’s a kid, so our budget is tighter?

This is the boss monster, our financial nemesis. Anyone have a strategy guide that will help us defeat it?

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Sunday Evening Post #64

Day

Amount

Place

Category

Tuesday

$19.81

safeway

Groceries

Wednesday

$52.00

safeway

Groceries

Friday

$39.50

costco

Groceries

So I have to say, I was happily surprised when putting together this week’s spending report. I felt like we were spending more because I was at the grocery store last Sunday, and again on Tuesday and Wednesday, but aside from grocery shopping, we didn’t actually spend any money this week. The trip Wednesday was also not because we forgot anything, but because C decided he wanted to make a beef barley stew this weekend and we needed barley, beef, and some veggies for his homemade stock. Friday we went to CostCo for our weekly shopping. We were surprised then that it came out to less than $40, but we won’t complain.

Based on our budget review and just the way life has been lately, we’ve decided to try and do our grocery shopping on weekdays to help keep our weekends free-er. In addition, we’re going to try to get back to every other week CostCo shopping.

That’s pretty much all that’s exciting

 

 

We are over half way through 2012. I revised some of my goals because life took some turns I wasn’t quite planning on when I came up with them.

1)      Be paid for publishing one piece of fiction

Submissions so far: 2

Responses: 1 rejection 1 acceptance

The anthology I had a piece accepted to is now available to buy on Amazon. It’s called Conquest Through Determination.

There submission count should be up next week. There are a couple places I plan to submit to this week.

2)      Pay All Adoption Expenses in Cash & Still Pay for C’s College Out of Pocket

We’re doing good here. This was helped tremendously by getting 3x as much in life insurance from the MIL than expected. Our savings is still growing, and we’re in really good shape.

For those who have been looking for an update, we’re waiting to get some paperwork back from the state of Nevada, where we all used to live. I am hopeful that we will have all paperwork submitted and just be waiting on official confirmation of the foster license by the end of the month.

3)      Attend FinCon12. Pay for the trip with money from allowance/side projects saved/earned BEFORE the conference starts. Goal: $600

FinCon was awesome. Not all of the money came from allowance/side projects, but it was still easily affordable, so I’m calling this a win.

4)      Become a member of Yakezie (6 month anniversary is Jan 21)

I did not make Epsilon class. My Alexa ranking had gone too high. I think there will be one more class this year, so we’ll see if I can get my numbers back down to under 200k. I need to join the teams again, as that helps tremendously. And now that we’re done with all the house stuff for the adoption, I should have more time to participate.

Current ranking: 280,250

Still going up.

5)      Make money from my blogs.

AdSense earnings: $29.82 at the end of September, with $0.07 made so far this month. (They won’t send me any money until I hit $100.)

One of the things that FinCon really brought home for me is that I’m not actually in this for the money. For now, I’m leaving the AdSense blocks up, but they’re getting moved further down the page. I’ll keep tracking, but making money isn’t why I blog.

However, one of the reasons I do blog is to get my name out there as an author and editor, to share the work of my friends, and also to let people know about books, games, etc. that I love. In that vein, you’ll notice that I now have an Amazon affiliate store. If you want to know which authors I read or which games I pay, that’s a good place to start. There’s nothing in there that I haven’t (or wouldn’t) spend my money on.

6)      Be healthier

I walked twice every day but Friday, though on Thursday, I missed a walk at work. So I came home and took Larry for a walk.

So far this year, C has made 4 soups- roasted red pepper, chicken corn chowder, sausage & tortellini, and now beef barley. The soups are yummy, filling, and really low calories.

C has decided to start tracking his calories, too, and is looking to lose about 30lbs by our anniversary next year. He’s been super supportive already, but this will also help, as we both have goals to meet.

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What I’m Reading: About to Leave the House Edition

We have no theme this week, just blog posts I like. And since I have to leave the house in 30 minutes, this is going to be quick.

 

Daisy reminds us exactly what her blog is called Add Vodka with the Best Mixed Drinks You’ve Never Heard Of. These sound pretty good. But let me let you in on a little secret- you do not want to drink kiwi vodka. Just trust me on that one.

Jana and I had a conversation at FinCon that was a version of this post. I am so glad she wrote it down. For all of you out there dreaming of a different life- Stop Wishing and Just Do.

Considering we bought a new video game last week, the roomie bought us the new Dominion expansion this week, and we’re all trying our best not to buy the WoW monk hoodie, this post over at Debt Black Hole speaks to me. How Not to Blow Your Money on General Geekery

In the midst of the crazy at work, I also need the reminder from Kathleen at Frugal Portland about the Keys to Happiness.

And since I just did our quarterly budget review and had the quarterly budget conversation with C, let’s take a look at this post from the Millionaire Nurse Blog about developing the habit of saving money.

 

That brings us to this week’s newest Yakezie challenger- Building Wealth Buzz, and we’ll highlight this great post of suggestions on which debts to pay off first and what to do with overdue payments. On Facebook, just a couple of days ago, I had a friend posting about how burned out he is feeling on his get out of debt plan and life in general. Sometimes, we all need a few suggestions from the rest of the world.

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3rd Quarter Budget Review

At the end of every quarter, I take a look at our actual spending as compared to what I budgeted at the end of last year. I don’t panic as long as there has been money to pay for everything and we aren’t raiding savings on a continual basis to pay for things, but, especially as the year winds down, I like to have an idea of what changes I need to make to the budget for the next year.

Last November, I did a 3 parts series (you can read them here, here, and here) about my year end budget review and how I was coming up with my new budget amounts. Because of some major expenses this year (that I want to have a couple more months to dissipate into the averages) I probably won’t set my 2013 budget until December. But it never hurts to take a look and see where you are.

 

  2012 Budget 2012  Actual Difference
Student Loans  $     685.00  $     710.00  $     (25.00)
School  $     850.00  $     583.00  $    267.00
Bills  $  2,190.00  $  2,133.00  $      57.00
Car  $     350.00  $  1,827.00  $(1,477.00)
Groceries  $     350.00  $     469.00  $   (119.00)
Medical  $       25.00  $       44.00  $     (19.00)
Eating Out  $     150.00  $     173.00  $      (23.00)
Allowance  $     200.00  $     254.00  $     (54.00)
Pets  $     150.00  $     137.00  $      13.00
House  $     400.00  $     450.00  $     (50.00)
Travel/Misc  $            –    $     518.00  $   (518.00)
MIL  $      (40.00)  $ (2,758.00)  $ 2,718.00
Savings  $       75.00  $  1,679.00  $(1,604.00)
       
Total  $  5,385.00  $  6,219.00  $   (834.00)

 

As you can see, on average, we have gone over our budget by $835/month. Yikes. That’s a lot a lot. However, I’m not freaking out. Why? Well, if you look at savings, we’ve actually put over $1,600/month more into savings than I’d planned. That’s almost twice our over budget amount, so I know we’re not frivolously spending the money.

We also had a budget line for my MIL, from whom we expected to get $40/month toward her cell phone bill. Her passing earlier this year means we stopped getting that money, but that we did get some life insurance, though we also paid some bills out of our account from that money. That’s a positive difference of over $2,700/month right there.

Of course, now I might need to be concerned that without that money next year, could we be in danger?

I don’t think so. We had some one time only expenses this year, like buying a car for almost $10k, loaning $3k to my brother, and the initial adoption expenses around $3k (which averages out to over $1,750/month). When I figure the budget numbers for next year, I’ll remove those expenses from our averages.

Also helping us out this year, I got a slightly larger raise than anticipated. And when we decided to up our cable service (because we had to add a home phone), J voluntarily increased the amount of rent he is paying in order to help cover the increase in the bill.

Things I am a little worried about- our grocery bill. We’re at over $100/more than I budgeted for, and we haven’t even had Thanksgiving or Christmas yet- two times of year when we traditionally spend quite a bit of money on groceries.

I’m also a little concerned by how much we’re over on allowance. $54 over 9 months is almost $500. I know some of that was (delayed) emotional spending in response to the death of my MIL. But some has also come from the fact that we do have a very healthy savings at the moment (needed if we go the private adoption route) and sometimes, when you know you’ve got money sitting in the bank, it makes it hard not to buy things you want, especially when you can make an argument for why you almost need them.

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Jobs High Schoolers Have Never Heard Of: Contract Managers

This is the first post in a new series on jobs high schoolers have never heard of. I don’t mean literally, of course. Some high school students have parents or relatives who work in these jobs. At the same time, these aren’t jobs that most high school seniors would name if you asked them what they wanted to do after college.

My goal is to highlight jobs that pay well (or very well), generally require a 4 year degree, but not in a STEM field, and are widely available. If you have any ideas for a job I should highlight, let me know.

 

We all know you can make more money by negotiating your salary and benefits when starting a new job, or save money by negotiating on home, car, or other major purposes. But have you ever thought about making your living as a negotiator? I’m not talking about the negotiators brought in by the police in hostage situations or anything like that (talk about a high stress job), but there are a lot of people out there who make their living negotiating contracts between businesses. I’m not saying it’s a low stress job, just not on the same lines as military/police negotiators.

I bring this up because I was in a meeting last week where one of my directors was talking about filling some vacancies we have for Contract Managers and saying that she was concerned with being able to bring in the talent she wants at only $100k/year.

Take a step back and think about that. Now, we’re not looking to bring in newbies. We want people who are roughly mid-career. So a Contract Manager, in my company, mid-career should make over $100k/yr. That’s pretty good money.

And think of all those people who say you can only make good money with a STEM degree. Not in this case. I would guess that degrees in Communications, Psychology, or even English or History would stand you in good stead in this position. A Business degree could also be useful, but what matters most in this type of position is soft skills.

Yes, it helps to understand the numbers, but we have contract analysts (who make substantially less than contract managers) who run the numbers. The managers just need to be able to understand the reports and the limits set on them by leadership.

Their main job is to walk into a meeting and get the best deal possible for our company from the people representing another company. People skills are the key, not the ability to run the numbers.

Our company employs 12 contract managers and 2 directors of contracting- and we’re pretty small, with a service area only in our state. Think of how many people larger corporations employ. Because trust me, they all have contracts with other companies or the government, and they all need people in the room to negotiate those contracts for them.

A quick search for jobs with the title Contract Manager on the National Contract Management Association website brings up 126 openings, 33 of those in Virginia and 15 in Maryland (the government hires a lot of contract managers). Of those that specify education, 90 require a 4 year degree, but only 3 want a masters or higher.

 

Is this a job for everyone? Of course not. I’d be miserable in a job that required me to negotiate all the time, but there are plenty of people who are good at it and like doing it. But it’s not one of the jobs you hear about all the time. Honestly, how many high school students do you know, if you asked them what they wanted to do for a living, would say Contract Manager? But it’s a good job, with good pay, with opportunities all over the world, from small towns to major cities. Every business has contracts they need someone to negotiate and manage.

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Sunday Evening Post #63

Day

Amount

Place

Category

Tuesday

$14.50

safeway

Groceries

Wednesday

$27.25

teriyaki

Eating Out

Thursday

$8.25

safeway

Groceries

Friday

$200.00

APICS

allowance

$80.25

Frys

allowance

$19.50

terrible beauty

Eating Out

Saturday

$60.75

costco

Groceries

sunday

$8.50

parking

car

$12.00

ice cream

Eating Out

$27.25

safeway

Groceries

Crazy at work led to a pretty relaxed weekend. On Friday, I finally paid the membership fee to join APICS, one of the professional societies for Operations managers. After work, we went to Frys for a $3.50 part for J. We spent over $80 ourselves, including on my new keyboard, a backrest for my computer chair, and a new video game for C and I to play together. Later that night, we went to a local pub to listen to our favorite local band play.

I had thought we might be able to do another Saturday of going nowhere, but the dogs really needed a visit to a dog park, so we did that and then decided to hit CostCo.

Today, I went downtown for a Nia jam with a good friend and then we got ice cream after.

 

 

We are over half way through 2012. I revised some of my goals because life took some turns I wasn’t quite planning on when I came up with them.

1)      Be paid for publishing one piece of fiction

Submissions so far: 2

Responses: 1 rejection 1 acceptance

The anthology I had a piece accepted to is now available to buy on Amazon. It’s called Conquest Through Determination.

2)      Pay All Adoption Expenses in Cash & Still Pay for C’s College Out of Pocket

We’re doing good here. This was helped tremendously by getting 3x as much in life insurance from the MIL than expected. Our savings is still growing, and we’re in really good shape

3)      Attend FinCon12. Pay for the trip with money from allowance/side projects saved/earned BEFORE the conference starts. Goal: $600

FinCon was awesome. Not all of the money came from allowance/side projects, but it was still easily affordable, so I’m calling this a win.

4)      Become a member of Yakezie (6 month anniversary is Jan 21)

I did not make Epsilon class. My Alexa ranking had gone too high. I think there will be one more class this year, so we’ll see if I can get my numbers back down to under 200k. I need to join the teams again, as that helps tremendously. And now that we’re done with all the house stuff for the adoption, I should have more time to participate.

Current ranking: 273,774

Back up a little bit.

5)      Make money from my blogs.

AdSense earnings: $28.81 at the end of August, with $1.03 made so far this month. (They won’t send me any money until I hit $100.)

One of the things that FinCon really brought home for me is that I’m not actually in this for the money. For now, I’m leaving the AdSense blocks up, but they’re getting moved further down the page. I’ll keep tracking, but making money isn’t why I blog.

6)      Be healthier

I think I walked twice every day this week, but I honestly can’t remember. I did have two days where I was seriously under my calorie target and one where I was over. The Nia jam today was 80 minutes of continuous movement. It was fun but tiring.