Archive for December, 2008

Best of 2008 & December Link Love

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

Here’s a quick overview of the best 2008 posts on this blog along with the best from the other blogs in December. I have not written much recently for the reasons explained here, but there are plenty of interesting articles on other blogs.

Best of Shark 2008

In January I was still interested in Forex trading and researched tons of signal providers and information on trading by signals. As a result there is a three part tutorial – part one, part two, and part three – if you are interested in forex yourself, it may be quite useful.

In February one article got a great feedback and attracted a lot of interest – The Basics of Domain Investing. It’s a very important piece if you are interested in alternative investing strategies.

The Sexy Art Of Losing Money, published in March is there to remind you that fear is your worst enemy. Be more courageous not only with your money, but also with your life.

April came to contradict Passive investing and growing assets. My position is clear: putting more efforts usually results in getting better results. Completely passive investing is almost a dream.

In May many of the readers of this blog were happy to learn how to earn income by freelancing. It’s not easy but is far more reliable than trading forex.

Speaking about forex, the June article called 10 Reasons Not To Trade Forex is one of the most commented on this blog. Seems like you are more interested in producing real wealth rather than playing the numbers game.

The all time most read and commented article on this blog was published in JulyDon’t Make Money Blogging. Is it that another “make money” myth have been stripped?

On the other side, people seem very interested to know How To Profit From Ideas. This article was published in August.

After the summer breaks, in September many returned back to their 9 to 5 jobs which attracted a lot of interest to the article about the 9 to 5 alternatives. Did you already find yours?

The fear, chaos and panic everywhere resonated in the post Is Investing A Big Fat Lie? published in October.

In November I made a little provocative and little funny post – How YOUR Saving Advice Caused The Financial Crisis. It attracted link from MSN Money and few other forums and a good traffic spike. If you are a blogger, you can read that post like “How to attract links” case study.

I didn’t write much in December (lazy and busy month at the same time). However if you have time to read just one post from this blog, read How To Outgrow The Self-Help Learning Stage. It’s not at all the most popular one, but in my opinion it’s one of the most useful articles ever published here.

Now, enough self-retrospection, let’s see what my fellow bloggers have published in December:

Best That Others Wrote In December

Tricia at Blogging Away Debt has collected a nice list of unusual ways to make money.

Jim at Blueprint for Financial Prosperity shares the five reasons why he recycles.

I keep linking to lists: Patrick at Cash Money Life advices on 4 ways to not get stuck in the sandwich generation.

Harisson at Finandom Dot Com muses whether you can use a 100% working way to make money from Adsense. The article is good, just don’t limit your income streams to Adsense. Diversify.

Jeremy at FMF shares a quick example how a hobby can turn into a big income.

Gather Little By Little shares a touching story concluding that Your life is more important than your stuff.

Jeremy at Generation X Finance shares financial tips to make 2009 your best year ever.

Sadly the Lazy Man’s post giving some survival tips if you are laid off is quite actual. Let’s hope it won’t be for long.

Pinyo at Moolanomy has written a good tutorial about investing in commodities. Just be careful as these times commodities are quite risky.

David at My Two Dollars offers some inexpensive ways to stay warm in the winter. It’s -10 C here now, good tips *grin*.

David at MoneyNing helps you empower yourself to think that nothing is impossible. Let the power be with you.

Jacques at The Digerati Life shows how to stand out from the crowd when writing a resume.

Trent at The Simple Dollar always have more interesting stuff that I can read. This time I have chosen to share Overcoming Obstacles with you.

And this time the most important piece comes from Seth Godin10,000 hours. Have time to read only one post? Let it be Seth’s.

How To Outgrow The Self-Help Learning Stage

Monday, December 15th, 2008

You probably want to improve your financial situation. But how much? How strong is your wish indeed?

I am asking this because most people claim they really really want to fix their finances and other areas in life. Yet, they spend most of their productive time reading hundreds of blogs, listening to self help audio tapes, watching “how to make money online” videos and going to self-help seminars.

A typewriter
Photo by
mckaysavage
at Flickr

The Trap of Learning Procrastination

Look at your RSS reader. If you see a large number of “how to make money”, “how to save money”, “how to lose weight”, “how to improve your relationship”, “how to start a business” or “how to stop procrastination” blogs there, you are caught into the trap of learning procrastination.

If your RSS reader is full with such blogs, you are most likely spending some time in self-help forums too, listening to self-help tapes and probably reading paper self-help books. Good boy, you are such a thorough student!

Reading self-help advice is unlikely to help you grow much. And I can tell you why:

  • Most of that advice is rehashed. It doesn’t matter whether you are reading blogs, mass media, forums or listening to podcasts or audio interviews. Most of what people write or tell is written or told million times before. There are probably trillions of terabytes of information available online. Do you really believe all of it can contain new information and original ideas?
  • Most of that advice is crap. There is useless or plain wrong advice in any area of knowledge, but “self-help” with its subcategories is maybe the leading area. Making progress with money and life is not like doing math or physics, neither programming or even public relations – it’s a “science” which works different for different people in different situations. So if Warren Buffet’s tactics make him billions, they fail for many of his followers.
  • Learning is not doing. It’s so easy to fall into the trap of learning procrastination: “I read 5 great blog posts, a half of XYZ’s book on starting a business and listened to that great podcast from XYZ. It was such a productive day”. Reading, listening and learning is actual work so it makes you feel like you are doing a lot, but in reality you are doing nothing. Self-help knowledge is absolutely useless unless you apply it in practice. Before that you have not done any progress.

So many people spend day after day searching for the next cool e-book and paying for the next cool e-course and after that doing nothing with what they learned. They are so much afraid not to miss someone’s insight or some new trend that they spend all their time learning.

The Learn-When-Doing and Learn-By-Doing Approach

This way of living won’t get you anywhere. You should stop being a student. People will not pay you for what you know. They don’t care. They don’t care how much time you spend learning or how hard you tried. All that people want is results. All that you want from yourself is results. And results are achieved by doing, not by learning.

I am not suggesting you should do something without having an idea how to do it, but to learn along with doing. The first step to that is to de-clutter your information channels. There are only few blog posts worth reading. If all that one blog is giving you is five minutes of entertainment every day, remove it from your RSS reader. It’s perfectly fine to spend some time for fun and entertainment but it’s very dangerous when you disguise this action as “learning”. Unless you understand that you are just entertaining yourself, remove all the blogs, forums, books and audio tapes that don’t have a significant impact on your life. You are likely to reduce the info-noise 10 times or more.

Once cleaned your channels, you are ready to start action. You will have a lot more time for that and much less excuses like “I have to read this book first and then will try to apply what I have learned”.

When you know what you want to do with your life and money, you can start with learn-when-doing and learn-by-doing approaches. This is the time when the blogs, forums and especially search engines come into action. Now go to your favorite blog, forum or search engine, type “How to [whatever you want to do]” in the search box or start a forum thread asking the question and go from there. Take the first few results, have a quick glance on them and see which ones seem to have the answer. Pick the one that appeals to you most and start reading. If it’s an article, read the entire article. If it’s a book, read just the beginning. Then immediately start doing what you want to do and have just learned and don’t read anything else unless you get stuck. When you get stuck, repeat the previous step with your new question. When you make a mistake, learn from it. It’s not that scary – the best way to learn is from your own mistakes.

Software developers know to use this approach very well. As a software developer I like to learn new technologies, but I avoid spending too much time at the learning stage. I sometimes read the entire books or tutorials on the technology, but I know very well this is more entertaining than making real progress. The most efficient way to write software, once you know the basics, is to start writing and ask questions (for example Google) when you don’t know how to do something. Some developers will argue that before working with some program language or framework you need to know everything about it. They might be right, except that in most cases their way of thinking made them lose 5 years in the university instead of writing software like Larry and Sergey or Bill Gates for example. The learn-by-doing approach works exceptionally well when you know how to do something similar to what you want to do. For example a Perl programmer can start writing a web application in Python almost immediately – by searching the web for Python alternatives of Perl features he knows to use. In the process of finding the answers he can learn a lot about the differences that both languages have and about the features that Python has and Perl has not. He will learn a lot and at the same time will have written some software as opposed to the student who will only learn.

You can use the same approach in real life. You can apply the knowledge you have in cooking chicken soup to cooking veg soup – just search what chicken should be replaced with. You can try to date women with the knowledge you gained in school when you had to talk in front of the entire class. If you were able to talk in front of 20 teenagers, why would you be shy to talk to a single woman? You can also apply the knowledge you have in your office work to starting your own business. Search the web, your favorite blogs, or ask in forums and find out how other people start business in your field. Get some results and start action.

A Quick Example

Let’s say you want to make more money, but are absolutely clueless what to do. Go to Google and type “How to make more money”. When I run this search now I am getting results with some purely motivational articles, advice on how to get a salary raise, links to how to invest and save money, advice on how to find a hotter job, how to make money with a website, how to make money blogging, how to make money freelancing online and even how to earn as English teacher in Taiwan. Have a quick glance at the results and pick one that looks good to you. Start reading the article. Does it sound like something you want to do? If not, stop reading and move to the next in the list.

If yes, finish the article, write a plan and try to apply what’s learned. Don’t read more at this point, you will learn when doing. Of course you may simply fail. It may happen that you simply don’t like to blog or are very bad writer (that’s usually too quick assumption however) so “make money blogging” wasn’t a good idea at all. That’s OK, at least you learned you don’t like this and aren’t going to lose more time reading advice on how to make money blogging. Then move on the next method until you find something that appeals to you and you seem to be making some early progress. Then, just like the software developers do, start to expand your knowledge while doing. That’s the way to get some real progress. Everything else is an excuse for procrastination.

Did you like this article? Do you think that it can really help you outgrow the state of endless reading and start doing some progress with your finances and life? If yes, please spread the word so others can also benefit from it. Link to the article, comment it on your blog, bookmark it at delicious.com or share it with the “ShareThis” link at the bottom.

If you did not gain anything from this article, you have lost some time. Maybe I will write something worth your attention soon – if that was true for some of the past articles here, it’s likely that it’s going to happen again. If you have never found anything more than 5 minutes of entertainment here, please unsubscribe from my blog. I want to change lives, not to be used as an excuse for procrastination.

You Have The Potential To Raise 100 Times More Money Than You Do Now

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

How much do you spend now on investing? 10% of your income? 20%? 70%? Don’t worry if it is not too much. The less you spend now, the more you can improve. You can invest even 1000% of your income in a given period of time.

A typewriter
Photo by
iirraa
at Flickr

We all have hidden assets

Our wealth is not a constant value and it is not limited to any fixed limits. Your ability to earn, save and obtain money are very flexible even if you work for a fixed salary.

Some of the hidden assets you have are actually pretty obvious:

  • Spending Less/Saving
  • Working more
  • Borrowing
  • The value of your home and other property you own

Most of the people don’t even use 10% of them. Since you are reading this, you are likely to use more. But how much? Look just at the four items above. Are you using all of these hidden assets? There is probably a lot to improve yet at this point.

And the opportunities do not end with these. You have assets that you may not think about at all. For example:

  • Intellectual properties
  • Your skills and knowledge
  • Your friends and relatives
  • Your business connections
  • Your current investments
  • Your future ideas

Leverage works not only in forex or stock trading

The concept of the leverage is one of the keys to financial prosperity. You will not go too far if you invest $1,000 per year in banks for 4% yearly ROI. To be exact, you will have $30,969 after 20 years (check yourself with the compounding calculator).

But if you can mutliple both values by 5, you will achieve more than 5×5 times that amount. To be exact again, for 20 years you will have $1,12 millions. Invetsing $5,000 per year and achieving 20% growth is certainly a realistic goal, especially if you leverage your assets.

The problem most people have with aggressive investing is messing logic with emotions. It is hard not to be emotional when you risk big amounts of money. And you will do this quite often if you want to achieve good results. You can’t expect not to be emotional. Your goal should be to follow a strategy regardless what feelings dictate you.

Outgrow Fears

The pessimists see difficulties in each opportunity. The optimists see opportunity in each difficulty. In aggressive investing you will need a moderately optimistic look. Too much optimism will kill your finances, but without some you’ll just miss all the opportunities.

Think about investing in this way. You are investing some money that you don’t need right now. It’s like buying a lottery ticket but with much bigger chance for success. Each successful investment will help you win the jackpot. Each loss will just make you smarter.

Learn From Losses

You should accept there will be losses. Some investors say the key is to reduce losses.

The key is not to reduce losses.

It’s to learn from them. What did go wrong last time when you invest? Were you aware of the potential pitfals? Was it looking too good to be true? Did you give your money to someone else hoping he or she will do the best to manage them? Did you follow the crowd? Did you exit with a loss because of fear not to lose more?

You will quickly notice most of the time losses are due to some of the issues listed above. Aggressive investing is not very risky. It’s your mind that makes it look so.

I am going to talk soon about specific strategies for raising funds. If you don’t want to miss them, stay subscribed.









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