needs vs. wants

Winning Game Plans Save Money!

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This time of year can be full of joy, celebration, and festivities. For many, it can also be a time of worry, anxiety, and overspending—but, it doesn’t have to be! Check out these ten family-focused ideas for ways to start smart and save some money during this holiday season. Even if you can only try one or two of these ideas, you might become inspired to come up with a few more that work for your family!

1: Cash Counts!

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Credit cards are often tempting when it’s time to shop during gift-giving season. The convenience of these cards can often backfire when the bills are due. This first strategy can help—a lot. Once you create a budget for your shopping plans, why not consider paying with cash? After all, with this approach, you can only spend what’s actually in your pocket. As with all forms of cash and credit, exercise care when carrying around a lot of cards or cash because safety should always be the first order of business.

2: Hold the Latte

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Shopping, holiday errands, and too many events can mean a lot of running; this can lead to a skipped meal or two. It might also make the luxury of indulging in a supersized, foamy peppermint latte and a warm gingerbread cookie seem like necessities for survival. With lines, traffic, and too much to do, this feeling’s no surprise. It’s also no bargain. This tip can help.

By skipping these higher priced and higher calorie snacks on the go, it’s possible to save enough money to buy an extra gift or two! The price of such snacks can tip the scales at $8 to $10 dollars. Switching to a simple drip coffee and a granola bar from your backpack even just twice a week between now and Christmas, could result in an extra $50 to spend on gifts. Now, THAT’s a very sweet treat!

3: Quality, Not Quantity

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These days, gift giving might more accurately be described as GIFTS-giving. In today’s high volume-based world, multiple gifts per person can be an expected norm. Instead of buying several smaller gifts per person, reverse it. Truly listening for hints about one special gift that might be at the TOP of your recipients’ wish lists. By thoughtfully considering, researching, and shopping for that nicely made red sweater for your aunt, for example, you can potentially invest the same money and give one longer lasting gift that she will wear and enjoy for years to come. Three smaller gifts at $15 each might not mean nearly so much as one beautiful $45 sweater.

4: Dollar Store Delights

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Not all gifts need to be store bought or expensive. What gifts could you and your family create together? Could you bake and decorate cookies and then line a round foil pie pan with a home-made holiday construction paper snowflake? Top this treat with a festive, inexpensive dish towel from the local dollar store, and all that’s left to add is a card. The dollar store is a treasure trove for lots of economical gift-making supplies. Pick up a few plain ceramic coffee cups, write recipients’ name or initials in permanent marker, and tuck in some tea bags or candy. Why not buy plain ornaments at the dollar store and spend some family time decorating them with glue, odd buttons, dots of nail polish, and ribbon or yarn scraps? By making the decoration styles random, even kids will relax and discover there’s no wrong way to decorate a keepsake ornament.

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5: The Gift of Time
Remembering that time can be more valuable than money is a great gift-giving strategy to add to your planning. What about creating some simple IOUs for friends and family? Volunteer to babysit, walk a friend’s dog, or bring in the trash cans for a busy neighbor during the winter months. CARPOOL or ERRANDS Certificates with no expiration dates could be a life-saver to a friend. The financial cost of these gifts is low, but the consideration and value to those who receive them can be high, if not priceless.

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6: Trade-Ya!
Along the same lines as the IOU and homemade customized gift certificates described in idea 4, suggest to friends and family that you dream up a few TRADE-YA ideas. For example, if you can sew, offer to hem three pairs of pants in exchange for two ready-to-freeze casseroles. By choosing to trade activities that come easily to one of you but are a struggle for the other, everyone wins. This money-saving idea has an added bonus: TRADE-YA gifts set a wonderful example for kids. Beyond modeling that not all gifts are tangible, you can work together as a family to bring these special gestures to life for family and friends. Everyone can contribute. If you take a photo while you’re working together, you can give an inexpensive keepsake, too! Making memories is a great trade.

7: New Traditions
Sometimes, holiday traditions like pricey tickets for a holiday performance or feeling pressured to buy the expensive photo package of your kids on Santa’s lap can feel like mandatory expenditures. Why not choose more carefully this year, perhaps opting for only one tradition that costs money and introducing some new traditions that are low-cost or even free.

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Pop over to the library or scope out a free, public-domain version of  holiday story on your phone to create your own home performance by reading or even acting out a new favorite holiday tale. Each child can play a part, too. Don’t forget to take a photo or two! Look for tree-lighting neighborhood events, community center festivities, or invent new family traditions like taking a walk to see the holiday lights or inventing festive names for economical dinner ideas. You and your family will treasure these new activities especially if you come up with them together.

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 8: Location, Location, Location
While after the holidays is the perfect time to stock up on clearance decorations for next year, this year’s budget can quickly become strained with last-minute shopping for new decorations. If you pull out the box of old decorations only to discover that it’s less plentiful than you remembered, don’t despair—and don’t go shopping. Try switching up what you have saved from past seasons. Change a ribbon color, put those tattered pinecones in a different basket or flower vase with some crinkled tissue for color. Most of all, swap locations. By placing old decorations in new places, they’ll look new to guests, to your family—and to you!  

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9: Keep It Together for Happy Returns
Stay organized this season. Don’t tuck receipts and change in coat pockets or shopping bags. Instead, form the habit of putting every receipt in one central and consistent place in a big envelope labeled November and December Receipts. This way, if you discover you need to return a gift you purchased earlier, you can more easily make time to get your money back. In addition to convenience, keeping all receipts in one place lets you make fast tallies of what you’ve spent to date so you’re ready to pay the bills when they come due. Keep loose change in a bowl or cup nearby, too. You might even discover you’ve saved up enough pocket change to treat yourself to that one last peppermint latte before this seasonal treat disappears from the menu board.

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10: Become a Sales Sleuth
At this time of year, it seems like every store and website is promoting a BIG sale, but be careful. Sometimes sale prices are not nearly so reduced as claims promise. Making enough time to research and check for best and lowest prices before you make bigger purchases can result in big savings. By comparing prices ahead of time, you are an informed buyer. Not only will recipients value what you buy, you’ll receive a real value, too. Spending more time ahead of time can save your budget big-time, too.

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11: Say NO to SnowBILL Fights
After all the gifts are all opened, it’s quickly back to school at the start of the new year. It’s also the start of payback time as the bills come pouring in. Credit card debt is a serious matter and debt and interest payments can add up quickly. Be prepared.

Make your payback plan NOW. By calculating your budget, sticking to it, and planning out beforehand how long it will take you to pay down what you owe, you’ll feel in control and be better able to contain spending. By giving yourself a HARD Shopping Stop Date, you will limit those SnowBILLs—helping to prevent your interest payments from snowballing. Now that’s a great gift to yourself for the start of 2020!

 Get Smart from the Start with FUTURES!

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These ten ideas can help you stay on track during the holidays. If you want some more specific, easy-to-grasp-and-apply information about Personal Finance, check out the Personal Finance Strand of FUTURES: Financially Literate Kids for a Financially Literate Society™. This FREE, groundbreaking Financial Literacy Program has 29 different sections across the four strands. Each section begins with a detailed ready-to-use planning guide and is brimming with handouts and resources—including worksheets, charts, and other handy tools. This school program “travels” smoothly outside of classrooms, making it easy to introduce and weave in financial education topics in after school programs, home-school settings, and even around the family dinner table. In the late-night hours, turn worry time into learning time with FUTURES.

Early next week, look for Post 3, Hidden Holiday Budget Breakers, where we bring into clearer focus all of those fuzzy, forgotten holiday costs that can trip up even the most committed holiday budget planners. 

Holidays Express!

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T’is the season to go shopping! Welcome to December. Did you know that during this holiday season we actually have six fewer shopping days between Thanksgiving and Christmas than we did last year? It’s all a function of the calendar, of course, but this express time window plays a key role in holiday spending, too.

Mindful Reminders!

We can’t think of a better time of year to be mindful of financial literacy. That’s why your FUTURES™ team will post 12 Days of Blogging! during this holiday season. Every few days between today and the first week of January, we’ll share seasonal posts filled with ideas, reality checks, strategies, and great ways to connect with your kids about financial literacy on these action-packed spending days—and nights!

 A Financially Literate Holiday Season

The FUTURES team knows all about Financial Literacy and how to integrate this critical skill set into your family and classroom. From Personal Finance and Economics to Entrepreneurship and Investing, FUTURES: Financially Literate Kids for a Financially Literate Society™ is the groundbreaking Financial Literacy Program that empowers students BEFORE High School—to achieve their best success AFTER High School. And, unlike the other items on your shopping list, this program is FREE!

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Because this time of is year is so busy, we know you likely won’t have time to dive into the whole FUTURES program even though it IS free; time is at a premium. So, these twelve posts will be rich with relevant, easy-to-apply FUTURES concepts and ideas that you can quickly incorporate into this holiday season both in the classroom and around the kitchen table.

Why We Buy

This tightened Thanksgiving-to-Christmas timeframe doesn’t correlate to consumers doing less shopping. In fact, the reverse is often true. Time compression makes many people feel an urgency that translates into spending even more money in less time! Expedited shipping fees, less time to scope out coupons and discounts, limited inventory choices, short deal windows, and too many confusing sales are symptoms of a compressed shopping season and often increase the amount of money that buyers spend because temptations abound!

 People tend to fall into several different categories when it comes to the reasons that they justify spending more—

  • What other choice do I have? I need to buy gifts.

  • I’ll forget about my debt until the bills come.

  • I’m luckier than most; after all, my only worry is money.

  • I don’t want my kids to feel the disappointment I felt as a child.

  • It makes me so happy to buy for others and give great gifts!

 Worry All The Way

Whatever reasons might ring most true for you, this time of year is often about spending—and over-spending. Credit cards make it even easier to spend now without considering the interest, debt, and overdrawn anxiety that is soon to follow. Phone ads, commercials, banner ads, and videos tend to focus on shopping, deals, the need to BUY IT NOW! But BUY NOW all too quickly morphs into PAY LATER–and later is not far away. It’s easy to get caught up in and distracted by events, excitement, and traditions. While it’s easy to push away those nagging worries, in truth, most of us worry all the way, anyway. If this scenario feels familiar, check out the Loans and Credit section in the Personal Finance Strand of FUTURES for a quick refresher. You might even want to do a few of the activities with your kids. It’s never too early to foster financial literacy.

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Because gifts are often stashed in hiding spots, it’s easy to forget all that’s been purchased until it’s time to get wrapping. It’s only when it’s time to step back and wrap that many of us actually see all of our purchases in one place. This is when the reality of what’s been spent sinks in. By this point, however it’s too late to undo much of the damage.

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Start Smart

Do you often hear the words, “But, I need it!” or “Here’s my HAVE-TO-HAVE list for this year!” from your children, students, or even your partner? This season is an ideal time to help those you love, including the young people in your life, to become more aware of their own financial responsibility, too. Try these two quick strategies to get your small group focused on what really matters—starting with you.

Checking Your Lists

A great way to control what you spend at this time of year is to have a plan. Before you ask for anyone else’s lists, be sure to make one of your own. It’s the most important list you’ll make.

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To stay on budget, one must have a budget, so before you begin to spend in earnest this season, stop and assess exactly how much money you can afford to spend. Use a budgeting form like the one below to help you consider both obvious and hidden expenses.

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Do the Math

Before you ask for gift lists, do the math. Calculate how many people you’re buying for. If you have three kids, a parent, two siblings, and four dear friends who always buy for you, consider assigning categories to each group. Can you afford to spend $15 on each friend? Are you the only person buying for your kids? What percentage of your budget should be dedicated to them? Can you suggest that your family draw names from a hat and each person chooses one extended family member to buy for in order to give one more significant gift? Why not propose a limit so everyone spends the same amount?

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When you begin with your budget, and look at the list of gift recipients on your list, you may discover you need to pare down your list or get more creative in your gifting approaches. (More on this topic in this weekend’s post.) 

Set Expectations, Get Options

Now that you know what your resources look like, you’ve begun to shape your own expectations. Next, it’s time to set the expectations of those for whom you’re shopping. One way of setting the stage is to share the scope of what you can do. Perhaps you begin by explaining that this year you hope to be able to buy each person one nicer gift like a coat or one new game. By giving examples, you are clarifying what you mean by nicer so no one is disappointed when gifts are opened. Even the nicest coat pales in comparison to a hoped-for new cell phone or the hottest new tennis shoes.

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When you ask others for ideas, be clear about what you want to know. Ask for three different ideas for a bigger gift in the range of X dollars and ask for five ideas for three smaller gifts in the range of Y dollars. While these discussions might reduce the level of surprise by your recipients, it equally reduces your own surprise when the billing cycles roll around. Asking for options helps everyone know what to expect. You’ll know you’re spending your hard-earned money on something that recipients want, you’re not boxed into overpaying for just one item, and there’s still an element of surprise when gifts are opened. Your recipients will also be prepared for fewer, more meaningful gifts.

Underneath It All

Under the colorful, active trimmings of the holiday season, at the heart of all your planning, purchasing, and paying actions, you’ll discover financial literacy.

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The four strands of the FUTURES program are hard at work all through this season. Economics and Personal Finance lead to Investing in gifts that matter to others and that you can afford to give while tapping into your Entrepreneurial talents for those more creative gift-giving ideas that work for recipients—and your budget.

Jumpstart your own financial planning this holiday season by checking out the Personal Finance strand of FUTURES. It’s full of worksheets and ideas you can apply all month long. In fact, click here to download the entire program. We’ll be back in a few days with our next post, Winning Game Plans Save Money!

“But, I NEEEEED It!” Discovering Needs vs. Wants

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Financial Literacy Month is an ideal time to help young people become more aware of financial responsibility. Do you often hear the words, “But I need it!” from your children, students, or even your partner? What distinguishes a want from a need? Food and housing, of course, are both needs. But food can be a want as well—think candy or junk food. Is ice cream a want or a need? After a long, stressful day, it certainly might feel like a need. How much housing is a need, and at what point does it become a want?

Check out this game, adapted from a classroom lesson on Wants and Needs from FUTURES: Financially Literate Kids for a Financially Literate Society™. Download the PDF. Share it on an iPad or print out a copy for each player.

Players will sort the images into needs vs. wants, circling needs and drawing a box around wants. Even early learners who can’t yet read can participate by looking at the pictures. It’s never too early to raise awareness of the importance of understanding wants vs. needs. In fact, we can probably all use a reminder. After all, companies shell out billions of dollars each year to make us “need our wants,” and it’s easy to get caught up believing we need far more than we really do—or can realistically afford.

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Determine Your Own Wants and Needs

A great way to extend this game activity is to have kids continue the discussion with examples from their own lives. Depending on the circumstances, plenty of things can fall into either category—or both. Use the topics below to spark discussion—and have fun coming up with your own ideas.

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  • Is summer camp a want or a need?

  • What about pizza?

  • A day in the city?

  • Going to visit cousins?

  • A new backpack?

  • Shoes?

  • Donating to a charity?

  • What else might be a need for one family and a want for another?

For more information about FUTURES: Financially Literate Kids for a Financially Literate Society™ for students in kindergarten through eighth grade or to download any of the 29 sections of the program, please click below.