Tag: Festive season

  • Saving Challenge 2024: How you can save money in the new year

    Are you tired of watching your hard-earned money slip through your fingers each month? Then I think it’s time to take control of your finances and start saving. I understand that saving money can be challenging, but it is an essential skill to have to secure your financial future. This is especially so if you want to build a healthy financial foundation; you must make saving a priority. In this article, we’ll provide some simple but effective strategies for putting more money aside each month.

    Why you should save

    There are many reasons why you should save money. Some of them include:

    • Building an emergency fund: An emergency fund is a set amount of money that is set aside to cover unexpected expenses, such as a car repair or medical bill. Having an emergency fund can provide peace of mind and protect against financial shocks.
    • Planning for large purchases: Saving can also help you plan for big expenses, such as a down payment on a house or a new car. By setting aside money over time, people can make these purchases without going into debt.
    • Retiring comfortably: Saving for retirement should be an important goal for you. By setting aside money regularly and investing it wisely, you can build a nest egg that will provide financial security in your golden years.
    • Leaving a financial legacy: You might save to leave a financial legacy for your loved ones. By building up your savings and investing in assets such as stocks and real estate, you can create a lasting source of wealth for your family.
    • Achieving financial independence: Finally, you can save to achieve financial independence. By living below your means and saving a significant portion of your income, you can eventually reach a point where you no longer have to rely on a traditional job to support yourself.

    Methods of saving a buck: Traditional and creative

    Traditional methods

    The traditional ways to save money and increase income include:

    1. Cutting expenses: One of the most common ways to save money is to cut expenses. This involves identifying areas where you are spending more money than necessary and finding ways to reduce or eliminate those expenses. For example, you could cut back on eating out, switch to a cheaper cell phone plan, or cancel subscription services that you do not use.
    2. Increasing income: Another way to save money is to increase your income. This can involve finding ways to earn more money from your current job, such as asking for a raise or taking on additional responsibilities. Alternatively, you could look for a new job that pays more, start a side hustle, or invest in assets that generate passive income.
    3. Creating a budget: Creating a budget is a crucial step in saving money and increasing income. A budget allows you to track your income and expenses, identify areas where you can cut back, and plan for future expenses. By creating and sticking to a budget, you can make sure that you are spending and saving your money in a way that aligns with your financial goals.

    The Creative

    There are many creative ways that people can save money, beyond the traditional methods of cutting expenses and increasing income. Some of these ways include:

    1. Using cashback apps and websites: Many cashback apps and websites offer rewards or cashback for making purchases at certain retailers or for completing certain tasks, such as answering surveys or watching videos. By using these apps and websites, you can save money on your everyday purchases and earn some extra cash at the same time.
    2. Swapping items instead of buying them: Instead of buying new items, consider swapping them with friends, family, or neighbours. For example, you could swap clothes, books, or DVDs instead of buying new ones. This can save you money and help you to build a stronger community.
    3. Using public transportation or carpooling: Instead of driving your own car, consider using public transportation or carpooling to save money on gas and car maintenance. This can be a great way to save money and reduce your carbon footprint at the same time.
    4. Growing your own food: Instead of buying produce from the grocery store, consider growing your own food. This can save you money on groceries and can provide you with fresh, healthy food.
    5. Using DIY solutions: Instead of hiring professionals for home repairs or other tasks, consider using DIY solutions to save money. For example, you could learn how to fix a leaky faucet or paint a room yourself instead of hiring a plumber or painter.
    6. Negotiating bills and fees: Many bills and fees, such as cell phone bills, cable bills, and credit card fees, are negotiable. By negotiating with your service providers, you may be able to reduce your monthly expenses and save money.
    7. Using coupons and discounts: Coupons and discounts can be a great way to save money on everyday purchases. Look for coupons and discounts in the newspaper, online, or in-store, and use them to save money on groceries, clothing, and other items.
    8. Selling unused items: Many people have items that they no longer need or use, such as clothes, books, or electronics. By selling these items, you can make some extra money and declutter your home at the same time.
    9. Renting out your space: If you have extra space in your home, such as a spare bedroom or a garage, you can rent it out to make some extra money. This can be a great way to save money on your own living expenses and earn some extra income.
    10. Sharing resources: Instead of buying things that you only use occasionally, such as tools, appliances, or sports equipment, consider sharing them with friends or neighbours. This can save you money and help you to build a stronger community.

    It doesn’t matter what method you choose to save or why you’re doing it. The key lesson is that as we get into the New Year, you should turn a new leaf. Saving money should be the first subtopic on that list. Save money as regularly as you can because you never know. One day, that money might save you. Good luck and Happy New Year!!

  • Simple financial tips to keep in mind this festive season

    Simple financial tips to keep in mind this festive season

    Personal, according to the Advanced English Dictionary, means something that affects or concerns a particular person in their private life and personality. Since the topic of this blog involves the word personal and finance it thus means that when it comes to the management of personal finance, you get the last word. What you do with your money is your business, and thus out of the privy of the general public since personal finance is, well, personal.

    But since the moment humans learned to communicate through language, advice has been more or less bundled into that communication. Thus, although personal finance is, well, personal, I could tell you a thing or two that I feel you could adopt to ensure that you manage your finances to provide maximum utility.

    Skills You Need talks of personal finance as involving being aware of your position financially and then undertaking steps to ensure that you have meaningful outcomes that you can be proud of in the end.

    Some things that you could do to manage your finances better might include:

    Be aware of the limits of your income

    Money is a resource. And like all resources used in satiating limitless and sometimes needless human wants, it is scarce, for scarcity is what confers value and thus utility. However, this last one is highly subjective. Thus, this scarcity dictates that money should be managed prudently and effectively to provide the highest utility values.

    Since they pay you in currency, which is money, it means that what they pay you is probably not enough to cover all the exposed parts of your financial anatomy. This, therefore, means that you must know how far you can stretch your income before it snaps and hit you right between the eyes in the form of debt. To avoid the embarrassment of debt, you must be able to prudently manage your money, ensuring that you exercise financial brevity for brevity is the soul of wit. Using your money correctly will make the world see you as a smart person indeed.

    Save whenever and wherever

    A lot of literature, both online and offline extolls the virtues of saving. Saving refers to the act (you must do it, not just think about it) of setting aside some portion of your income to cover unprecedented outcomes, mostly negative, in the future or to accomplish a given task in the future. On the battle of whether you should save before or after, I do not know enough to actually form an opinion. Do as you see fit.

    Now, saving has been difficult even in the best of times, and now with the advent of Covid-19, the level of difficulty is far above the reach of most ordinary folks. This smacks true for us in Kenya, where inflation is in a hurry to reach its teens while wages, not in a hurry to catch up, are sticky flowing with the grace of bitumen. It barely moves and if it does you never see or feel it.

    Evil, as Stephen King says, has a way of popping up full-blown and ready to go. Saving, which is the direct opposite of evil (that title goes to wastage), takes time, slowly dragging itself into use. But like all things good, the pain usually comes before the gain. This means that no matter what happens, you must strive to save.

    But like all things in life, you cannot plan for the future and sometimes misery brings along its distant relatives into your life to keep it company. Sickness and other crazies can wipe out your savings no matter how prudently you save. If this happens to you, head over to our website or download our app for a quick salary advance to sort yourself out in case your savings run out. We got your back.

    Try to invest

    Investment, an offshoot of savings, is the act of purchasing assets, which might be in the form of land, for example, to earn a return on the money you invested. The sole aim of investing, as opposed to saving, is to increase an individual’s wealth.

    To better manage your finances, you are better off if you learn to invest prudently. One of my favorite lines in investing is by Warren Buffet, the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. He said, “I do not look for six-foot poles to jump over, but rather one-foot sticks to walk over”. This means that it doesn’t have to be complex. But like all things good, investment can be difficult and mind-boggling at first. Dogged determination can get you far, and might go a long way in helping you dodge the glaring blunders that novice investors make. Time spent on the internet, or on books will go a long way in helping you figure out the best investment vehicle.

    However, if it’s all a conundrum to you, you can look for brokers and do your investments through them for they might be well versed in these matters. Remember, the goal is to invest.

    Have an Extra Income

    This might not be traditional in the financial management camp, but extra money has never hurt anyone. My thinking might be convoluted, but sometimes money can be so tight that no matter how prudently you manage it, it just never cuts it.

    To loop around this, I think you should look for extra income if you can get it, that is. A side hustle will give you the peace of mind to better manage your affairs, for that too is the purpose of financial management. This side hustle, be it a business or a skill that you’re good at, will provide that extra oomph you need to live comfortably.

    If you need funds to start your side hustle, you could head over to our website or download our app to get funding to unlock your potential.

  • Tactics to Saving Fuel this Festive Season

    Tactics to Saving Fuel this Festive Season

    Oil is the opium of the world. The dose that keeps the world patient while it’s being overloaded with climate change, extremism, poverty, and every other manner of garbage. The world is addicted to it and I doubt if there is any detox program to wean itself off. To put it into perspective, the world consumed close to 99.4 million barrels of oil per day this year. This addiction has made the House of Thani family of Qatar very rich, by the way. The family is worth close to $335 billion. Meaning that if they add nothing to their fortune and consume $1 billion a year, their fortune will run out in the year 2357. Yeah.

     Oil and its offsprings get us high, and we’re never coming down. But, being the good humans we are, moderation is our virtue, and although we love largesse, our conscious dictates we save here and there. This is why I bring you this post ladies and gentlemen. We are speeding into the festive season at sixty minutes per hour. The period when we spend and simultaneously strive to save. To reach my quota of goodness this year, I am going to offer some insights to help you save fuel this season. Ready? Let’s Go…

    Clean your filter and change your engine oil

    This is Saving Fuel 101. Want to save fuel? Service your vehicle.

    Saving fuel has never been this easy, but many people never bother. As a distinguished member of the Amateur Mechanics Association of Kenya, I bring you a special message from the automotive gods. Change or clean your filter regularly and you will save a lot of fuel. Don’t believe me? Well, try to keep up.

    Everything requires oxygen to burn, including the fuel in your engine. The work of an air filter is to, well, filter the air of dust and other debris from getting into your engine and damaging it. However, if it’s clogged, less air passes through and thus little of it enters the engine. From basic science, we know that air is made up of approximately 21% Oxygen. Less than a quarter. So the less air, the less oxygen available for burning your fuel. Your engine, on the other hand, has a fixed capacity and if less air is drawn into the cylinder per charge, it will gladly fill the remaining percentage with extra fuel. Resulting in a rich mixture. Since there is less air to burn that fuel, the oxygen will bind with whatever fuel it can burn and release the rest of the unburnt fuel as black smoke. Do this a few thousand times per minute and your vehicle turns into a fuelaholic. A guzzler. Consuming your fuel in a manner likely to suggest that it doesn’t like you. Which is terrible, especially if you intend to save on fuel.

    Oil, as you know, lubricates your engine. If you don’t change it regularly, it becomes heavy. Which in turn reduces its lubricating capability, making the engine strain to overcome the extra friction, making it work harder than necessary. And you know what happens to an engine when it works hard? No, it doesn’t get paid more, Ernesto. It consumes more fuel. Jeez!!!

    Reduce idling and unnecessary revving

    Idling is sometimes unavoidable in the modern world. And the more modern the world becomes, the more our vehicles will idle. This is a fact that won’t save you fuel, anyway. We spend more time at junctions, red lights, and traffic jams because the infrastructure grows slower than the rate we buy cars. On average, it’s estimated that we spend close to 3-4 hours every day on the commute. Keeping your car idling for even a third of that time will cost you about 0.64 liters of fuel. This is because, as the engine idles, it’s consuming fuel, doing no work. Wasteful. If you’ve to spend more time idling in traffic jams, the best strategy is to turn off your engine. This will help you save fuel because your engine will only run to drive your vehicle. Now that’s smart.

    Note: Don’t do this if your engine has a hard start. It will embarrass you.

    Revving you’re your engine is the most wasteful thing you can do. Some motorists rev their engines after starting. Why? It’s pointless and adds nothing except waste fuel by unnecessarily straining the engine. The basic procedure is to start, idle, and drive. Unless your engine has a hard start, don’t rev it, especially if you’re trying to save fuel. However, if you’re not trying to save fuel, rev baby rev. 

    Avoid thrashing your engine

    If you have a heavy foot, go see a doctor. It might be a condition. But if seeing a doctor is not on your bucket list, then hear me out. Putting the pedal to the metal, the symptom of a heavy foot, will not:

    1. Make you go any faster
    2. Make you look any cooler
    3. Save you any fuel

    Unless you have an electric car, which I know you don’t desist from smashing the pedal to the floor. This is because your car weighs at least a ton, and therefore will need to overcome its inertia before picking up any discernible speed. Suddenly stomping on your accelerator, as you move, opens the throttle body wide allowing maximum fuel into the engine with little work. All this just wastes your fuel.

    This also goes for your driving. Unless you’re a getaway driver in a robbery, it makes little sense to make your engine scream. Learn to operate your engine at optimum rpm to suit your driving. This will not only help save you unnecessary visits to the mechanic, but it will also go a long way in helping you save on fuel.

    Walk

    No brainer. The best way to save fuel is to not use your car. 

    Get a Prius

    This is my favorite. If you have some 3 Million shillings lying about that you have no use for, get yourself a Toyota Prius. This move will save you some crazy amounts of fuel. According to Toyota, the Prius returns about 56 mpg combined. For every 100 km traveled, a Toyota Prius will use an average of 4.2 liters of petrol. A Premio returns 8.3 liters per 100 km. If you were to travel from Mombasa to Kisumu, a distance of about 825.5 km, assuming every other thing is held constant except fuel, the journey will cost you about 6,000 shillings in a Prius. Yeah, I know, that’s 4000 more than an Ena Coach ticket. That’s, however, about 6,000 shillings less than what a Premio will consume in fuel. What’s more, you will finish the journey earlier as the Prius has 136 hp compared to a Premio’s modest 125 hp. Talk about being outclassed.

    Please Note;

    This is not an exhaustive list. It’s but a tip of a very long list. However, if you are to learn anything from the list, it’s that it doesn’t need to take drastic measures to save fuel (well, except the last one). Doing the above will save you a lot of money in the future. And as you speed along into the festive season, I wish you nothing but the best and happy fuel saving.

    Sorry, it’s me again. I couldn’t leave you without a call to action so, here goes nothing. Hela Pesa Salary Advance supports this post. Please head over to our website or download the Hela Pesa App for a quick Salary Advance this festive season.