Tag Archives: budgets

Building Financial Harmony: Strategies for a Positive Money Mindset

By Jim McKinley

Special to Financial Independence Hub

Our relationship with money often shapes many aspects of our lives, influencing decisions and perspectives. Developing a healthier connection with finances can lead to greater peace of mind and a stronger sense of control. By exploring thoughtful strategies, individuals can create a balanced approach that fosters both stability and growth.

Align Finances with Personal Values

Developing a personalized financial plan begins with identifying your core values and long-term aspirations. This process ensures that your financial decisions are purpose-driven and aligned with what matters most to you, whether it’s achieving financial independence, supporting family, or pursuing personal passions. Start by assessing your current financial situation, including income, expenses, and debts, and then outline specific, measurable goals that reflect your priorities.

Practice Mindful Spending

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Incorporating mindfulness into your financial habits can transform how you manage money. By consciously evaluating each purchase, you can determine if it aligns with your core values and long-term goals, reducing impulsive buying.

This practice fosters better financial decisions, increased savings, and improved financial security. Understanding the emotional cues that lead to unnecessary expenses allows you to address them effectively, minimizing the risk of falling into debt.

Mindfulness empowers you to make deliberate and informed financial choices, paving the way for a more stable and sustainable financial future.

Manage your Finances with Budget Templates

Mastering the art of budgeting is a crucial step in managing your finances. Creating a budget provides a clear picture of your income and expenses, helping you make informed decisions and avoid overspending. By sticking to a budget, you can save for future goals and reduce financial stress. To simplify this process, consider using budget templates, which offer a variety of styles to fit your circumstances. These templates are customizable, allowing you to tailor them to your unique financial situation and manage your finances more effectively—learn more about the benefits of using a budget template.

Embrace Zero-based Budgeting

Zero-based budgeting is a strategic approach that assigns a purpose to every dollar you earn, ensuring your spending aligns with your financial aspirations. By planning where each dollar goes—whether for essentials like housing and groceries or for savings and debt reduction—you can take charge of your financial destiny. This method is particularly advantageous for those with steady income, but it can be adapted for individuals with variable earnings by making monthly adjustments. Continue Reading…

Navigating the Challenges of Solo Entrepreneurship

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By Devin Partida

Special to Financial Independence Hub

Solo entrepreneurs face unique financial challenges, including inconsistent income streams, high operational costs, limited access to capital and the difficulty of separating personal and business finances. Effective financial planning becomes crucial to navigating these hurdles and ensuring sustainable business operations and long-term success.

Creating realistic budgets, building emergency funds and managing expenses allows solo entrepreneurs to stabilize their financial health. Additionally, seeking professional financial advice offers personalized strategies, tax planning and investment guidance, which are essential for securing a stable and prosperous future.

Unique financial hurdles for Solo Entrepreneurs

Variable revenue presents significant challenges for solo entrepreneurs in budgeting and managing expenses. The unpredictable nature of income makes it difficult to plan for consistent cash flow, often leading to financial strain. According to a recent survey, 77% of respondents reported their expenses increased by 6% or more due to inflation, further complicating financial planning.

Solo entrepreneurs also face the challenge of managing overhead costs without the benefit of economies of scale. Unlike larger businesses that can reduce per-unit costs through bulk purchasing, they must find ways to cover operational expenses efficiently. In fact, 37% of small businesses resort to borrowing to meet their operating expenses, which highlights the financial pressure they endure.

Securing loans and investments is another hurdle for solo entrepreneurs. Financial institutions and investors may view them as high-risk due to their lack of a proven track record and limited collateral. This makes it difficult for single proprietors to obtain the necessary funding to grow and sustain their businesses. Continue Reading…

Canadians turn to digital advice amid Covid uncertainties

By Michael Walker, Royal Mutual Funds Inc.

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

In today’s digital world, we haven’t forgotten the importance of ‘old school’ methods to help people keep on top of their finances. Every November, as part of National Financial Literacy month, financial planners across the country talk to Canadians about the importance of having a plan in place to guide their financial future; one that takes into account the unexpected and which can be adjusted as lives change. You can make a plan on a pad of paper, you can create it on your laptop, your tablet or your mobile device. The important thing is to set it down so you can review it and make adjustments as your life changes.

What’s proving to be a real game-changer, however, is the access Canadians now have to financial advice through digital channels: particularly now, when economic uncertainty due to COVID-19 has many Canadians asking what lies ahead for their financial future.

Canadians who have seen their savings and investments negatively impacted by the pandemic have been seeking reassurance about what lies ahead for their financial future. They want to know how their retirement plans have been affected; will they need to work longer than expected? How can they rebuild their ‘just in case’ fund? Will they still be able to contribute to RESPs for their children or their grandchildren?

Increasingly, as physical distancing has meant Canadians are unable to meet in person with their financial advisors, we’re seeing Canadians turn to digital means to get answers to their financial questions. We already had well-established digital channels at RBC providing digitized advice and insights in place ahead of the arrival of the pandemic. When the number of clients seeking digital advice surged, we were able to quickly respond to their needs and not only provide digitized advice, but also connect clients remotely to our advisors.

Free digital advice accessed 24/7 from home or office

MyAdvisor – only available at RBC – is a key example. This free digitized advice service helps clients create a personalized plan online and provides access to the expertise of our advisors – all from the comfort of their homes and workspaces. Clients can readily view a complete picture of their financial accounts – even those held at other banks – on interactive screens. They have real-time, 24/7 access to their personalized plan through MyAdvisor’s digital dashboard and can see the impact of their money decisions before they make them. They also can get the advice they need, when they need it, by connecting with one of our advisors in their local community through live video, phone and, where possible, in person.

To give you an idea of how many Canadians are now seeking digitized advice supported by the expertise of our advisors, there are now over two million clients connected through MyAdvisor: twice the number as last year. Between April and September of this year, the number of clients logging in increased 21% and video appointments jumped to 20% from 2%. During that same timeframe we also saw a huge increase – 80% – in completed appointments, where clients went beyond logging in to look at their financial picture; they booked appointments and then met with our advisors. Continue Reading…

How to pass on Money values to your kids

By Matt Matheson

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

(Part 2)

When we had kids, both my wife and I discussed how to be intentional about teaching them about money. We’ve read books, articles, and looked at resources online.  We wanted to be sure that they knew what a healthy relationship with money looked like in the areas of faith, family, and work ethic. We wanted them to know what a truly wealthy life looks like.

Our plan to do this was to model handling our money responsibly. And we wanted to give them real-world opportunities where they could begin to make financial decisions on their own, at first in a supported environment, and later on, independently.

With our first child, our daughter Gemma who’s getting ready to turn 5, we’re in stage 1 of teaching her to be a wise manager of her money. She’s being supported, taught and encouraged to make good choices with her money. She’s also being given lots of opportunity to fail with money. Also known as non-catastrophic failure, it is an essential element to learning, and one many kids are being robbed of by overprotective parents.

So how are we doing it? By teaching her the basics of how to give, save and spend…in that order.

Give

Gemma has been on commission for about four months and it’s been going quite well.  Every Saturday she gets paid $1.50 in six quarters. Some people may think that’s cheap, but I prefer frugal. 

My wife decorated three old loose tea containers with fancy wrapping paper and glitter letters to store her bounty.

The first thing we do when she gets paid is put 25₵ in the Give container. As people of faith, we tithe a percentage of our income to our local church and other charities.  We want to instill the value of generosity and gratitude in our children, and so before we’ve spent or saved, this money goes into the Give fund.

Recently, we went out and used her money (she has stockpiled $4) to buy some gifts for an Operation Christmas Child shoebox. Before we went out I showed her a short video and we talked about how some kids don’t have much money, and how we can give to them.  It was awesome to see her picking out the items for the box and growing her giving muscles right before my eyes.

Save

The next place money goes is to her Save container.  It gets three quarters, the most of any jar.  Before she’s touched any cash to spend, this “invisible money” disappears into her saving fund so she doesn’t even miss it.

We want to impress upon her the value of delaying gratification. We want her to experience the joy you get from passing on the temporary good feeling of spending now, for the amazing feeling of satisfaction and self-control you have when you buy something you’ve been saving up for.

Right now, she’s not saving for a car, university, or a down payment on a house.  We’re not that crazy.  She saves for larger purchases that she wants but can’t buy on impulse and that we’re not going to cave in and get her on a whim.

A Teachable Moment

A few weekends ago, she and I were hanging out and she let me know that she had seen a Spirit Riding Free toy that she wanted to buy. (For those who don’t know, it’s a Netflix show, which is pretty solid for little kids. Continue Reading…

Blending families and assets: How to make it easy

By Rowena Chan, TD Wealth

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Finances can become challenging when adding — or removing — a new partner, stepchild or extended family member into a household. The instances of blended or multigenerational families are becoming more and more common in Canada as the number of multigenerational families has grown in the last 15 years – rising 37.5 per cent. In addition, 12.3% of families in Canada are stepfamilies, according to recently-released 2016 Canada Census data.

A recent TD survey found 66% of Canadians living in a blended family say they face financial challenges because of their household situation. Additionally, 47% find juggling these challenges stressful. The top three financial challenges they faced are determining who pays for ongoing household expenses (25%), having different views on managing the household budget (23%) and determining household saving priorities (21%). Take a look at this infographic here for more survey findings, tips and advice.

No matter your family situation, money matters can get tricky. To guide you through the process, there are some simple steps blended families can implement to help create a more stable financial future for everyone involved. Continue Reading…