Frank Murtha from MarketPsych returns with some insight about how that annoying habit from high school follows most people into their grown-up financial lives. If you’ve been jumping off bridges after your friends up until now, maybe this will convince you to stop:
Archive for the ‘TILE Blog’ Category
Battling Peer Pressure… In Investing
Monday, May 23rd, 2011Would you like a tax write-off with that sandwich?
Friday, May 20th, 2011
© 1999-2011 Panera, LLC. All rights reserved
“The lesson here is most people are fundamentally good,” [Panera founder and Chairman Ronald] Shaich said. “People step up and they do the right thing.”
The “right thing,” in this case, is choosing to pay the full retail price (or more) for a bagel at one of Panera Bread’s pay-what-you-want restaurants. These locations are nonprofit, and “prices” are actually just suggested donations. Any money left over after paying the utility bills and workers’ salaries (i.e. overhead) goes to Panera’s charitable foundation.
This is genius for two reasons:
1. Amaaazing PR for Panera
2. Combining hunger and peer pressure to make people donate to your charity
Seems like it’s getting easier every day to spend money. Is this the new philanthropy? Are $10 text donations just the start? Anything that gets people to donate more money to good organizations is progress in our book.
You have to wonder, though. Is this kind of giving the way you really want to spend your donation dollars? Impulse giving is kind of like impulse shopping – it will probably make you feel good about yourself at the moment (especially if you just ate a delicious sandwich), but it doesn’t usually reflect who you are or where your values lie.
And it definitely goes against the sage advice to do your homework before you give someone your money.
How Not to Make Major Financial Decisions
Thursday, May 19th, 2011
(photo credit: BaronBrian)
Looks like wealthy Russians (and, yes, wealthy lunatics everywhere) are spending their nest eggs on underground apocalypse-proof nests. After all, the world is scheduled to be laid to waste on December 12, 2012. Or May 21, 2011. Depending on which irrefutable evidence you’re looking at.
But this seems like as good a time as ever to point out that basing your financial strategy on the ancient Mayan calendar is probably about as smart as trying to time the market. Base human emotions – fear, anxiety, and greed, for example – don’t mix well with financial transactions.
Wait… Can you time the market? Could we all be getting ridiculously rich quick before the end of days? Why didn’t we think of this before??
Today’s Episode of “Personal Finance for Preschoolers”
Wednesday, May 18th, 2011
(photo credit: popofatticus)
Seems like the rash of recent economic disasters have woken America up to the fact that education in personal finance is practically non-existent in this country.
So financial educators are starting to pay more attention to the kids. (See, for example, SPEND.GROW.GIVE.) But there’s one little problem… For most kids, personal finance is, well, boring and irrelevant.
Sure, you can talk about it in an Elmo voice, but is that really going to make money matter to young children? And should personal finance education really start in preschool? Starting young probably can’t hurt, but you’ve also got to be smart about how you approach the topic.
What would be the best way for you to learn about personal finance?
Anti-Trust Cops Anti-Nasdaq/NYSE Takeover
Tuesday, May 17th, 2011
(photo credit: banspy)
What happens when the two largest stock exchanges in the U.S. become one big mega-exchange? A monopoly, that’s what! In case you don’t remember from history or economics class (or the game Monopoly), a monopoly is when one company controls an entire market, making it hard or impossible for smaller companies to fairly compete. (The market, in this case, being the market of stock markets.)
That’s why anti-trust regulators at the Justice Department have shut down Nasdaq’s attempted hostile takeover of the New York Stock Exchange. The takeover is hostile because the NYSE already has a deal with German bank Deutsche Borse to be acquired for $10 billion, and it’s so not interested in starting a relationship with Nasdaq right now.
The New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq have been competing for years, which keeps them both in customer-pleasing, price-cutting mode. Without that competition, NYSEasdaq could charge whatever it wanted and still crush what little competition would be left.
It could even become… too big to fail!
Here’s Why You Need Insurance
Monday, May 16th, 2011Insurance is one of the least interesting things we can think of. We don’t even like typing the word. But you know what? There are some really good reasons why it’s really important.
Allow Jessica Serbin, Senior Vice President at Willis, to school you in less than two minutes:
>> TILE brings you exclusive opinions, explanations, and interviews from experts in every industry. Have a burning question or an expert you’d like to see interviewed? Just Ask TILE!
It’s the Enthusiastic Youngsters Who Will Be Fired First
Friday, May 13th, 2011
(credit: kevindooley)
New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg just announced a budget that will require 4,100 public school teachers to be laid off. That’s pretty tough news for a city with a challenging (to say the least) public school system. But what’s even tougher is the way those unlucky teachers will be chosen.
We’ve written before about the last-in-first-out rule (LIFO). In New York, the law says that teachers must be fired in reverse order of when they were hired. That means that an idealistic 24-year old with enough energy to start her career in an overcrowded, underfunded public school in the Bronx is more likely to be fired than an underperforming veteran.
What’s interesting is that many of the young teachers who are set to be laid off are actually participants in programs (like Teach for America and NYC Teaching Fellows) designed to bring new energy and drive INTO the public schools.
Well, there goes that idea. How do you think the public education system can be improved?
Does traveling (or living) well have to mean spending a lot of money?
Thursday, May 12th, 2011
(credit: notsogoodphotography)
We read the Frugal Traveler section of the New York Times from time to time, though frugality is not something all our members are familiar with. But today’s article about spending a weekend in Rio de Janeiro for less than $100 sounded like a lot of fun. The kind of fun you might miss if you spent, say, $2,000 instead.
In this case, the writer has an amazing experience for less than a Benjamin because he’s open to new (and potentially uncomfortable) experiences. So why not make it a point to travel the road less recently paved now and then?
Think about what you really want. Is spending the only way to get it? Is brand-name really worth more to you than generic? Can you see as much of a new city from a high-rise as you can from the street?
Now take a look at your spending habits – what do you spend most of your money on? Is that what makes you happy?
Today at TILE … Who Am I?
Tuesday, May 10th, 2011Today at TILE we talked about identity. How do you identify yourself – or others? Is identity what is on the surface (i.e., are you a preppie or a skinny-jeans-and-ironic-glasses-wearing hipster)? Or does it run deeper? We talked about all of these things, and specifically about how they relate to a concept we really believe in at TILE – financial identity.
What is financial identity? In the past, financial identity might have been, “I am what I have in the bank” or “the number I need to be happy.” The dollar signs drove how people looked at themselves. Now, there’s nothing wrong with this really, but in today’s world it seems outdated. How can you identify yourself with a just number without understanding a lot of other things about yourself first?
At TILE, we believe there are many things that make up your identity – it’s what you do, what you care about, and how you act every day. And in the real world, these passions and actions are played out in the way you use your money. Combining self-awareness with an understanding of how money works – and how it can work for you – is what makes up your true financial identity.
Identity is particularly important to us this week because we are launching TILE’s Financial Identity Profile at the FinovateSpring conference in San Francisco on Wednesday. (We’ll be tweeting about it, so feel free to tune in @spendgrowgive). It’s a major innovation to our product and we’re very proud of it. It does show numbers – but numbers are only part of the story. The Identity Profile is all about you. This new page – which you’ll see immediately upon logging in – helps you understand your identity from a financial perspective. It helps you express your passions, state your mission, and learn about money (and your relationship with it) so that you can use it wisely – the way YOU want to.
What does this mean for the TILE community? Well, it’s a pretty big addition to your current SPEND.GROW.GIVE experience. As more young people start using TILE and spending more time there (TILE members spend an average of 10 minutes per visit now), we want to make your experience with us as positive as possible. Sure we want you to grow your assets, grow your earning power, and grow your knowledge – but we really want you to grow into a strong person with a clear sense of what makes you tick. Knowing that – combined with a real knowledge and understanding of money – will make you a very powerful and fantastic person. So get in there!
- Amy
Google Diversifies Its Empire
Tuesday, May 10th, 2011
(credit: Sougent Harrop)
…with robot cars!
We’re always prattling on about the importance of diversification around here. You know, the “don’t put all your eggs in one basket” philosophy, applied to your investment portfolio.
Well the same principle can apply to all areas of life – baskets of eggs, for example, or Internet empires like Google’s. They’ve been branching out from their humble search engine roots for years (email, document sharing, voicemail), but now they’re taking it to the streets. With robot cars.
Robot cars, as you might imagine, are currently illegal on U.S. roads. But if Google does a good job lobbying the Nevada legislature, then Sin City may become the first market for automated overlords. Er, vehicles.
Hey, if the Internet implodes some day, at least they’ll have something to fall back on.