MBN Group Writing Project - Your Best Advice for New Entrepreneurs
Welcome to July’s Money Blog Network Group Writing Project.
This month we are focusing on advice for new entrepreneurs. We have all fantasized about leaving our day jobs and starting our own business. But how exactly do you take the leap?
Below, you’ll find great advice to help you get started:
- Get Rich Slowly: 5 Tips for Starting a Small Business
- Mighty Bargain Hunter: Are You Thinking of Quitting the Nine to Five?
- Free Money Finance: My Best Advice for New Entrepreneurs
- Five Cent Nickel: Advice for Entrepreneurs
- Consumerism Commentary: Can You Be an Entrepreneur In Your Spare Time?
- No Credit Needed: My Best Thoughts for the New Entrepreneur
- All Financial Matters: How to Encourage Your Budding Entrepreneur
- Wise Bread: Create a Business Plan by Answering 4 Simple Questions
As usual, we’ve invite other personal finance bloggers to participate in our discussion. Here are some of our favorite entries:
- The Digerati Life: Basic Business Advice From an Accidental Entrepreneur
- Blunt Money: Of Exit Strategies and Small Businesses
- No Debt Plan: My Advice for New Entrepreneurs
- Personal Finance Analyst: So You Think You Can Sell Banana Peelers?
- Think Your Way to Wealth: 6 Key Tips for Starting a Part-Time Business
The Money Blog Network hosts a group write every month. For more details on how you can participate in our next group write, stop by the Money Blog Network forum.
MBN Group Writing Project: Finances at Graduation
June is a big graduation month, and for lots of students the time has come to exit from a world of protection and nurturing to The Real World, where life does have losers, your boss can be more demanding than any professor or teacher you’ve ever had, and broadband Internet access is no longer free.
With that in mind, bloggers of the Money Blog Network and other bloggers in the forums have written posts that relate to finance issues people face at graduation. We invite you to check them out!
Bloggers: This is a great opportunity for discussion and cross-linking! Additionally, we’ll be adding any June, 2008, posts on this topic until July 1st! Instructions are here.
Thanks for everyone’s participation, and enjoy the posts!
- Wise Bread gives out their best advice to new graduates
- Consumerism Commentary rattles off some financial tips for graduates
- Get Rich Slowly gives simple advice that works wonders
- Free Money Finance shares his money advice with graduates
- No Credit Needed shares the secret to saving $35 million
- Mighty Bargain Hunter warns that graduates might be shocked
- Five Cent Nickel listed four tips for recent graduates
- Poorer Than You gives some tips on how to budget without hurting yourself
- Plonkee Money serves up a few pointer for uni grads
- Think Your Way to Wealth reveals the two simplest ways for graduates to achieve retirement success
- My Dollar Plan offers ten financial tips for new grads
- Cash Money Life posts on financial advice for the high school graduate
- Personal Finance Analyst discusses finances at graduation
- Dumb Little Man hosts a guest post by Blueprint for Financial Prosperity on seven things he wished he had known the day after college graduation
Money Blog Network Group Writing Project: Looking Back
This month, members of the Money Blog Network - and other personal finance bloggers - look back, 10 years, and examine how their lives have changed.
Here are the articles from the Money Blog Network -
- Wise Bread: Money management lessons: Not quite 10 years to life
- No Credit Needed: Looking back 10 years ago
- Mighty Bargain Hunter: My finances ten years back
- Five Cent Nickel: Stepping back in time: Our life ten years ago
- Free Money Finance: My finances 10 years ago and now
- All Financial Matters: Then and now: What our finances looked like 10 years ago compared to now
- Consumerism Commentary: Looking back: The difference 9 years makes
- Get Rich Slowly: Now and Then: How My Current Financial Situation Compares With A Decade Ago
Here are articles from our fellow personal finance bloggers -
- Blunt Money: What A Contrast
- Blueprint for Financial Prosperity: My Personal Finances Ten Years Ago
- Personal Finance Analyst: My Ten Year Financial Retrospective
- Blogging Away Debt: The 10th Anniversary Of Our Windfall
If you are a personal finance blogger and you would like to participate, contact me and we’ll be glad to link to your post.
MBN Group Writing Project: Emergency Funds
This month’s writing project focuses on "emergency funds." The participating bloggers will share tips, pointers, and opinions about the generally-accepted financial advice that dictates that individuals should be able to access cash for emergencies.
Here are the articles.
- Consumerism Commentary: 50 Tips to Help Establish Your Emergency Fund
- Five Cent Nickel: How to Build an Emergency Fund
- Free Money Finance: Real Life Example of Why You Need an Emergency Fund
- Get Rich Slowly: Learning to Love the Emergency Fund
- Mighty Bargain Hunter: Revisit Your Emergency Fund Periodically
All bloggers are invited to participate. Please email us with a link to your article from April 2008 pertaining to emergency funds and we will add it to the list.
- My Retirement Blog: Save to Retirement Fund or Emergency Fund?
- Prime Time Money: Your Emergency Fund is So Big…
- Debt Free Revolution: How Big an Emergency Fund to Save Up?
- Quest for Four Pillars: Emergency Funds and Tax-Free Savings Account
- Girls Just Wanna Have Funds: Emergency Funds vs. Savings Accounts: Navigating the Grey Area
- Poorer Than You: The Importance of an Emergency Fund in College
- Green Panda Treehouse: Rebuilding an Emergency Fund
- I’ve Paid for this Twice Already: All Funds are Emergency Funds Until You Have a Sufficient Buffer
- Being Frugal: Reaping the Rewards of Our Emergency Fund
- Blunt Money: When Should You Start an Emergency Fund?
- Plonkee Money: Emergency Funds are No Fun
- Bored Finance: Real-Life Example of Why You Need an Emergency Fund
- Your Finish Rich Plan: 10 Tips to Jumpstart Your Emergency Savings Fund
- You Might as Well Burn $5: What If Rent Was Already in the Bank?
- Pants in a Can: Emergency Savings - Should I Bother?
- Blueprint for Financial Prosperity: Laddering Your Emergency Fund
- Ask Mr. Credit Card: Emergency Sources of Funds and Income Complement your Emergency Funds
- Think Your Way to Wealth: Emergency Fund 101: A Crucial Step on the Road To Financial Well-Being
Have a link to add? If it was written and published in April and pertains to emergency funds, let us know on the MBN Forums and it will be included.
MBN Group Writing Project: Best Tax Advice
Well, it’s that time again — the tax man has his hand out and April 15 is right around the corner. That’s why this month’s Money Blog Network group writing project deals with taxes. In this edition, each MBN member lists his best tax advice/tip. We’re hopeful that these posts make this time of year a little less taxing for you. ;-)
Here are the posts:
- Consumerism Commentary: Is it Better to Receive a Tax Refund or Owe the IRS?
- Five Cent Nickel: The Value of Doing Your Own Taxes
- Free Money Finance: My Best Piece of Tax Advice
- Get Rich Slowly: Mr. Lawyer and Mr. Accountant Chat About Taxes
- Mighty Bargain Hunter: A tax tip from my pastor
- No Credit Needed: A Taxing Situation - My Biggest Financial Regret
- Wise Bread: Certainties: Death, Taxes, And Change
Here are some more. If you have an article published in March about your best tax advice, please let us know, and we’ll add a link to this list.
- Prime Time Money: 3 Ways to File Your Taxes for Free
MBN Group Writing Project: Budgets
Good morning. Welcome to this month’s Money Blog Network Group Writing Project.
Each month, members of the network write about a specific topic - and we encourage you to write about the topic as well.
This month’s topic - Budgets
Below, you’ll find links to our articles about budgets, budgeting, and budgeting software.
* Five Cent Nickel: The Fine Art Of ‘Reverse Budgeting’
* Mighty Bargain Hunter: A Budget In Your Head Isn’t Really A Budget
* No Credit Needed: Living On A Budget - Don’t Knock It Until You Try It
* Get Rich Slowly: A Free And Simple Budget Planner
* Free Money Finance: My Confession: I’m Not Doing A Budget For 2008
* Consumerism Commentary: Actual vs. Budget Report, January 2008
Here are some more:
* Crazy Mokes: You Really Do Need a Budget
* Newly Corporate: 3 Fast And Easy Budgeting Methods
* Millionaire Mommy Next Door: We Live The Good Life, Not The Goods Life
* Prime Time Money: Budget: Easy And Smart
* SoundMoneyMatters: Creating A Cash Flow Budget
* Credit Withdrawal: My Crazy Budget, The Quicken Way
* Moolanomy: Living Stress Free Without Budgeting
* DebtFree-Revolution: How I Got Out Of Consumer Debt: The Budget
* The Wisdom Journal: A Budget Controls Your Money Like A Dam Controls A River
* Make Love, Not Debt: How We Budget
* Millionaire Money Habits: Spend Your Budget
* Paid Twice: How I Budget
If you have an article about budgets, contact me and I’ll add it to our list.
MBN Group Writing Project: How are Those 2008 Goals Going?
It’s near the end of January. Most of the holiday decorations are down now, work is back in full force again, and tax season is just around the corner.
It’s also been almost a month since the beginning of the year, and almost a month to begin working on making some of those 2008 goals you made in December 2007 a reality. You do remember those goals you made, don’t you?
It’s no secret that the large majority of New Year’s Resolutions aren’t kept long enough for the resolver to see their positive effects. Depending on whom you talk to or which statistic you believe, one-half to four-fifths of resolutions don’t make it past the end of January! Or even if you don’t call them “resolutions,” the steps that you said you’d take to reach your goals might have already lost some steam.
That’s why we’re doing an MBN Group Writing Project on this subject. We’ll be posting on various aspects of this subject today; some of us may do a brief report on how we’re progressing toward our goals. We may even reach out and pick on a few other bloggers who’ve set goals for themselves to see how they’re doing! The whole purpose is to remind ourselves of where we want to go this year, and to try to nudge ourselves toward making all of those great things happen!
Here are the posts in the group writing project:
- Mighty Bargain Hunter: How are my 2008 goals going? How are yours going?
- Free Money Finance: How I’m Doing on My New Year’s Resolutions
- Get Rich Slowly: Making Progress: An Update on My Goals for 2008
- Five Cent Nickel: 2008 Resolutions: Are You Still on Track With Your Goals?
- Consumerism Commentary: Flexo’s Financial Goals: First Check-Up
- No Credit Needed: 15 Resolutions and Goals for 2008 — January Update
MBN Group Writing Project: Year End Money Moves
Good morning, and welcome to what we hope will become a regular feature here at the MoneyBlogNetwork… Our very own group writing project. Given that 2007 is almost history, we thought we’d kick it off by talking about year end money moves. So… At some point today each of us will be publishing an article detailing a particularly timely money move.
Below is a list of participating articles (check back if they’re not all up yet):
» Time to Rebalance Your Portfolio (All Financial Matters)
» Dumb Year End Money Moves (Blueprint for Financial Prosperity)
» Use Your Flexible Spending Account (FSA) Funds Before Its Too Late (Consumerism Commentary)
» Clearing Our Your House for Fun and Profit (FiveCentNickel)
» Make Your Charitable Deductions Before Year End (Free Money Finance)
» Paycheck and Witholding Calculators for Year End Money Moves (Get Rich Slowly)
» Jump Start Your Debt Reduction Using Christmas Gifts and Year End Bonuses (No Credit Needed)
» Grab Some Year End Bargains (Mighty Bargain Hunter)
If you’d like to be listed, simply publish an article of your own, link back to this announcement, and drop me a line with the link and the title. We’ll be accepting entries throughout the week.
The MBN Welcomes No Credit Needed and Get Rich Slowly
We are pleased to announce the addition of NCN of No Credit Needed and J.D. of Get Rich Slowly to the MoneyBlogNetwork. Their content has already been added to the Network Feed or you can get their content direct from the source:
No Credit Needed RSS Feed — Get Rich Slowly RSS Feed
NCN has been helping people get out of debt since April 5th 2005. As you may or may not know, NCN also runs an excellent debt reduction podcast as well as a network of his own. You can read more about NCN and his sites here.
J.D. is an old school blogger who entered the personal finance realm when he launched Get Rich Slowly on April 9th, 2006. He also runs the Get Rich Slowly Forums. You can read more about J.D. and GRS here.
Please join us in welcoming NCN and J.D. aboard.
Blog of the Week - April 15, 2007
This week’s Blog of the Week is The Bizarro World Debt Elimination Freakshow. I found their blog last week when Basil left a comment about his garage sale experience. It cracked me up so I decided to check out his blog. This is some great stuff! I love the honesty of this blog (even though they are blogging anonymously). They had over $33,000 in credit card debt and now it is down to $19,000. Their blog is their tale about paying off the rest.
