goodhousekeeping.com — In rocky times, you can?t afford to play fast, loose, and clueless with your finances. Minor money gaffes can add up to thousands of lost dollars over time. Avoid the five most common money mistakes, and you could add more than $10,000 to your savings this year.
Aug 7, 2008 View in Crawl 4
johloraxAug 7, 2008
Shave $27 a day from my spending to net $10K in a year...that almost seems doable.
shadeofgreyAug 8, 2008
#3 should read: "don't have children"
Closed AccountAug 8, 2008
#1, 2, and probably 3 should be this:<a class="user" href="http://consumerist.com/consumer/clips/snl-skit-dont-buy-stuff-you-cant-afford-252491.php">http://consumerist.com/consumer/clips/snl-skit-don ...</a>
Closed AccountAug 8, 2008
Tracking your finances is a nobrainer! software like quiken & mint can make a real difference...
dickyt83Aug 8, 2008
How to make money: Putting each step on separate pages.
Closed AccountAug 9, 2008
Awww, I seriously read "The 5 Most Common Monkey Mistakes!" While this may be informative, I don't think it's nearly as fun as what I was expecting.1. Monkeys throw poo. Don't tease them.
doodAug 9, 2008
Isn't it a "common money mistake" to give all of your account information to some random website? Maybe it's not so bad if they use "secure third party banking services", whatever that means.I'm certainly not convinced by mint.com's FAQ:"We ask for your online banking user name and passwords, but we do not see or store that information.That means no one at Mint, and no potential hackers of Mint.com, can access your banking credentials.Mint uses only your account login credentials for access to your account information and Mint does not store these credentials."Whaa?