3 Effective Finance Tips for Teens

NEW YORK - MAY 20:  In this photo illustration...

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

When you are a teenager, it is very hard to manage your money. So, here are three effective ways to keep your finances in check.

  1. Create a budget. Write down all your income and expenses for a single month. If you’re spending more than you make, you’ll need to cut back on some of the things you don’t need. Creating a monthly budget will help you with your short-term and long-term financial goals. You’ll learn how to make your money last until the end of the month and have enough left to put into savings.
  2. Do not use a credit card. Every time you use a credit card, you risk going into debt. You’re also spending more money on every purchase because you owe interest when you don’t pay off the balance each month. With Visa prepaid credit cards, you put money on your card before you use it, so you can’t go over your self-imposed spending limit. You also won’t pay any interest with prepaid cards.
  3. Set up a savings account. Put your money in the bank. Just take out the money you need, so you’re not tempted to spend more money than you originally planned.

Don’t blow all of your money as soon as you get it. You should put a significant amount of the money you earn into your savings account. When you make goals and stick to them, you’re teaching yourself to be more responsible and you will have better control of your finances as you get older.

I Want It – Creating Smart Teen Consumers

iPod-like turquoise icon 

Image via Wikipedia

For not having any jobs, teenagers sure do have a heap of money to spend. It’s part of the lifestyle. Teens want the newest and latest thing. If it’s in fashion, they want it. Parents are still in awe that the iPod can hold 2,000 songs when all they had were cassettes and CDs. But teens know the new mp3 players can hold 6,000 songs, album art and music videos and they want it now.  How do you get teens to control their consumer wants and get off the impulse buying treadmill?

  1. You need to accept the fact that there will be fads you don’t understand but that are a live or die must for teens. The more you fight back with “no” and refusals, they are going to want it that much more.
  2. Teens and their peers are all about pop culture and fashion trends. Marketers know they are out there and spend millions of dollars to get their attention and try to become the next trend. It’s hard to compete. The best thing to do is remind them of previous trends they were into but have moved on from. It will teach them that trends are fleeting and fashion fades.
  3. Meet them halfway. Concert tickets with backstage passes to the latest teen singing sensation might strain your finances, but letting them get the album and a DVD of the concert is well within the budget.

Enjoy the ride. They are only young once.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Teenage Rebellion – Why it’s Good

Two adolescent couples at the 2009 Western Ida... 

Image via Wikipedia

They come from every race, ethnicity and socioeconomic class…teenagers. Teens like all children test their boundaries. What scares some parents is the way some teens choose to express themselves as they test these boundaries. But it’s not as bad as it seems. Cultural norms of today such as rock and roll, long hair for boys and even girls wearing pants, all started as a form of teenage rebellion.

A teen’s world is very controlled. They are told what to do, what to eat, when to sleep and so on. Education is their main focus and school is their social center. Everything they experience is often as a part of a group. This is especially true in pop culture and fashion trends. They are constantly bombarded by friends, family and media regarding what they should like, music and movies they need to experience and how they are supposed to feel.

Rebellion is a natural response to all the pressure. Rebellion isn’t always a bad thing. Changes in clothes, hairstyle, piercings and musical tastes are normal responses. Rebellion is often just an attempt of teens trying to define themselves.

Unless your teen goes down a path of drugs, alcohol and crime, you should accept the rebellion as a rite of passage. Show you teen you care about them and respect their choices. Encourage their experimentation and try to find common ground. Mostly try to remember when you were that age.

Enhanced by Zemanta