Hi, Linda
Thanks for providing this thread and asking me to help field questions. First thing I'd better do is post a disclaimer. In the US, a financial consultant is licensed by the federal government to give advice about investing as well as about how to handle money. I don't have such a license. Any expertise I've gained has been in the school of hard knocks and more recently through Ascend, which provides financial education and tools for personal financial management--not investing. So if anyone asks a question outside the realm of managing family and small business finances (which are often intertwined), I'll have to refer them to a licensed consultant. Fair enough?
So. You asked:
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But, therein is the question. If a site owner "pays themself first," the truth is that it's not going to be a lot at first. A site owner might be really excited to make their first $100 or $200... but 10% "off the top" is only $10 or $20.
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My opinion is that the 10% that you pay yourself first should be just that. I'd put it in a savings account, or if you start with too little to open a savings account, then into a cookie jar or something to separate it from spending money.
Have you ever read George Clason's The Richest Man in Babylon? The recurring theme there was that you should have a couple of coins to jingle in your pocket to show for a day's work. I think it was the next 10% that was to go toward payoff of debt. (Sorry, my copy has disappeared, loaned to a young friend who never gave it back.) I believe there was an allocation for charitable giving. The rest was to live on. Maybe Babylon didn't have taxes, lol.
Honestly, there's a difference of opinion among the experts whose works I have read. Some say pay off the debt and you'll have more to save soon. Others say absolutely get an emergency fund first, then worry about the debt. A lot depends on the size of the debt, what resources you have to handle unforeseen expenses, your tolerance for risk, even your age.
I do know that even a small amount of extra payment on debt now has a much bigger impact than you would think in the long run. The same is true for saving. That's called the time value of money. If it isn't working for you, it's working against you. It's also true that to learn to save you must develop the habit of saving.
So if you can't decide and can't allocate a second 10% toward debt, it might be best to divide it and allocate half toward each goal. When you're talking about small amounts, the details of how you use it are less important than implementing the philosophy, even if the amount is only 10 cents.
Cheri
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