CORRESPONDING POST: Ten Commandments for Smart Consumers
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TRY ME: Create your very own B.B.P. (Big Buy Plan). This will help you begin thinking about your purchasing behavior, and decide what you might want to change!
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BONUS TRY ME: Take the College of Consumer Knowledge Quiz, created by the ConsumerMan, and see how you fare.
Understand How to be in Control Your Money, Whether It's A Lot or A Little
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Ten Commandments for Smart Consumers
In honor of Consumer Protection Week last week (March 4th-10th), MSNBC columnist and blogger Herb Weisbaum, The ConsumerMan, posted his ten commandments for being a smart consumer: Life Inc.: The Economy and You. He is confident that if you follow his “commandments,” then you will have a lot less trouble with whatever you buy. His commandments all boil down to two common themes: Preparation and Prevention.
Preparation
A smart consumer is a prepared consumer. And to be prepared as a consumer is to go against every natural purchasing instinct that we possess. We see something we want (e.g., a new outfit, game, car, computer, etc.), and we want to buy it right now, without doing any preparatory work. Now, I am all for the occasional or, better yet, rare impulse buy; but this should be an inexpensive item ($25.00 or less), for which pre-purchase work would have been unnecessary. Under $25, it may not be worth your time to do the research; if you’re making the same (or similar) cheap buys repeatedly, however, you should consider finding out which items are better and less expensive.
Prevention
Smart consumers always find ways to protect themselves when problems arise. This is much tougher than being an idle or passive consumer.
Preparation
A smart consumer is a prepared consumer. And to be prepared as a consumer is to go against every natural purchasing instinct that we possess. We see something we want (e.g., a new outfit, game, car, computer, etc.), and we want to buy it right now, without doing any preparatory work. Now, I am all for the occasional or, better yet, rare impulse buy; but this should be an inexpensive item ($25.00 or less), for which pre-purchase work would have been unnecessary. Under $25, it may not be worth your time to do the research; if you’re making the same (or similar) cheap buys repeatedly, however, you should consider finding out which items are better and less expensive.
Prevention
Smart consumers always find ways to protect themselves when problems arise. This is much tougher than being an idle or passive consumer.
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