personal finance

What Is In Store For 2024? My Predictions and Outlook On Creative Businesses In the New Year by Paco de Leon

Here are my predictions for what’s in store in 2024 and what that means for creative businesses. They’re a result of reflecting on the last year, observing larger trends and chatting with folks across various creative industries, from creators who make money on social media to to small business owners, artists, and folks in the podcasting industry. A lot of this may be anecdotal, but some of these patterns are worth paying attention to. Let’s dig in.

Read More

An Open Letter to Buy Now, Pay Later Companies. Your product is like cigarettes for people’s financial lives. by Paco de Leon

Dear Buy Now, Pay Later companies,

The path to hell is paved with good intentions.

“Consumers need this,” you say. “We’re giving them options and flexibility in uncertain economic times,” you say. If you shut one eye and squint the other, you may be able to fool yourself into seeing what you want to see. That’s the beauty and the curse of the human mind. You’re asking them if they’d like to be kicked in the crotch or punched in the face. Options!

Read More

The Secret to Managing Money as a Couple: Split the Check by Paco de Leon

Navigating the intersection of love and money can be tricky, especially if one partner is more of a spender than the other. There is one method of managing finances that can help every couple find the balance between working towards the same financial goals, while also maintaining some level of autonomy. It’s called “splitting the check.”

Read More

Five Financial Rituals to Adopt in the New Year by Paco de Leon

We don’t always get what we give. At least, that’s what the Italian economist and sociologist Vilfredo Pareto discovered in the 1800s while harvesting peas from his garden. Pareto observed that 80% of the peas came from only 20% of the peapods, demonstrating an unequal relationship between inputs and outputs. Wondering if this pattern would repeat itself in other areas of life, Pareto began to look at different data sets to confirm his findings. 

While this principle might skew and not always hold one hundred percent of the time, the general principle that 80% of effects result from 20% of causes holds. Less than 10% of the population owns 80% of the stock market. Few social media accounts are responsible for most misinformation across platforms. And we’ve recently seen, in a pandemic, that roughly 20% of the most infectious individuals are responsible for 80% of the transmission.

Knowing 80% of your success and results come from only 20% of your efforts; you can apply the 80/20 rule to your financial lives. Here are the five financial rituals you can focus on that will impact results the most. 

Read More

A Black Friday Survival Guide by Paco de Leon

The shopping season is here, and it’s coming for your wallet. Not only do we have Black Friday, the biggest shopping day of the year, but this American tradition has also spun off into a string of frenzied buying days. There’s now Small Business Saturday, Cyber Monday, and Giving Tuesday. Of course, I’m not a monster. I do love a good deal. But it’s hard not to be cynical and critical of our hyper-consumerist society. So for anyone looking to mindfully shop this holiday season, here are some things to consider before venturing out into the wild.

Read More

How to Apply for One-time Federal Student Loan Debt Relief by Paco de Leon

It’s happening, y’all! The Department of Education launched a beta test of student loan forgiveness applications at 5:45p PT on Friday Oct 14, 2022. During this beta period, federal student loan borrowers may submit applications for some debt relief.

The applications won’t be processed until the official site launch later this month. However, according to a Department spokesperson, folks that apply for forgiveness during the beta period won’t have to reapply once the site goes live (or so they say).

Of course, a beta period indicates that the site, the application, and the process are in testing. During this period, bugs will be discovered – it’s the point of a beta test. So folks that apply now should manage their expectations.

Read More

Five Financial Things: Meditations on Money by Paco de Leon

Here are some things I’ve been thinking about lately.

Disclaimer: I’m probably not the first person to think of these things. I’m sure I picked these up from a fellow human expressing themselves through conversations, words in a book, dialogue in a movie, lyrics in a song, or eavesdropping on folks arguing over dinner (one of my favorite things to do). Sometimes it’s hard to remember where every insight originated. Sometimes they are slowly internalized through repeated exposure, like learning every lyric to a pop song you had no intention of loving. We’re all pulling from the same weird, swirling pool of ideas

Read More

How to Have a Year-End Personal Money Review by Paco de Leon

The end of a year is a time for reflection. As you plan your end-of-the-year celebrations and start to plan your new year resolutions, you may want to consider taking some time to take a closer look at your finances. A year-end personal money review can help you reflect on the choices you made over the previous year and help guide you to make better financial choices in the new year.

Let’s take a look at what a year-end personal money review is and how it can help you have a better relationship with money:

Read More

The Sequence of Savings by Paco de Leon

The sequence of events is consequential when we cook a meal, tell a story or travel to a destination. Instructions and directions are ordered, stories have sequential acts and arcs that depend on events. It’s the way things are, we accept this.

The same thing is true in the world of saving and investing. The chronology for both how you save (and invest) and where you save (and invest) matters.

Read More

Six Important Financial Lessons I've Learned While Writing A Book by Paco de Leon

It's easy to complicate things; it's hard to simplify them.

"Earn money. Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Rinse and repeat."

This is the advice an old boss would give when asked to distill financial planning into its simplest parts. It's excellent advice. When I first heard him deploy the words that would become a well-worn mantra in my mind, it was the moment I realized how easy it is to complicate things and how hard it is to simplify them.

Read More

How to Break the Cycle of Making Bad Financial Decisions by Paco de Leon

Even if you have all the right practical, rational information, when you're in a state of fear, anxiety, or stress, it is impossible to make sound, rational decisions. These states are innately emotional states where cognition is bypassed. When you're afraid, a part of your brain (amygdala) releases hormones that prepare your body for a "fight or flight" response. Humans struggle with having control when we're in these states because the amygdala has few connections to the rational parts of our brain, like our cortex.

Read More

Your Trauma, Your Money and How to Make Better Financial Decisions by Paco de Leon

Daniel J. Siegel, MD is a contemporary psychiatrist and writer who specializes in interpersonal neurobiology. He is credited with creating the concept of the window of tolerance.

The window of tolerance is used to understand and describe normal brain/body reactions, especially following adversity or trauma. The concept states that we each have an optimal zone of arousal, called a window of tolerance. When a person is within the window of tolerance, they can regulate their nervous system in order to deal with the natural ups and downs of being a human being on earth. In the window of tolerance, one can reflect, think rationally and calmly make decisions without withdrawing or feeling overwhelmed.

Read More

How to Feel Better About Your Finances: The Operating Principles by Paco de Leon

We all operate based on our own set of internal values and principles. We make financial decisions based on them, and our choices shape our financial life.

If you aren't aware of the financial principles you're living and operating by, you might have internalized someone else's, like your mother's fear or risk. Or your father's illusory confidence in his abilities to understand complex financial instruments. Your uncle's skepticism of everyone "trying to make a buck." Your aunt's overconfidence in the intentions of others.

Since there is so much we cannot control, you have to take responsibility for what you can control. Make sure you're acting on the values you truly value.

Here are my own financial operating principles to help guide me to make the best financial decisions with limited information. But really, they are principles to help me on my path to inner peace.

Read More

How to Have a Better Relationship with Money by Paco de Leon

Everything is connected. Your relationship with money impacts both your inner world and your external world. In your outer world, outside of you, your feelings about money can impact how you see the world, how you act in the world, and how you interpret experiences in the world. In your inner world, your relationship with money can impact how you feel. You cannot wholly compartmentalize your financial life; as much as you may have convinced yourself you can. How you feel about your financial life and your relationship with money, impacts how you feel about yourself. How you think about yourself affects the choices you make. And all the choices you make, create who you are, what you're able to do, and who you will allow yourself to be.

Read More

How to Shift Your Mindset Around Money by Paco de Leon

I usually hate Maroon 5. But it’s Saturday night in Little Tokyo and a stranger is absolutely slaying his version of ‘Sunday Morning’. The crowd is feeling it and the next thing I know I’m totally grooving to the only thing crappier than an actual Maroon 5 song - a cover of a Maroon 5 song. But I don’t care that I look like a loser. After all, it’s a karaoke bar.

Read More

Stop Not Understanding Life Insurance: The Definitive Guide by Paco de Leon

Imagine a room full of people running the odds on how long a stranger will live or die and then making bets on those odds. It could sound like an interesting scene in a movie, where questionable characters indulge in some casual underground gambling, but what I’m actually describing is a room full of underwriters in the life insurance industry.

When you look at it that way, doesn’t the insurance industry sound fascinating? It’s one of the biggest industries in the world and it’s all based on risks and making bets.

Read More