NerdWallet's Smart Money Podcast - Expert Budgeting and Spending Tips from a Live Financial Planning Session (Video Episode)
Episode Date: August 12, 2024Hear an actual financial planning session where a CFP advises a listener on transforming her budget and spending habits. NerdWallet Advisors is no longer accepting new clients, and will be closing it...s financial planning business as of December 20th, 2024. Magda Doemeny, a certified financial planner from the NerdWallet Advisors platform, gives a listener specific advice to improve their finances (advice given on behalf of Nerdwallet Advisors, not NerdWallet). Brinker, the listener, is struggling with spending habits that she calls “irresponsible” and how to manage some of her debt. She discusses her upbringing, financial challenges, and goals while Magda offers insights and strategies to help her improve her finances. The episode delves into methods for tracking spending habits, setting financial goals, and developing better money management practices to achieve financial stability. Magda also guides Brinker on creating a budget, prioritizing debt repayment, and implementing behavioral changes to curb impulsive spending. As mentioned by Sean, here is NerdWallet’s list of the best high-yield savings accounts: https://www.nerdwallet.com/best/banking/high-yield-online-savings-accounts NerdWallet Advisory LLC (dba NerdWallet Advisors) is an SEC-registered investment advisor, and wholly owned subsidiary of NerdWallet, Inc. The advice provided in this episode of Smart Money was for illustrative purposes only and not intended as financial or investment advice specific to your personal facts or circumstances. In their conversation, the Nerds discuss: financial planning session, budgeting, debt management, savings, spending habits, financial goals, high yield savings accounts, ways to curb spending habits, financial planning session, how to manage debt effectively, strategies for paying off credit card debt, how to curb spending, budgeting apps, Uber Eats, Uber habits, splurging, what it’s like working with a financial advisor, impulse buying, lifestyle creep, money mindset, spending habits, financial goals, and actionable financial strategies. To send the Nerds your money questions, call or text the Nerd hotline at 901-730-6373 or email podcast@nerdwallet.com. Like what you hear? Please leave us a review and tell a friend.
Transcript
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Welcome to NerdWallet's Smart Money Podcast, where you send us your money questions and
we answer them with the help of our genius nerds. I'm Sean Piles. You've heard us say
many times on this podcast, episode after episode, that we are not here to give you
individualized personal finance advice. Except this episode, we're going to be doing exactly
that. A few weeks ago, you may remember that we put out a call inviting you, dear listener,
to contact us if you want a financial planning session and allow us to record that session.
Lots of you contacted us, and today we're going to hear from one of you.
We're coming to you from a studio in Chicago where our listener lives.
But before we get into that, I'd like to introduce you to Magda Domini.
She's a certified financial planner from the NerdWallet Advisors platform.
One thing I want to be clear about is that Magda and NerdWallet Advisors are a distinct
platform from NerdWallet.
Magda will give our listeners some specific advice to improve their finances, and that
advice will be given on behalf of NerdWallet Advisors, not NerdWallet.
Also, we want to mention that in exchange for participating in this series, our listener
is receiving a one-year membership to the NerdWallet Advisors platform.
Magda, welcome to Smart Money. Thanks, Sean. So tell us a bit about NerdWallet Advisors and your role there. Sure. So I'm an advisor with NerdWallet Advisors, and what we offer is
affordable financial planning memberships where you get access to a certified financial planner
like me, and that's for a low monthly fee. And what we do is we'll do a review of your finances
and we'll create a financial plan with some bite-sized action items that you can really
start to take action on quickly. And you'll get unlimited access to myself or your planner with
calls or a chat function in any capacity. Great. So how long have you been an advisor?
I've been in this industry for about 15 years now. I got my CFP certification back in 2016,
but I've been advising clients for about 12 years now. And I've kind of considered myself
a finance nerd since I can remember. Love to hear it. So have you ever
recorded one of your sessions for a podcast? I have never done that, but I am very grateful
to be here and excited that we can talk finance
and folks might learn a thing or two.
All right, well, I think it's time
to get to some financial advising.
In a moment, our conversation
with a listener here in Chicago.
Stay with us.
Okay, let's get to our guest star for this episode.
Brinker is a smart money listener here in Chicago.
She's 30 and lives in an area of the
city called South Loop. She's here with us now in studio. Brinker, we are delighted to have you on
Smart Money. Hi, Sean. Thanks so much for inviting me. I really appreciate it today. Oh, we appreciate
your time too. So tell us a bit about yourself. I mean, what do you do for work? What's your living
situation like? Like, what do you do for fun? All of those things. Yeah. So I'm an executive
assistant. I work in affordable housing.
It's really fun.
I love helping people.
And when I'm not helping, you know, people just kind of keep their day-to-day together.
I have a lot of fun with my dog.
She's a Yorkie.
Her name is Penny.
She's the sweetest little peach in the world.
What do you do for fun around the city? I mean, especially in the summertime, like we're talking right now, there are a lot of
things to do in Chicago.
Yeah.
I stay inside and rot.
No, you know, I love to be outside.
Me and Penny go on very long walks and I love to spend time with my mom and my cousins.
Just kind of family time overall.
And just kind of like,
just enjoy the hot weather
before it gets frigid and just unbearable.
Coming from living in Chicago for years,
yes, I totally understand that.
It's rough.
The winter's gonna be rough.
Totally.
Okay, so let's turn to money.
I'd like to hear about what kind of money lessons
you learned growing up.
Like how are your family finances managed?
Ooh, gosh.
You know, I don't think I had any specific lessons,
which is probably why I'm kind of here today.
It was more like my dad was a
breadwinner and my parents had a production company back in the early 2000s, 90s. So they
were entrepreneurs and business owners. That was great, you know, until they got divorced in like
2004. It was about nine and I kind of saw my dad, you know, just kind of, you know, exit the family. And it was just my mom and I.
She's a stay-at-home mom.
And it was just kind of, well, how do we survive, you know, if dad's not here, who's going to make money?
And it came down to essentially just being on food stamps a lot of the time.
There's occasionally, yeah, it's okay.
You know, it's character building, I guess.
There was a couple times when maybe the electricity was off.
We didn't have the luxuries like being able to have cable TV back in the day and way before the streamers.
So it was a weird childhood growing up because I also went to private school. And it was like, I'm seeing all of these children and who are my age back in the day
who are, you know, having these very luxurious experiences going on these nice vacations and
that kind of thing. And then I come home and like, ooh, we have food in the house, you know.
And it was kind of a weird way to grow up, to be surrounded by people who came from wealthy
families. And then I myself was not, you know, things just really fell
off once my parents got divorced. How do you think that upbringing, being around so much money in
school and coming home and not having as much affected the way that you view money now? Yeah,
so it's definitely altered my little lizard brain, unfortunately. Some for the good, some for the bad.
For the good, it's kind of set a bar of how I would like to live and how I feel comfortable
living and that kind of thing and how I strive to, you know, whether it's make money in my career or just kind of maybe a
lifestyle, you know, maybe we see on social media, you know, a lot of the, you know, glitz and glam,
even though those are usually highlight reels, that's sometimes how people live. And that's kind
of been the standard that I've set myself for. Aspirational. Yeah, it's very aspirational. And I think it's helped me out a lot in terms of how I want to
tackle my career and how much money I want to make. And it's, at the end of the day, not been
the best. I've been trying to live within my means. I don't own any real designer items. I mean,
I've got like a vintage indie bag from Poshmark know, it's never been like going to buy one of the $10,000 Chanel bags, you know, I don't go to vacation in Monaco or anything like that.
But you wanted to have nicer things because you saw this growing up.
Exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, so how would you describe your finances now just broadly?
Ooh, irresponsible.
I am so irresponsible. It actually angers me because
I've tried to slow down on my spending and I've tried to adopt better habits,
but for whatever reason, it's just like swipe the card, ching, you know, whether it's just me,
just blindly shopping online, late night scrolls, you know, I just realized, ooh,
probably shouldn't have bought a $50 item at two o'clock in the morning.
So it seems like you are in conflict with yourself sometimes.
You know what you ought to be doing, the responsible quote unquote thing to be doing, but then your actions are taking you in another direction.
Yeah, totally contradicts everything I want to do.
I hate it.
Yeah.
Well, you wrote to us about some challenging debt that you are working through right now.
Talk with us about that.
Ooh, oh my gosh. So this has kind of been a long road of how I got here. And I can kind of pinpoint
exactly where it started and why it's happened, why it snowballed. But essentially, a very long
story short, I'll probably try to do the SparkNotes edition of it. I ended up moving into
a complex called River City, one of Chicago's kind
of more famous architecture buildings, that kind of thing. I think my rent was like $19.95. And so
I was fortunate enough to, during the part of the pandemic, stay with my mom and save up a little
bit. But the amount of money it cost me to get into that building, I used a company called the
Guarantors, which is a lovely company.
Helps people who, you know, don't have maybe the 700 credit score that all the landlords really want you to have.
Or anything in collections, that kind of thing.
I used them.
So they charge a service fee more or less.
They want to hold this amount of rent.
A security deposit?
Yeah, for a security deposit.
Yes, thank you.
And then I had to also pay the additional building fees,
which was another security deposit
and dog fees, move-in fees, that kind of thing.
So all of the money that I'd really saved over COVID
just kind of went down the drain there.
And I didn't think that anything of it,
I was like, oh, spend it back, get it right back.
It'll be fine. It was not fine. Yeah, and how't think that anything of it. I was like, oh, spend it back, get it right back. It'll be fine.
It was not fine.
Yeah.
And how long has that been going on for that you've been dwindling your savings and now
you find yourself in a tough spot financially?
That was basically the starting of it.
You know, I emptied out my savings and was never able to recover.
So it's been a few years.
It's been some years.
Yeah.
Well, let's talk about your financial goals.
Do you have any specific financial goals right now besides resolving your debt?
How would you say you are making progress on them or not?
Sure.
I would say some of my goals are savings for sure.
I would really like to just kind of save in general at some point in the near-ish future, maybe like five years.
I'd love to make a move abroad.
And so that costs money.
And so whether that's finding a flat and paying whatever visa fees that need to be paid, I would like to save, you know, 30, maybe 40 grand, give myself a cushion.
And then I would also like to save and, you know, get this debt out of the way because it's about 25K, but it's, you know, a monster when, you know, you have to pay it, you know.
It weighs on you financially, personally, emotionally.
It does, yes.
Okay.
Well, have you ever used a financial advisor before? I have not personally, emotionally. It does, yes. Okay. Well, have you
ever used a financial advisor before? I have not. No, this will be a first. Okay, great. Well,
Brinker, I know that you two have been sitting across from each other for a little while now,
but let me officially introduce you. Brinker, Magda. Magda, Brinker. So Magda, I'm curious if
you have any initial thoughts about Brinker's finances based on what we've just been discussing.
Yeah, I think initially your situation I've heard before in bits and pieces.
And it is so hard to come from a upbringing of not having a lot and being surrounded by people that do because it's always the, well, how did they do that?
Why can't I have that?
And that really, A, can be really motivating,
and it sounds like it was for you in your career to be like, I want to get that.
Because looking at some of the, and we'll get into it,
but your income is actually pretty good.
And it's great that you have a
motivation to excel your career and earn a high income because that's going to really help your
finances. But ultimately, I think what also happens with that is what's called lifestyle creep,
right? And that is the first thing that I noticed that I think you even, you're saying it in
different words, right? You are
making money and you deserve to spend it. And that is absolutely true. You do deserve to spend it.
It's all about taking into considerations what you're trying to accomplish in conjunction with
what you want to spend. So if you have goals like saving for a trip or one that will impose on
everyone, which is retiring, we just need to figure out how we can still enjoy life.
I don't ever want to be somebody who sits and says,
you just can't spend any of your money.
That's no fun.
It's just about figuring out how we can fit that lifestyle in
and still accomplish your goals.
And so I think we can talk about ways to do that.
Yeah.
So Brinker, how thoughtful or intentional or not
are you around the lifestyle creep that you've been experiencing?
Ooh, it's been not thoughtful in the case that I've been just going full force into lifestyle creep.
But then it's been thoughtful in a way of, ooh, it's happening.
How do I stop it?
In the rear view mirror.
Well, I'm really interested in that dynamic, this push and pull that you have internally where you know, okay, I probably shouldn't be swiping this day.
But then you do it anyway.
So what is that internal monologue like?
Like, how do you justify it when you're having a day
where you're like, I just want to buy this thing?
You know, I think I just go for it.
And I, you know, I see honestly
that it's made a small dent in my account,
but not so much where I'm going to, you know,
be eating ramen noodles for the next, you know,
13, 14 days while I'm waiting for my next check.
I'm kind of in the mindset of, unfortunately, again, spend a check, get it right back.
And as long as my account's not at zero, I can afford it theoretically.
Let's talk about that check.
How much do you have coming in on a biweekly or monthly basis?
Yeah, so I get paid semi-monthly. So for me, it's the 15th and about the 30th of every month.
And it comes out to about $2,900.
Okay, each paycheck?
Yes.
And then what's your rent currently?
$1,895.
And then at the end of the month, are you finding yourself left over with much or is a lot of it going toward your current debt payments. So I do not have anything left over
because of my egregious spending habits
and shopping and whatnot and Uber Eats, et cetera.
So besides the pre-arranged payment plan
that I'm already on,
not really tackling the debt like I'd like to.
So there's a lot to pick apart here.
Have you ever used anything like a budgeting app
or budgeting template, something to break down where your money is going on a monthly basis? So you get
that sort of high level and also detailed view. I just started using the Monarch app, which seems
to be really great. There's a lot that I had to kind of go in and toggle myself, but it gives me
a really good kind of overall view of where my money's going. So I've spent a lot of money since January on Uber between Uber Eats and Uber itself,
which is about $3,500.
Okay.
Not awesome.
Yep.
So it says shopping is kind of like the next, the third biggest group.
It says I've only spent $802 on shopping.
I would say, you know, maybe-
You know what?
Let me double check. Oh, yes. In the month of July. Got it. Thank you. Yes. I just want to say, year to date, you know, maybe this month. You know what? Let me let me double check.
Oh, yes.
In the month of July.
Thank you.
Yes.
I just want to say you're to date.
That's pretty good.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
A single month.
Yes.
No.
Yeah.
So that's yeah.
So for the month of July, it's been about 800 bucks.
Travel and lifestyle for the month of July has been about 796.
I mean, my goodness, we're only in the 15th.
Food and dining, $367.
I'm assuming they're
counting Instacart or any type of
Aldi's run I do.
Health and wellness, which is
$286. That
includes my personal trainer
and gym membership.
Is a personal trainer necessary?
Probably not.
And then the rest is like bills, utilities.
It's got auto and transport in there.
I don't drive.
Pretty detailed breakdown, though.
Yeah, it's very detailed.
So, Magda, hearing these numbers, let's think about these, chew on these numbers a bit and get to your analysis and advice.
What is the first thing that comes to mind as you're hearing Brinker talk through these expenses and all that? Yeah. So first, when I just do a basic calculation,
you're about $500 away from already spending your paycheck right now.
That's spot on. Okay. Which is something that you're saying. So
there's two things that we would want to think about with kind of what you're describing. There's the debt and how do we handle it and what do we do with it?
But I, for the beginning parts of this stage of really deciding, like, I want to make a change.
I want to do something different.
I actually want to prioritize your spending because focusing on getting rid of your debt quickly or having a quick fix tends to not solve your long-term problem
if we don't fix the habits that created the debt, right? And I find that if folks will
cut out the debt for three or four of their 10 cards, then they go, oh, I have $5,000 I can spend,
and we go right there. So it's not as though I don't want to tackle that.
And I want to talk about that in a moment.
But the first thing I want to tackle is your spending and what's happening here.
So I'm super excited that you signed up for an app and that you can actually do the work
and look at it.
Because the first part of this process is actually understanding that dollars in and
dollars out.
And it is work.
People think, oh, I'll just plug in my stuff and everything shows up and I can see everything.
And that's not always true.
Like you have to mentally go in there and kind of categorize it and make sure it's accurate,
which is what you're starting to do.
For you, though, depending on how this goes, I also want to talk about some behavioral
changes that you can do that actually wouldn't require the app and it would be
supplemental to that process. So one thing that came to mind when you were talking about shopping
is that it sounds like right after you do it or shortly after you do it, you almost say,
why did I do that? And so something that I would challenge you to do is create one day a week,
that's your return day. Every Sunday, you sit down, you look at what you bought and you return as much of whatever it is
that you just bought that you said after you bought it do i really need this right there you
could save maybe hundreds of dollars by actually taking action on what your internal body had
already said like why did i do this most of the things you purchase can be returned um i had a
dollar for every time i'm there handing that thing back to them, I'd be a lot wealthier.
So that's one thing that you could try to implement is pick a day that you do returns.
I have another question for you, Brinker.
So going to the why did I buy that question, what is your answer to that usually?
I justify it by saying, you know, if it's a piece of clothing, it's I'm trying to keep my wardrobe as updated.
I'm a big furniture person as well.
And I just constantly rotate things in and out of my space.
And so I just usually think to myself, OK, well, you know, this is my current desk is ugly.
Let me get a cute looking desk, maybe something that's a little more functional, which the functional aspect of it is what trips me up because it's just a desk.
Like I have two screens on it, my laptop.
That's it.
I just need a surface.
I don't need something that's hundreds of dollars.
Yeah.
You can rationalize this, but then you still have that impulse to make that purchase, right?
Correct.
Yeah.
Have you found any techniques to try to curb your spending?
Yes. So I implemented minimalism years ago.
I mean, like we're talking maybe like 2017.
And back then I was working and I mean, like it wasn't my official big girl job,
but minimal, excuse me, minimalism really helped me curb off that, you know,
to just keep me at the bare minimum of what do I actually need? Food, water, okay, can I wear this t-shirt more than five times without it disintegrating? Okay, maybe instead of spending $7 on a t-shirt from a fast fashion, maybe I just do $48 or $30 or something like that so that I can keep re-wearing the t-shirt over and over again. Minimalism really helped me just kind of like honestly live better and make better choices.
But then what happened?
When we get the lifestyle creep that I've been experiencing, especially with like a
big girl job and my own, you know, adult money and that kind of thing, then I'm like, okay,
well, instead of just, you know, kind of stereotypically sticking to maybe like
black white and gray for like a minimalism aesthetic you know uh I can get color and like
a lot of clothing comes in different colors and styles and patterns and I'm like I need it all
like give me all of it well I want to ask you one question about what you said which is that I need
it all um that word is something that I think sometimes we say to ourselves so loosely, but we
all know that, and you would say, you don't need it. What is the word that we actually are saying?
We want it. And so I do think if there's time at all during any exercise of purchasing,
a funny story I tell a lot of clients is that when I was in high school, which tells you a lot about
me, I would go to a store with my girlfriends, usually Target, and everyone would be ready
to check out. And I would make everyone stop before we checked out and take one
thing out of their cart. Because I said, there's no way you made it through this whole store
without putting in something in there that either A, you didn't come for, or B, you don't actually
need. So the exercise of just pausing for one minute before you purchase anything
to ask really need versus want. I'm also someone who loves to shop online and can buy myself buying
things that I don't need. Two things that have worked for me are one, just remembering that
I truly have enough and that word enough has been really beneficial. And when I forget that I have
enough, sometimes I will go to where my enough is,
which is my closet.
Just looking at my stuff, I'll be like,
oh yeah, I actually do not have space for anything more
because my house is tiny and so is my closet.
Have you ever tried anything like that
just to curb yourself physically
from pressing the buy button?
Ooh, so no, but you know what?
I resonate with the word enough
because I think based on the way I grew up, I always felt, whether I wasn't enough or I didn't have enough, that kind
of thing, it's kind of translated into adulthood as I want it all. I need it all, you know?
The one last thing that I'll say in this context, these are all just, you know, ideas of things for
you to think about and what you think will ultimately help you
potentially change some of these habits. But, you know, if we decide that your goal is to go abroad
and that's really something that you're committed to, we can create a separate savings account for
that. And the exercise every time you buy something could be, do I want to fund my trip or do I want
to buy X? And what you could do if you can catch yourself is say, oh, $50 item or $50.
I'll just transfer it from my bank account into my fund.
And it sits there.
And you can slowly, hopefully, see it growing.
And you can really, in real time, see the tradeoff between $50, $100, X, and your fund
growing to go study abroad.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Let's turn to your debt.
So talk us through what you have, how you got there.
You have a few different forms.
It's a little complicated.
Yes, definitely.
Let me pull that.
So I have quite a few personal loans, credit cards.
What is quite a few?
Ooh, let's count them up.
Let's see.
About three. Personal loans. loans uh credit card what is quite a few oh let's count them up let's see about three personal loans and these are personal loans that are covering consumer purchases yeah um and then i have about
five uh credit cards that have gone into collections and then your balances
so it looks like all of them are under $500.
I have something from Mission Lane, $460.
Nordstrom, $380.
Apparently, $28 on a Capital One credit card,
which don't know how that slipped through,
but it did, unfortunately.
And I definitely think, you know, there's,
you may have heard there's two different ways to kind of think about your debt.
The avalanche and snowball method are the two pretty common ways.
One of them being where you could tackle some of these smaller debts that, you know, the $28, $59, and just get rid of them so that you just feel a little bit of weight.
It consolidates it a little bit for you artificially. And then the other one would be to tackle just your highest interest
rate debt, regardless of its size. I think for you, I would definitely want to prioritize some
of these smaller debts first. I think it would be a weight off your shoulders. And frankly,
this seems attainable to me based on your income. With just some tweaks to
your lifestyle, I think there would be no problem in tackling maybe five of these in two months.
Because I know that if we're talking about behaviors of shopping, I mean, we could probably return
five of the items you bought over the last two weeks and pay down three of these cards.
You would be correct.
Yeah, right, right.
And I was just thinking of a home goods purchase I made this weekend, which it was about $65.
And well, there goes some of that.
Almost two cards right there.
And so I think that's really encouraging to me and should be really encouraging to you is that we could tackle a lot of these.
My matter of fact here would be that if you even have access to these cards, those go bye-bye.
It doesn't necessarily mean you have to close them per se, but just throw them in the door and lock.
We just don't want to use them anymore. And then we would slowly start to tackle
some of these higher balance ones after that.
Okay.
Yeah.
I mean, one of the challenges
that you've been experiencing, Brinker,
is like knowing what you should be doing
and then doing what you shouldn't be doing.
Yeah.
And with debt payoff,
it seems like that is still a hard thing to get over.
So do you have any advice for Brinker, Magda,
around how she could maybe
readjust habits to actually make the progress, return the item, pay off the debt? I think one
strategy, at least for returning the items, would be a dedicated time. And it would be really
exciting to have a spreadsheet and be delete, delete, right? So motivation to pick a day,
do some refunds or returns. And then the other one,
that's a big one for a lot of people is Uber Eats and or Uber. For Uber Eats, especially
one suggestion I would have is that we can talk about how many times a week you usually get Uber
Eats. How many, how many times or how many times do you go out to eat or order in?
So order in, oh gosh, maybe twice a week. Depends on how busy my schedule is from work.
Depends on how lazy and tired I am. It's not helping my health all the time. And I'm super
aware that I overspend it on Uber. So I definitely know that it needs to get cut way back.
So for an Uber, you know, maybe we could come up with a number of rides per week and you get,
I don't, we'd have to figure out what works for you, but three rides a week. You can decide when
you want to use that, whether that's going out for fun, whether that's getting to the office,
whatever it is. And when you hit your three, we got to figure out public transportation
or walking for the remainder of the week.
And it's fairly easy to track.
Maybe three is not the right one,
but the number we want to pick is less,
much less than what you're doing regularly.
And then you can, you know,
if you use your first two by Tuesday,
it's a conscious decision you're making
and you know, all right,
I only get one more for the rest of the week.
So I have to plan.
And that's really what this boils down to is making conscious decisions, even just on a
weekly basis of how do we think through what I'm doing so that I can make the right financial
decision. And that's like a no less using less of your brain to try and do it. Yeah, that makes
sense. So how do you track habits that you have
in your life, whether it's around shopping, going out? I wing it. Yeah, I don't. I don't track
habits probably as much as I should. I do think one, we should write them down. So I think the
start would be a budgeting app and we can see how that goes. Some people find them overwhelming and
then they just turn it down and say like, all right, forget it.
This isn't working for me.
That is some people.
Some people thrive off of that stuff.
You get super excited.
They'll send you a note like you're about to overspend
and you say, oh great, this notified me.
So I would say I would wanna start there.
The second one would be,
we would come up with your set goals
and track them for a month.
Just like you said you had a personal
trainer that takes a lot of commitment, right? You going in there and you doing, putting in that
hard work, you got to get your butt up and you got to go there. You got to work out and all that.
It's not any dissimilar from this is that you got to create a plan and start executing on it.
Yeah. Makes sense. So I want to get into some specific recommendations
that you have. Magda, if you could list maybe the top three things that you would recommend
Brinker do as specific as you can get. Let's hear them. So I think we touched on a little bit of it,
but the very first thing that I would want to tackle is to do a deep dive as you've done
with your budgeting app and actually confirm exactly
how much you are spending on average per month, figure out your top spending categories,
and come up with the right strategy for you on how to bring that down.
The second one would be any dollars that we save after that first month would be make
sure we chip away at a handful of those small
credit cards and just get rid of them. And at the same time, I would want to set up at minimum an
auto payment from your checking account into a high yield savings account that goes in at maybe
$25 a month is what we would start with. The point is to build a habit because
while we have debt, we're never going to get out of the cycle if we also don't start saving some
of our money. So getting a separate savings account so we can start to build an emergency fund.
Do you have a high-yield savings account currently?
I do not.
Okay. Well, it is my obligation as a nerd to direct you to nerdwallet.com where we have
plenty of pages where you can shop around for the best ones. We update these pages monthly.
They're super easy to open
and they'll earn you a lot more interest on your cash
that's just growing as you make these auto deposits
over time versus a standard savings account.
So I do highly recommend checking that out.
All right, will do.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Well, Brinker, as we wrap up,
do you feel like you have maybe more of a handle
on what you want to do with your finances?
I do, absolutely. You know what? I feel like I have a really good roadmap handle on what you want to do with your finances? I do, absolutely.
You know what?
I feel like I have a really good roadmap so far and I'm ready to tackle it.
I've been feeling like I've needed help for a very long time and haven't been sure where to start, etc.
So now we've got hopefully a game plan so that I can stick to it and tackle some of these goals.
Great.
Well, one thing I want to emphasize, too, is that this is just your first conversation with Magda.
You'll be working together
as you have this year-long membership
in NerdWild Advisors.
So reach out to her.
She's a great resource for you
and you don't have to go through this alone.
So that's one great thing too.
Yeah, sounds good.
Well, thanks, Sean.
Thanks, Magda.
I really appreciate it.
And that's all we have for this episode.
Remember, listener,
that we are here for you
and your money questions.
So turn to the nerds and call or text us on the nerd hotline at 901-730-6373.
That's 901-730-NERD.
You can also email us at podcast at nerdwallet.com.
Also, visit nerdwallet.com slash podcast for more info on this episode.
And remember that you can follow the show on your favorite podcast app,
including Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and iHeartRadio to automatically download new episodes. To learn more about Nerd
Wallet Advisors, go to nerdwalletadvisors.com slash smart dash money. Here's our brief disclaimer. I
am not a financial or investment advisor. This nerdy info is provided for general educational
and entertainment purposes and may not apply to your specific circumstances. This episode was
produced by Tess Viglin, Cody Goff, and myself.
A special thanks to Magda Domini, Georgia McIntyre, and Emily Canedo.
And a big thank you to NerdWallet's editors for all their help.
And with that said, until next time, turn to the nerds.
NerdWallet Advisory LLC, DBA, NerdWallet Advisors, is an SEC-registered investment advisor and
wholly owned subsidiary of NerdWallet Inc.
The advice provided in this episode of Smart Money was for illustrative purposes only and not intended as financial or investment advice specific to your personal facts or circumstances.