Alpha Consumer

How to Spend Like a Frugal Millionaire

By Kimberly Palmer

Posted: May 27, 2009

Today’s guest post comes from Jeff Lehman, author of The Frugal Millionaires.

Saving thousands while still spending.

Millionaires make up just 2 percent of the population. They get a bad rap during recessions for being wasteful with their money and are frequently used as examples of excess. It’s the millionaires that you don’t see that you can learn from in times like these. I call them the frugal millionaires and interviewed 70 of them to uncover ways we can all be smarter with money.

Nearly 70 percent of the economy is based on consumer spending. To keep the economy going we need to keep spending but not waste money in the process. This is where the frugal millionaires come in. They’ve been smart with their money all along and haven’t lost it all and had to remake it. These are the kind of people you want to learn from when it comes to spending your money.

Spending philosophy.

Frugal millionaires are unique thinkers when it comes to spending money: 1) they can easily delay their need for gratification when purchasing; 2) they are resourceful in getting what they want by carefully timing their consumer purchases; 3) they make living below their means painless; 4) they don’t like wasting anything (especially money); 5) their sense of “self-entitlement” is highly minimized: and 6) spending is OK with them…depending on what they are buying (think: appreciating vs. depreciating assets).

[For more, see, "10 Secrets of Millionaires' Money Management."]

Buying tips.

These millionaires keep more money than they spend, that’s why they are rich. Their tactics work for them so they’ll work even better for you. Key Point: They don’t view shopping as a sport. They shop efficiently and spend their time doing more important things with their lives. Here are their tips that will help you save while spending:

Cars: Buy used (or off lease) fuel-efficient cars, often with “certified pre-owned” warranties. This warranty can be better than a new car, plus the initial depreciation hit is avoided. Drive the car for a long time and never lease it.

Eating Out: Bring half of a meal home to eat later (this also saves the waistline). Eat at happy hours. Bring wine from home and skip dessert. Value food quality over expensive ambience.

Eating In: Eat better and less expensively by cooking at home. Make it a friends and family event. Get your kids involved. Bonus: You can have that extra drink without worrying about getting busted for driving under the influence. Also: buy day-old bread at the best bakery in town and freeze it. Eat oatmeal, because it’s the most cost-effective breakfast food. Get a supermarket “club card” and buy food on special. Play the game of trying to see how much of a discount can be saved off the total food bill.

Clothes: When you buy something new donate something used to charity. Buy traditional clothes, but wait for the off-season to acquire them. Go for high quality – not high price. Buy vintage clothing and avoid logo clothing and keep people guessing who the designer might be. Hint: There shouldn’t be one!

[For more, read: "Juggling Your Money in the Recession."]

Consumer Electronics: Buy low-end gear that has the basic functionality of the more expensive stuff. Don’t be the first to buy new technology. Wait at least one lifecycle so the bugs are worked out. Buy refurbished electronics whenever possible.

Computers: Buy more mainstream computers with proven technology. Select higher capacity hard drives, a decent amount of RAM (the memory that the program runs in) and a cost effective processor. Super fast doesn’t always equal super good…unless you are building airplanes or bridges. Laptops are a good compromise between desktops and netbooks. Don’t go through the pain of upgrading operating systems on existing computers, it’s not time efficient and you will probably go insane trying.

Going green: Being green and frugal go hand-in-hand. Yet frugal millionaires don’t readily fall for the trendy green hype machine. They typically buy green if it helps the environment and lowers their costs. They look at the timeframe when a product can pay for itself. They do use compact fluorescent lighting, turn off lights and equipment that isn’t being used, monitor AC and heat usage (with programmable thermostats), drive efficiently, live in “right-sized” homes and turn off the water when they aren’t brushing their teeth or washing dishes. Because they have trained themselves to not waste money they won’t waste anything else either. They get into good habits and keep them going. You can, too.

Amazing

I think the rich are the ones who help others out. they make the jobs so when our government takes the rich's money and gives it to the poor. the poor take the money and squander it because most of them are poor for a reason then all of the sudden there are no rich to create jobs, unemployment goes up and nobody has money not even the rich. the only people with money would then be the foreign people who are government pays to do stuff for them because they do things cheaper then all of the sudden are country has no money because our government sucked up all of our money tried to be smart and paid foreign people to do work for them a little cheaper and all of the sudden their taxpayers have no money to give them resulting in multi-trillion dollar debt!!!!!!!!! this is a great website read and learn!!!

Bob Dank of AR @ Oct 26, 2009 11:28:34 AM

"Nearly 70 percent of the economy is based on consumer spending"

"Nearly 70 percent of the economy is based on consumer spending"

This is a frequently misused factoid. The fact is that we don't measure produced goods until they're purchased by a consumer, so nothing we produce is added to the GNP calculation until a consumer spends money on it.

Here's an example: Company A makes a tire. Do you count that as GDP? Not yet! You have to wait till a consumer buys it. Otherwise, if it sits in a warehouse for 5 years and then gets recycled, you've counted something no one had any use for, and it's not really part of our productivity.

Let's say Company B buys it, instead of a consumer. Do you count it now? No. You may have to wait till Company C makes a wheel, and company D puts it on a car, and then Company E (a dealership) sells the car. Otherwise, you'd count the same tire 5 times: once each time someone added value to it by buying the previous group of items and doing something to them.

Another thing to keep in mind is that there are frugal millionaires (usually the low-millions group, typically those who built a small business into a good-sized business) and then there are the ones that can't hardly spend the money fast enough. That's a different ballgame entirely. (http://biz.yahoo.com/special/luxury083106_article1.html)

There were good insights in this article. But there's some other stuff too, and it's worth knowing the difference

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Alpha Consumer

Alpha Consumer

Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about how to save money, avoid scams, manage debt, and be a savvy shopper. Send your personal finance questions to her for expert money advice.


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