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Pay as you go with the 'a la carte method' of spending

Posted Jun 16 2008, 03:47 PM by Karen Datko
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Would you order a six-course meal if you planned to eat only the salad and dessert? No. You'd order a la carte.

Apply the same concept to the subscriptions you pay for, suggests Ramit Sethi at I Will Teach You To Be Rich. That includes services like cable, TiVo, cell phones and that underused gym membership. Ramit writes: "In fact, in one remarkable study of three health clubs, two researchers from Stanford and Berkeley showed that gym members overestimate how much they'll use their gym membership by over 70%."

You can pay as you go for workout sessions, TV programs and songs (from iTunes), and other services you now buy in bulk. And may we suggest a prepaid cell phone?

What are the benefits? You get what you pay for, and you're more aware of what you spend. Ramit adds, "You will value whatever you're buying if you're actively spending out of your pocket, rather than an invisible subscription."

The downside, of course, is that less of your life will be on autopilot. Of course, that's not necessarily a bad thing.

Ramit explains how you can try his "a la carte method" for two months and see if it makes financial sense for you.

His readers had mixed reviews of his method. Those who liked it pointed out other ways to downsize the cost of cable and other subscriptions. We think they're definitely worth your time to check out.

We particularly enjoyed the comment from Rita, who compared a major expenditure she made to a very expensive contract.

She said: "We bought a hot tub when we built our house and I didn't want it because it's very expensive and I thought we'd never use it. Sure enough, in three years we've used it exactly three times. I tease my husband when he uses it that it was a thousand-dollar bath he just took."

Comments

 

GAS IS REDICULOUS!!!!!!! COST OF FOOD IS REDICULOUS!!!!!!! I HAVE ABOUT RESIGNED TO THE FACT THAT WE MAY HAVE TO LIVE OFF OF CRACKERS AND WATER! OH WELL, AT LEAST MY 4YR. OLD LOVES CRACKERS! I'M TO THE POINT I'M NOT GOING ANYWHERE THIS SUMMER, I'M NOT BUYING OR SPENDING UNLESS I AM IN DESPERATE NEED OF SOMETHING. PERIOD. I THINK EVERYONE SHOULD JUST SHUT DOWN. QUIT BUYING CLOTHES, ACCESSORIES, ELECTRONICS ETC. ONLY BUY FOOD YOU IMMEDIATELY NEED, AND ONLY DRIVE WHEN ABSOLUTELY NECCESSARY! SEE HOW THE GOVERNMENT LIKES THAT ONE!

As a poor Social Worker, I haven't had cable for years. I buy and rent inexpensive movies. Sure I have to wait longer to see the good ones but having one less bill in my mailbox means a lot. I utilize the library which is a short distance from my home to check out books and movies for my grandchildren. I drive a 10 year old car. I keep my blinds pulled on sunny days and the summer and open on sunny days in the winter. All the articles on read on cutting costs suggest many of the same things I've been doing for years as I worked my way through college while on Social Security Disability.

People just need to be smarter and and recognize what they will and won't use.  It wouldn't be practical for my husband and I to get prepaid phones because we use our phones too much and we're better off with a plan that allots us that many minutes.  A gym membership, on the other hand, I'm quite certain we would pay more for the membership than we would per visit, because we just wouldn't go enough.  Instead of either, we just bought a used treadmill in great condition on craigslist for $75.  Not a complete workout, but try comparing that to a gym membership for 2 people.

To all the people that sign up for a gym membership and use it once or twice....the new years resolution people and the other group that starts to work out before summer to get that "slim and muscular" build for the beach. Dont blame the health clubs for charging 300-400 a year. If you worked out consistently (three times a week), like you intended, it is a good deal. It's "your" lack of committment that makes if sound like a waste of money

This economy will make us all leaner and meaner...not a bad thing.  My spouse changed jobs recently and 5 WEEKS later the new company layed off about 20% of their employees, including the new guy.  I went through all our bills, cable, land line, cell phones, etc... and scaled back where I could.  You'd be amazed at how much fat can be trimmed, like paying and extra $60/mo for unltd long distance when we each have it on our cell phones already.  I dumped premium channels like HBO because we only watched it for The Wire and The Sopranos. Perspective is everything.

Tough times or not, we Americans are a pretty blessed bunch.

This method might work for someone who blindly signs up for subscriptions.  We have internet, cable and phone bundled together, Netflix, gym and cellphones.  I just did the math after reading this article and the linked article and I think we'd be losing money if we paid as we went.  We go to the gym a lot and their day pass is $10 so for both of us that's $20 a trip.  We go three or more times a week and the membership is $60 a month for both of us.  This is more of a suggestion than a budget plan.  

So true about the money you can save on those cell phones. Both me and my husband just have the 'pay as you go' phones and they do the job well. We pay $25.00 for 3 mths and we always have extra minutes as calls a re free between us and whoever has the same cell company. The simple life...what a dream

Try raising a garden and canning or drying the surplus, (it doesn't take much space). Keep a few laying hens in the back yard,(you don't need a rooster for eggs), make your own yogurt , it is much less expensive, and tastes better. Also make your own bread, cookies and dog treats. I work full time and still manage to squeeze in these cost savers, of course I am not busy watching premium cable channels or texting on a fancy phone

I was laid off in April and I have cut the garbage bill, newspaper and telephone bill.  I have adjusted the car insurance and house insurance.    I have started clipping coupons on the things we use and saved about 300.00 dollars in grovery bills.  I have tried to think of everything I could to cut expenses.  I think I have made good decisions.

Try raising a garden and canning or drying the surplus, (it doesn't take much space). Keep a few laying hens in the back yard,(you don't need a rooster for eggs), make your own yogurt , it is much less expensive, and tastes better. Also make your own bread, cookies and dog treats. I work full time and still manage to squeeze in these cost savers, of course I am not busy watching premium cable channels or texting on a fancy phone

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This assumes:

1. That every person has a backyard

2. Every person lives in a neighborhood free of restrictions on keeping animals like chickens.

People can try container gardening but again that assumes they have space for it.

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