Holiday Humbug or Holiday Spendthrift - finding balance in your budget this season
Tips to Avoid the Pitfalls of Holiday Spending, from Questis Coach Kimberly Esse
If you’ve been to any craft stores lately (I have!) you know that Holiday décor has been out in full display for weeks now.?
While constant seller anticipation of the next holiday has come earlier and earlier (Starbucks started selling pumpkin spice lattes in August) it has become common and normalized. Why? Because it is effective. Consumers are starting the next season’s shopping sooner and sooner each year. According to a?Bankrate survey, “48% of holiday shoppers plan to start shopping before Halloween.?This includes 12% who plan to start by August 31, 13% in September, 24% in October, 37% in November, and 15% in December.” This means there is longer to shop for a holiday, and we are likely to spend more than we intend. We forget previous purchases or simply are not tracking what we are spending as closely. And who can blame us? When the holiday shopping season is perpetual, how can you keep track, anyway?
Sellers are successfully playing on our nostalgia and taking advantage of the ease of buying any time of day and receiving it overnight. The simplicity of buying and receiving is tempting and convenient. Can you think of the last span of time when a holiday or season was not being marketed to you in a way that had you longing for something you had not considered you needed? New winter boots, for example? A fully loaded coffee beverage, or a new kitchen tool? If it’s not one season, it’s another- and all cycles are meant to draw in your expendable dollars.?
As a financial coach, I see that fewer people have those expendable dollars. But increased marketing is causing more FOMO (Fear of missing out) than ever, and it is driving spending out of fear or anxiety rather than out of true joy, pleasure, or value. The result is that people are either feeling deprived or indulged and feeling guilty about it later. And the quality of goods purchased does not necessarily reflect the cost.?
Having a plan for your money, and your time, this Holiday Season (and all holiday seasons) can help you purchase things you truly value, which fit into your spending plan. I recommend a few tips to my clients in an effort to relieve the FOMO and to spend where it really counts:
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Think of spending more meaningfully and in alignment with what you value. This will help you put your valuable money where you most value it, but also away from companies that engage in predatory marketing, create subpar products, and are even ethically questionable (according to your own values and beliefs, which are subjective and up to you to choose).?
How to start a spending plan for the holidays
You could save for holiday or seasonal shopping each month, as a “line item” in your spending plan equal to the full amount you spend for holiday shopping each year. You can look at your previous shopping expenses for gifts for the year (including other holidays and birthdays), then divided it by twelve to get to an estimate of a monthly cost. You would not spend this amount each month; you would instead put that amount away in a separate savings or checking account (different from your day-to-day checking account) and save it for when you do make a gift or holiday purchase. The money would be there for you at any time. This helps you save all year and is there for you when you need it.?
Another popular option is to set aside the money for holidays 1-2 times a year, and simply put less towards other expenses or savings goals during those periods. This means you know you will spend or save less those months and account for that in your goals.?
Feel Empowered this Holiday Season
The key is not to be caught off guard by a credit card bill over multiple months of holiday spending. Instead, empower yourself with a spending plan that lets you spend on the holidays. Knowing you have a finite amount of money helps you be more strategic about purchases and lean into what is important to you, and what is not. You also can enjoy the holiday season unscathed because you had a plan for your money. It keeps you mindful AND wealthy (or, closer to it!)?