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Suze Orman Book Free on Oprah site
Suze Orman's 2009 book is now available as a free download from Oprah's website, it's a pdf file.
http://www.oprah.com/article/oprahsh...s_bookdownload |
If you're a kindle user download it to your pc and email it to your kindle... I've only gone through a few pages but it looks fine (other than the TOC, pfft).
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However, I was a little irked they didn't make the Kindle version free to download (with 1.1 million download of her last PDF ebook in only 33 hours, I doubt doing so would affect sales on Kindle, since it's free for a week on her site and is easily converted for the Kindle). It's definitely not work $8 to get the TOC, but some may feel it is for the "lifetime library" (not me, I'll make backups). |
The last time they did a free Suze Orman book it was free on Amazon for the Kindle, too. That was even before Oprah decided it was her favorite gadget.
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Got the download
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Thanks for the tip! :) I downloaded it for my Sony PRS-500, but I have problems reading PDF on it (the text is TOO SMALL for me). Any tips to make PDFs more readable? :blink: I just bought a PRS-505, but it's "in the mail", and I don't know if that will help me. |
I just snagged it. I probably know all the tips and such anyway but it's always good to have a new swift kick in the butt :)
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Probably more suited to a US audience than an Australian but I see how it is. |
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The 505 will reflow the PDF book... not perfect but it will make the font size readable. But, if there are charts/graphs which I expect there are they won't translate very well. BOb |
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Actually, for Suze, it's a change. She finally tells you to pay off your credit cards first, before trying to build an emergency fund (but don't close them, as that lowers your FICO score, which can affect rates and ability to get a rental when you lose the house). Always before she had people building a fund while paying off cards and paying little cards off to "feel better" - now it's the much better fiscal advice: pay off all your high debt first, eliminate all WANTS from spending until all non-secured debt is gone (credit cards, loans against 401K's, etc). Don't stop putting money into retirement accounts (after all, this is your chance to use a way-back machine and buy at 1998 stock prices). Basically, quit being a baby and buying everything on impulse, get out of debt and build up an 8 month nest egg (her estimate of how long you'll be out of work if laid off). Oprah's show had 225 people with CC debt, totaling over $2.29 million. About $10K each, but they also had ringers there that had written in (on gal had $80 in CC debt, plus had borrowed about 30K from her 401K; another couple had about 80K in CC debt and $200 in savings, no retirement, etc). Here's her challenge: 1) Don't spend any money for a day. (this one's easy, we go many days without spending, so I'll pick one and call it done). 2) Don't use any credit cards for a week. (a little harder, but we'll just fill up the car and then stay home a week and off of amazon; of course, that mean's I'll pay more and use more gas to buy locally and spend cash ... maybe this one doesn't really work for us). 3) No restaurants for a month (I think her entire audience gave up at this - Actually I've done this many times, long ago due to both habit and expenses and more recently for other reasons. At the least, it'll vastly lower the food poisoning cases in the US and those who do this will probably save at least $300 per person per month, since you can easily eat for $10 less per day vs. just one meal out a day; some may save a thousand a month per person). |
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I'm actually really good financially- one credit card that gets paid off every month, and I have a budget, an emergency fund and other funds. But sometimes in these books there are little hidden gem ideas. |
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I currently carry no credit card debt, have no car loans and am paying double house payments (doubling principle) amount each month. I can't wait for my mortgage burning... I hope it's before I am 50. One good tip is to find an extra $100 by cutting out luxuries... and applying it to your highest balance credit card. Once that is paid off, roll all that to the next one then the next. Eventually you will be paying them off faster... once done start applying them to your mortgage if you have one. The only savings you should be doing while in debt (in my opinion) is to maximize 401K match. That is usually the best ROI you will every get.... unless you are a stock market guru. BOb EDIT: Of course debt payoff plan only works if you STOP using the credit cards. |
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You've just described the snowball method. I have to say though I think its a good thing to save some emergency cash while paying off cards, just in case. Then once those are done worry about the 401k (and max it out!) I don't want to pay my mortgage off early since I probably will only stay there for a couple years. My rate will be around 5%, so my money is better of in the stock market long term where I can earn 8-12% |
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BOb |
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For the first part, you're right. It depends on what someone feel more comfortable with. With the stock market, I'm viewing in long term (decades). Lets not talk about this year... |
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