Anonymous wrote:She knows these type of extreme statements get her attention, air time, relevance, clicks, book sales, product sales. She’s interested in her wallet, not yours.
Use your brain, look at your financial picture, and enjoy your life on your terms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Suze Orman, with a net worth over $75 million, says the biggest waste of money is eating out. She never eats out and will never buy a cup of coffee.
Isn't this quite shocking, even for a financial guru?
Her choice.
But she isn't wrong. You can spend $.50 to make a great cup of coffee at home or pay $7 to get the same thing made for you. That's almost $200 savings per month per person.
I can shop at Whole Foods and make an extremely nice dinner for 4 for $30 (and a basic M-F dinner for $15 for 4). That same dinner in a restaurant would be $250 plus 20% tip.
Nice bottle of wine for $40-50 at home, same bottle would be $120-150 in restaurant.
Many rich people are surprisingly frugal. They don't just waste money because they have it.
They actively make decisions of what to spend their money on.
Anonymous wrote:That might be click bait overstatement, but she had a point. Eating out is a waste of money, but not the biggest.
Anonymous wrote:Suze Orman, with a net worth over $75 million, says the biggest waste of money is eating out. She never eats out and will never buy a cup of coffee.
Isn't this quite shocking, even for a financial guru?
Anonymous wrote:She knows these type of extreme statements get her attention, air time, relevance, clicks, book sales, product sales. She’s interested in her wallet, not yours.
Use your brain, look at your financial picture, and enjoy your life on your terms.