SortMe Money
Budgeting every dollar sucks. It's also impossible. Traditional budgeting apps ask you to pre-allocate "lunches: $80" or "kids' activities: $50" in January and expect reality to obey — one week leftovers are free, the next you're buying every day; one weekend the sun is out and the kids are at the park, the next you're paying for movies, ten-pin bowling and Sunday dinner. That's why most people who download a regular budgeting app abandon it within three months. SortMe Founder & CEO Carl Thompson and the SortMe team have spent more iterations than they can count rebuilding the budget around a simpler idea: your essentials are forecastable, your lifestyle isn't — so stop pretending they are. This episode walks through what's new in Budgeting v3, why splitting essentials from lifestyle changes how households actually use a budget, and the maths that makes a single Lifestyle cap one of the most powerful levers on a five-year mortgage cycle. In this episode: * The honest case against forecasting every dollar — and why traditional category-by-category budgeting drives a three-month abandonment problem * The core insight behind v3: mortgage, rates, power, water and broadband are forecastable; lunches, coffees, kids' activities and the weekend plan are not — and trying to budget both the same way is why budgets break * How Category Groups work — Household Essentials and Lifestyle Spending ship by default, you decide where the streaming sub and the gym membership land, and you can rename or add more groups so your reports follow how your household actually thinks * Managing at the right altitude: set a single $1,500/month cap on Lifestyle Spending and stop tracking whether lunch was $80 or $140 this week — or keep using category-level targets if you prefer line-level control (the split works either way) * The maths that makes the split worth setting up: $400/month redirected from lifestyle into the mortgage, KiwiSaver or a fund is $4,800 a year — $24,000 across a five-year fixed cycle, reallocated to assets * The five-step, ten-minute tune-up: confirm categories sit in the right group, rename or add groups, set a group cap (optional), adjust category-level budgets, and open the new reporting view * How the migration works — every existing account has been moved to v3 automatically, so the change is visible the moment you open SortMe * Where to get hands-on help — book time with Charlotte Barraclough, SortMe's Chief Customer Officer, via the Book Pro Help button at the top of your account Read the full article: sortme.com/post/budgeting-v3-essentials-vs-lifestyle
15 episodios
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