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8 Proven Purchases For Happiness

By Frugaling 8 Comments

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The Wolf Of Wall Street Movie Film

Happiness = Money, right?

Research suggests that happiness and money are poorly correlated. In other words, money doesn’t tend to make people happy. Pretty crazy, right? Everything about our society seems to be predicated around the synergy of these two variables. But most of the time, happiness is correlated to other behaviors (i.e., closeness to friends, enjoyment at work, and balance in life).

In this consumer-driven society, encouraged to buy from our very own presidents and leadership, we are primed and ready to spend and spend – well beyond our budgetary restrictions. Our world tends to eschew philosophical questions about why you need to have something, in favor of taking advantage of the present moment to spend.

Happiness is often a marketing tool, used to increase sales. For instance, a commercial may feature scantily-clad women partying with beers in hand. It doesn’t take a scientist to decipher the claim: drink more beer, get more women – prettier ones, too! But lasting happiness isn’t at the end of a bottle.

You’re Doing It Wrong

Wolf Of Wall Street Leonardo DiCaprioIn Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street, Jordan Belfort wreaks havoc on financial markets, his family, and to anyone else in his way. He has a ruthless charm, narcissism, and greed. He spends and drives recklessly. Jordan is the living embodiment of a metastasized compulsion to capitalism.

What our antagonist fails to understand is that happiness, purpose, and meaning are not contained within another $100 bill (or, however many millions he makes). Who can blame him, though? When a society values money like we do, and encourages spending without regard for the future, he’s actually playing by our rules.

Moreover, he’s not alone. Many struggle to understand and say “no” to a society that propagates this need to spend and make more money. But what if money did actually make you happy? What if there was a way to make these two things more correlated?

An Action-Plan For Money And Happiness

Newer research suggests that money can make you happy, but up until now we’ve been spending it wrong. All the beer, fast cars, and yachts can’t make us happy. Instead, happiness comes from some specific action-oriented spending.

  1. Take the trip, ditch the tchotchkes
    When it comes to happiness, buying material goods rarely suffices. Whatever positive emotions are initially experienced tend to fade rapidly over time. In fact, 57% of people reported greater happiness from experiential purchases versus 34% for those purchasing material goods.
  2. Give a little, give a lot – just give
    Researchers found that personal spending – buying for yourself – did not relate to long-term happiness. On the other hand, those who spent money on others acknowledged greater happiness. When you think about all of your expenses for a month, it might help to think about how much of that is going to help others.
  3. The tiny purchases are more important
    Unlike Jordan Belfort and his bags of cash, you’ll likely be restricted by current bank account balances. When you purchase expensive, rare items, there’s a finality and adjustment that occurs – a new norm develops. If you buy smaller, more frequent items, you actually can take advantage of novelty and variability – both key health indicators.
  4. Avoid extended warranties and overpriced insurance
    Turns out that there’s quite a lot of psychological evidence to suggest that buying extended warranties may be an unnecessary “emotional protection.” Essentially, because we do not want to lose/damage our new purchase, these warranties pull out an emotional response regarding loss. Most of the time, buying or reacting to this makes you spend more than you have to and occludes happiness.
  5. Delay gratification, consumption
    Researchers suggest that “anticipation” is a key ingredient to a healthy, happy purchase. By waiting to purchase and letting that eagerness build, we may actually enjoy it more when we finally have it. Likewise, by delaying purchases, consumers may spend less – or not at all.
  6. Clear pros and cons
    Looking to buy that dream home someday? Where do you envision it? Maybe you want to buy a dream lakehouse? Researchers found that many people tend to downplay the negatives of an imagined purchase. What about the tax implications, a plumbing issue while you’re away, and/or an exceptionally mosquito-filled summer? Imagined happiness is often easier than the reality of an impending purchase. By trying to realistically imagine your purchase, while creating an objective, logical pro and con list, you may be able to avoid this pitfall.
  7. Don’t dare compare
    We’re notoriously awful comparison shoppers/buyers; at least, when we account for happiness. Dunn, Gilbert, and Wilson (2011) found that Harvard University students living in their residential system tended to downplay social ties and try to pick physical features of a building first.

    …when these students later settled into their houses as sophomores and juniors, their happiness was predicted by the quality of social features but not by the quality of physical features in the houses.

    The point is that even though the social features matter far more, before we choose something, we don’t always process and think about our own social needs. Interpersonal connections with others are necessary for most everyone, and they tend to bring greater happiness.

  8. Think of others’ enjoyment, too
    Online review sites and movie rankings bring swaths of people to rate their own experience with a product or experience. By utilizing these websites, you can measure your own enjoyment and future experience to theirs. If lots of people experienced happiness, odds are you will, too!

This action plan for making happiness from money is based off the research by Dunn, Gilbert, & Wilson (2011). They found that people were spending their money inappropriately, thinking they’d be happy, when there were better ways.

How do you spend your money? What do you do to find long-term happiness?

Filed Under: Make Money Tagged With: Budget, cash, Consumer, Happiness, Life, Make Money, money, research, science, spending, wolf of wall street

5 Steps To Remove Ads And Stop Feeling Like A Flawed Consumer

By Frugaling 4 Comments

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Gigantic Louis Vuitton Suitcase Occupies Russia's Red Square Photo
Gigantic Louis Vuitton Suitcase Occupies Russia’s Red Square. Photo: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg

An Advertisement-Based Society

We’re living in an increasingly advertisement-fed society. Research suggests that billions of dollars are spent on advertising in the United States alone. Unfortunately, more specific numbers are hard to come by in the this largely incalculable industry.

What we can posit is that advertising works. Companies utilize time-tested and psychologically-approved marketing tactics to induce a biological need for the product – that intense craving. Nothing expresses this societal shift more than the novel and film, Fight Club:

You have a class of young strong men and women, and the want to give their lives to something. Advertising has the people chasing cars and clothes they don’t need. Generations have been working in jobs they hate, just so they can buy what they don’t really need. We don’t have a great war in our generation, or a great depression, but we do, we have a great war of spirit. We have a great revolution against the culture. The great depression is our lives.

The Flawed Consumer

Usually, advertisements point out the benefit of one product over another. But the most nefarious ads exclaim how flawed the consumer is to induce spending (often with beauty-related products). In fact, these ads can lead to greater materialism, fragmentation, body image concerns, and drinking behaviors (just to name a few). Successful advertising means a subsequent purchase occurs, and it’s a harsh reality for those affected.

Stopping the deluge of advertisements to your eyes may be impossible in the developed world, but it doesn’t mean you can’t fight back. Over the last year, I’ve been heavily researching consumerism, materialism, and spending behaviors as they relate to psychological decline. Even though we’re constantly advertised to (even on this site, sorry), reducing accessibility may see your bank account swell and your psychological health return.

Remove Ads And Follow These 5 Steps

The key is not anti-consumption (I’m not sure that’s possible); rather, critical consumption. For me, the best way to protect my budget has been the removal of as many ads as possible. The following are a few ideas to start you on a path of critical consumption, advertisement reduction, and wallet protection.

Step 1: Inoculation Training

To reduce the effects of advertising, it takes a defensiveness. Advertisements should be an affront to your senses. You will be advertised to, no matter what efforts you take (unless you live on an island without Internet nor access to the world around you). Becoming primed and defiant to ads is a key to frugality. Whether it be for moral or identity-based reasons, find a reason/way to dislike the advertisement in front of you. The further distance you find between it and you will directly influence the spending behaviors to come.

Step 2: Install Ad Blocking Programs

AdBlock is the king. This program works cross platform and browser to block ads before they even show up. Not only will it remove all the ads from sites like the NYTimes, but occasionally it blocks online video sites, as well. Installation is easy and within seconds, your online exposure plummets.

Step 3: Install Cookie Blocking Programs

Cookies are the stalker of the world wide web. These follow you without permission and are ultimately used to sell you relevant products. The easiest way is to block them entirely for implanting themselves. A program like Ghostery, which also works with Chrome and Firefox, will prevent the tracking for you.

Step 4: Unsubscribe and Filter Corporate Emails and Junk Mail

When a spam or junk email reaches your inbox, don’t just delete it. Spend the time to “unsubscribe,” mark it as spam, and/or create a filter to feed these messages straight to your trash can. Gmail offers a wealth of features to prevent further harassment – take advantage of it. As for unwanted mailers and credit offers, the most fun way to rid these is by installing a program called PaperKarma. The app works on both Android and iOS. Open the app, take a snapshot of the unwanted mail, and they’ll do all the work to unsubscribe you. Also, those regular emails you receive from Groupon, Amazon, LivingSocial, etc. are just ads. The best deal is not buying anything.

Step 5: Don’t Bring Ads Inside

Much like Step 1, this is a philosophical decision and action-based prevention strategy. Make a rule for yourself not bring ads into your home or workplace. If you do subscribe to magazines, newspapers, or other mailers that have ads, try to tear out the important parts and recycle the rest. There is a satisfaction from taking back control of what you read and see. Proactive prevention of advertising is key.

Note: Not all advertisements are inherently bad. Those present here help to support the costs associated with this website. Likewise, charities frequently advertise to encourage donations and support.

Filed Under: Save Money Tagged With: ads, advertisements, advertising, browser, Consumer, cookies, fight club, ghostery, paperkarma, web

Media Confuses Consumerism And Ads With Success

By Frugaling 2 Comments

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Related post: Too Poor To Protest: How Income Inequality Silences Your Voice

The Daily Show CNN Walk to the Couch Ads
The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart makes fun of CNN’s walk to the couch ads

Reader happiness versus advertising revenue

This is infuriating and intoxicating all at once. When you start a site and begin to build an audience, monetary consequences become more important. There’s serious money to be made. If I place in-text ads in front of my readers’ eyeballs, I risk alienating them while also skyrocketing my earnings. As an author, I constantly wonder what’s more important: A comfortable reading experience or pure profits?

This equation is delicate for any news source. Without ads, they cannot operate. Share too much, and you may lose your avid readership. There’s been a push in recent years to make ads more seamless – an effortless part of the process of consuming media.

CNN took this to the extreme recently, as they turned a simple walk to a couch into an advertising opportunity. A satirical critique from The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart ripped the idea apart and brutally made fun of the network. Clearly, the balance and boundary for advertisements had been crossed. Shortly after displaying this depraved attempt at money making, CNN cancelled the in-show advertising segment.

Ad revenue is falsely, grotesquely linked to success

A recent article in Business Insider catalogued the many ways Android was failing in comparison to the iOS/iPhone platform. In particular, the article focused on the Christmas shopping season purchases between the platforms:

Apple users on iPhone and iPad accounted for five times what Google’s Android users did when it comes to online shopping.

This is certainly a story and interesting financial question: Why are Google’s Android users spending less than their iPhone carrying friends? But here’s where many media outlets take this one step further and assert an ad-friendly correlation that doesn’t necessarily exist:

What the heck is wrong with Android users?

Android people just seem to be sitting on their hands. Their phones are just as powerful as iPhones are. They have bigger screens, too. But they don’t do anything with them.

Simon Khalaf, CEO of Flurry, one of the larger mobile ad companies…had a surprising answer for us: Androids are simply dumbphone replacement devices…

…It seems like the users on the majority of the island aren’t interested in modern life.

By not supporting big business – as much – this Christmas, Android users are being vilified. This contempt for a population seems to be solely motivated by advertising revenue. They’re described as inferior and worthless in the eyes of this media outlet. Why look for Android users when iPhone users will buy more?

Unfortunately, this is an incorrect, vapid conclusion. The author seems to stop short of actually looking for reasonable conclusions about what is happening. Androids make up about 80% of all smartphones. There’s a great diversity in Android users, as many are more affordable than iPhones. Androids can be applied to less expensive prepaid cell phone plans and off contract. These options cater to a different, more frugal audience than iPhones. Shouldn’t these frugal users be exalted for spending less?

Apple appeals to many audiences, but its affordability is better suited to the wealthy. The company’s margins are well known for being industry setting limits, with some products garnering 50% or more markup on actual build value. The person that buys an iPhone is likely in a different income class than an Android user.

But all these reasons are simply a defense of Android users, and that misses the greater point. Larger media outlets often get distracted by revenue and profits as the sole barometer of success. These news sources even go so far as critiquing less ad-friendly executives as being childish.

Embrace ads and be revered by Wall Street

If you’re not developing a way to monetize your platform, Wall Street isn’t interested. When technology darlings rise beyond startup status and begin entertaining an initial public offering (IPO), investors analyze the earning potential. For instance, Snapchat may have a multi-billion dollar valuation, but it’s not making money yet.

Angel investors have pumped hundreds of millions into the company for development. The future looks similar to Facebook: mine user data without explicit permission or choice (accept the terms or get off the app), and plaster intrusive ads that capture your attention and wallet. But who decided Wall Street was the bastion for business acumen and respect for users’ wants?

This is a narrative that major media outlets across the board tend to support. One of my favorite websites, The Verge, suggested that Mark Zuckerberg was childish when he didn’t support advertising as much. Likewise, they suggested that the major turnaround in Facebook’s stock was associated with his new embrace of ads:

Zuckerberg decided to buckle down, grow up, and start focusing on the nitty-gritty of the business.

He got trusted engineers to give up coding and start working on spreadsheets and mobile ads instead. He began taking face-to-face meeting with important clients like McDonalds. And he embraced more ads in both the news feed and in the company’s mobile products. The result has been a strong turnaround that has boosted the stock to new highs. (The Verge)

The Verge’s article seems to portray an atypical business desire as wrong or inferior. Zuckerberg is painted as an idiot that needed to “grow up” to recognize the basic business needs. Instead of being considered a hero for trying to stand up to investors, the media tends to focus on something that supports the mass-media-advertising model.

Consumerism, ads, and real progress

Corporate America would like you to think you’re merely an employee that aids profitability. Why exist if you are not contributing to a bottom line? As a company, there’s this assumption that you should take any and all profits you make – no matter the cost. But there are limits to corporate greed, and a backlash may result from poor planning.

CNN was privy to a major critique of their strange advertising practices. Clearly, a line was crossed. It’s easy to confuse advertising revenues with success. Honestly, when I have months that make me less money on Frugaling, I wonder what I did wrong. Fortunately, there’s a healthier reality that includes the users’ perspective. Success should be gaged in sharing and commenting rather than the profit model.

When your goal is a powerful reading experience – versus profits – you’ll likely end up with more in your pocket anyways.

Filed Under: Social Justice Tagged With: ad, ads, CNN, Consumer, Facebook, Frugal, Jon Stewart, money, readers, revenue, Salon, Snapchat, Tech, The Daily Show, The Verge, User, walk to the couch

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