Ways to cut red tape and save money

From the hassle of dealing with your cable and phone providers to managing stolen identity, Kim Lankford of Kiplinger.com shares how you can speed up solving your money problems, and save some cash in the process.

Time and money are the two luxuries no one ever seems to have enough of. To help save you both, Kiplinger's Personal Finance contributing editor Kimberly Lankford spoke to TODAY's Jeff Rossen about their special feature on how to Cut the Red Tape.

For instance, want to save $30 a month on your cable bill? Just ask for it to be lower.

"Now is a great time," to negotiate a better deal on your cable package, Lankford said, because "there's so many ways to download movies and TV shows that cable companies are trying to keep your business if they already have you."

If you have a promotional rate that's expiring, call up your cable company and ask if you can extend it. It never hurts to ask."You'd be surprised," at the success you can have just by asking, Lankford said, "because they want to keep you." The same goes for if your rates have slowly been creeping over the years.

With a little chutzpah, and a few minutes on the phone, you can save yourself $360 a year.

But why stop there? There's another $30 per month in savings you might be able to get by jumping to a cellphone company offering a better deal.

Some people don't realize that if they're beyond their two-year contract and the other wireless company is offering a better rate and you want to switch, you don't have to also rush out and buy a new phone at the company store. AT&T and T-mobile phones are compatible on each other's networks, so you can bring a phone from one to the other.

Verizon and Sprint are a bit trickier, you'll want to thoroughly research your phone model first online. Or you can buy a slightly used, compatible, phone on eBay, and skip the big in-store price tag.

"T-mobile has a special deal right now where they're trying to get people with old iPhones who've been on AT&T to switch over," said Lankford. "With that deal you can save $50 a month."

Caveat alert: the big thing to watch out for with wireless plans is early termination fees. If you signed a two-year service agreement and try to switch before it's up, you can face giant fees that can quickly eat up any benefit you might get from going to a cheaper monthly plan.

Lastly, losing a wallet is a great way to find a heart attack, especially with fraud and identity theft such a concern these days. But you can cut down on the chest pains by first removing anything from your wallet that you don't really need. Especially, "don't keep anything with a social security number on it in your wallet," said Lankford. That's like giving an identity thief a freebie.

Then, Lankford says, "Xerox every credit card ahead of time so if your wallet is stolen, it's really easy to know who to call and what to replace."

If you do happen to have your credit cards go missing or get stolen, make sure to report it right away. If you don't report your debit card stolen within two days, you could be on the hook for $500 worth of any unauthorized spending spree.

Then there would go all that savings you worked so hard to get on your cable and mobile bills!

People.com
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Or even better, you could stop relying on this flawed system all together. Invest in Solar/wind power for your home and save thousands. Grow your own vegetables and save thousands more. Ride a bike to work and save another grand a year. Learn how to build/repair household items and save several hundred more a year. Collect rainwater and save $500 a year on your water bill. Raise chickens and save several hundred a year on eggs/meat. Brew your own beer and save on your fun-budget... grow your own tobacco and save over a thousand dollars a year... Use cloth diapers and wash 'em out for another $1k a year. Ditch your contract cell phone plan for a month-to-month deal and save a few hundred more....

Not only are you saving money by taking these steps but more importantly, your money isn't going to the elites who manipulate the laws by spending your money to purchase votes that go against your best interests.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Thu Nov 8, 2012 5:54 PM EST

Who needs red tape? Buy duct tape, or swipe scotch tape from work.

    Reply#2 - Fri Nov 9, 2012 7:01 PM EST

    There are a lot more tips available at PersonFinanceUniverse dotcom

    Pick and choose among 35000 more

      Reply#3 - Sun Nov 11, 2012 4:46 PM EST
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