As seen in Newsweek, The Associated Press, Woman's Day Magazine & Many More National Publications


Copyright by BetterBudgeting.com

Home | Sitemap | Free Membership | Budgeting Class | Non-Profit Groups

Better Budgeting™ is Dedicated
to Educating & Encouraging
Families to Save Money
& Live a Better Life!

Michelle Jones, Founder of BetterBudgeting.com
Michelle Jones, Founder of Better Budgeting™

Email Michelle, Editor of BetterBudgeting.com 

 

Bookmark and Share

 

Learn how to start a budget and manage your money better! Free budgeting worksheets,  monthly newsletter, frugal recipes, homemade gift ideas, and THOUSANDS of tips to help you save money all through the year! 

Home

Free Budgeting Articles

Free Budgeting Calculators

Free Budgeting Forms & Worksheets

Budgeting Class

Budgeting Planners & Software

Site Index

Free Membership

Contact Us

 Our Ebooks 

Frugal Family Recipes, by Michelle Jones

Frugal Family Recipes Cookbook...

101 Coupon Tips, by Michelle Jones

101 Coupon Tips...

Dealing with Debt, by Michelle Jones

Free Ebook Gift for Better Budgeting Members!

Dealing with Debt...

 

 

Black Belt Shopper
(featured column)

Save Money: Informal Economy

by Larry Wiener

Buying from private parties and other informal outlets involves a certain amount of risk, but if you use the informal economy regularly and one in ten transactions turns out to be a dud, you’re usually still ahead.  

*  *  *

I was cooking dinner the other night and poof!  My built-in electric cooktop blew.  Time to shop for a new one.

I went over to my local home improvement store and found that I could get a ceramic one for $600 or an old-fashioned coil type for $300.  Gas was not an option.

On the way home, I decided I would try the Recycler, a free-ad newspaper popular here in Southern California before buying from a store.  There I found a one-year old ceramic cooktop for $100.  The person selling it was a home remodeler and one of his customers had used it for a year and didn’t like the color of the border.  She was about to throw it away, but he took it to sell.  For an extra $50 he put it in and did such a good and careful job that I’m keeping his name for when I put a new floor and countertops in the kitchen.  Big win.

I discussed this with a cousin of mine and she was aghast.  “What if it doesn’t work out?  You’ll be out $100!”

Another time we got to talking about getting cars serviced.  She had just gotten the 30,000 mile service and I the 60,000 mile service.  Hers cost $600 and mine $200.  Why?  She insisted that no one would ever touch her car other than a dealer.

Then there’s the alteration lady who does my pants at home for $5 a pair rather than the much higher fee a drycleaner or department store would charge.

Then there was the portable heater I just bought on ebay.  I got it for $11 and it was brand new.  A similar heater would probably cost $60 in the store.  "How can I do that?," she asked.

After talking with her for awhile, I realized that my cousin and I have completely different ideas on how to buy goods and services.  I use the informal economy whenever I can to get quality goods and services at a good price—a term I use to mean private parties, smaller providers, self-employed service providers and other lesser known ways of getting goods and services.  She prefers to totally avoid risk even if she has to pay top dollar for goods and services.

It is true that buying from private parties and other outlets of the informal economy involves a certain amount of risk.  You usually can’t return an item and there always is the possibility that you will be disappointed down the road.  It happens to me from time to time.  But if you use the informal economy regularly and one in ten transactions turns out to be a dud, you’re usually still ahead.  Just don’t use the informal economy when a dud will cost you mightily and you have no recourse.

So how do you negotiate your way around the informal economy?  How do you give yourself the best chance of getting a good deal?  

Here are some ideas:

bulletInterview prospective providers thoroughly. 

bulletGet references when possible.  In my condo complex everyone goes to Jeff for their car service.  When I heard that, I figured there was a good chance that he would work for me.

bulletStart with low risk items.  If you’re just starting to explore the informal economy, start with low-risk items.  You may want to buy books and movies on Half.com.  I have been doing this for years and have rarely if ever been disappointed.  If you are not used to dealing with private parties, you may want to wait a while before you buy a used car from a private party.

bulletKnow Your Merchandise.  People in the informal economy may not be as knowledgeable as authorized dealers and other more mainstream providers of goods and services.

bulletAsk your friends for good providers.  A neighbor of mine is the one who told me about Bertha, the alteration lady.  Many of the best providers in the informal economy don’t advertise because they don’t have to.  The man I bought the cooktop from said that if he advertised, he’d have to turn away business.

The informal economy has proven to be a boon for me.  It has been so useful to me, along with closeout stores, consignment stores, and other non-mainstream providers that I almost never buy anything in a mall anymore.   Contrary to what some believe, you can get very high quality goods and services from the informal economy and not just castoffs that are of no use.  The man who installed my cooktop said that he knows someone who never returns merchandise to a store because it is too much trouble.  He then takes that and sells it at good prices.

The informal economy is an important component of the new economy.  For more information on how to thrive in the new economy, check out my book, The Black Belt Shopper’s Guide.

*  *  *

 

Copyright © 2005 by Larry Wiener. All rights reserved.

Want more money-saving tips?  Get a FREE Subscription to our monthly newsletter!

 

Related Articles:

What is Black Belt Shopping?

Resources:

The Black Belt Shopper’s Guide

 

Follow Us

Follow Me on Pinterest

Michelle's Meals on a Budget

S'mores Cookie Bars - BetterBudgeting.com
S'mores Cookie Bars

Frugal Recipe Index

Frugal Family Cookbook

Print Our Grocery Coupons

Get premium coupons in the Coupons.com Savings Club

 

Editor's Book Pick

Guerrilla Marketing for Job Hunters
Guerrilla Marketing for Job Hunters 3.0
How to Stand Out from the Crowd and Tap Into the Hidden Job Market Using Social Media and 999 Other Tactics Today

Editor's Book List...

 

The Better Budgeting™ Class
Sign up for our next 5-week session and learn how to create a budget that works for you!

 

 

Thank you for visiting with us today...  
Don't forget to sign up for your FREE SUBSCRIPTION & BONUS GIFT!

Home | About Us | Contact Us | Article Index | Affiliates
Reader Feedback | Disclaimer | Privacy | Subscribe | Unsubscribe-Change Address

Like Us on Facebook!        Follow Better Budgeting on Twitter!  

Copyright © 2001-2012 by BetterBudgeting.com,  a subsidiary of Blue Ridge Publishing, Inc.

All rights reserved.

Living a Better Life® is a registered trademark of BetterBudgeting.com and it's parent company, Blue Ridge Publishing, Inc.  No portion of this Web site or its publications may be reprinted without the written permission of the editor.  Please ensure that any reference to our content (shared in print, Social Media or on the Web) includes credit back to us with a link to BetterBudgeting.com.  You are welcome to link to our Web site or individual pages.  Thank you for your support!

Members... Have you told your friends and family about us?  Do we have your correct email address?