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10 Genius Things Suze Orman Says To Do With Your Money
Mediapunch / Shutterstock.com
Mediapunch / Shutterstock.com

As an author, award-winning TV show host and public speaker, Suze Orman has helped millions of Americans gain a better handle on their finances with her advice on debt, saving money, investing and lending.

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With a direct approach and practical advice that gets to the heart of the matter, Orman is one of today’s most popular and respected financial experts.

If you’re looking to freshen up your financial outlook, Orman has some great pointers. Here are 10 tips from Orman to help keep your finances in check.

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Get the Big Picture of Your Financial Situation

“It’s impossible to map out a route to your destination if you don’t know where you’re starting from,” Orman told O, The Oprah Magazine. To know where you’re headed, you’ll need to get a panoramic view of your finances, what Orman calls a “before” snapshot to shape the “after.”

“You’ve heard me say this a million times, but I want you to open every single financial statement — bank, credit card, mortgage, 401(k), brokerage account — and take a look,” she wrote. “Only when you have everything in front of you can you set priorities about what to do next.”

Once you’ve gotten an overview of your finances — what’s good, what’s bad, what needs improving — then you can start prioritizing and developing a plan to meet your unique needs.

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Track Your Spending

It’s not always the large purchases that can cause your budget to fail. Orman suggested taking a good look at every single expense you have to see where you might be overspending or losing money on unnecessary purchases.

“You know the big-ticket expenses in your life, but all of the smaller spending can also be a killer,” Orman said. “Take a look at your monthly outflow, and I guarantee you will have a few ‘Yikes, I had no idea’ moments.”

One way to gauge your spending is to collect all of your checking account and credit card statements, plus receipts, and put them into an expense tracker or a spreadsheet.  With the tracker, you can modify your spending and see what you can eliminate and where you can save.

Strategically Pay Off Your Credit Card Debt

You might think that paying down your credit card balance little by little is making a dent in your debt. But you might be going in circles if the money you’re forking over each month to your provider is going toward your interest, not your principal. Orman wrote about a more strategic way to eliminate debt from your life without having to forgo your credit card use.