The Money Mission: Destroy Debt and Become a Strategic Investor

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With even a modest income, if you start strategizing and saving for your future, the financial possibilities are nearly endless! Patrick Weinert explains the many strategies you can use to pay off your debt, save money, and plan for retirement. His guide, The Money Mission, is the result of years of experience in both personal and organizational money management. Weinert has advised the chief financial officer of the US Marine Corps on financial planning, and he brings the same rigorous skill to helping you plan out your personal financial future. The Money Mission begins by addressing debt, the main financial burden that afflicts so many Americans. Weinert offers simple and easy ways to begin reducing your debt. He examines and explains the most common obstacles blocking the way to a debt-free life and shows you exactly how to overcome them. He also explains how to create a starter savings fund and a six-month savings account reserve. After laying out the plan for a strong financial foundation, The Money Mission addresses saving for retirement, interest rates, banking, the Federal Reserve, investments, and more. With specific, accessible examples and simple terminology, Weinert makes financial management easier than ever.

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Amazon Customer says:

Build Good Financial Habits that Slash Debt and Amass Piles of Savings The Money Mission is a simple, useful book that lets you fix money problems so they’re fixed for good. Its focus is on behavioral change. Thus, rather than make plans you don’t stick to, or resolutions you abandon, your Money Mission will be to build good habits you carry out on autopilot.Patrick Weinert got his financial start as a teen helping his family budget its way out of debt after his mother’s untimely passing. Decades later, he planned and streamlined the budget for the…

Alejandro Escobar says:

Methodical and engaging Patrick Weinertâ??s book is a methodical and engaging journey into managing personal finances that, deliberately or not, moves brilliantly in the four quadrants of the Cynefin framework. But it is more than an academic tour of the simple, complicated, complex, and chaotic contexts of personal financial management; it intertwines these aspects with our journey in life and our wants and needs as individuals and members of a productive society. When I read the book, I could easily identify that it…

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