The SmartyPig Blog

Meet the SmartyPig Team

Meet Joe Minnehan, Director of Quality Assurance for SmartyPig…

SF: So, what do you do to ensure a quality experience for our users?

JM: Quality can mean many things. We do basic testing like making sure links work, pages load, and data gets saved. But we also try to identify ways in which we can make the site easier to use for our members. We try to anticipate the many different ways in which our members use SmartyPig. Despite our best efforts, we do not anticipate everything. Our customers can be very creative in how they use the system! Because of this, we work closely with customer support to identify issues members are having with the site. We work to quickly resolve these issues to make for the best user experience possible. The demands of our job always keep us on our toes!

SF: What is your favorite part of your job?

JM: The favorite part of my job is having the opportunity to work with a fantastic group of people. Not only are they extremely talented at what they do, but they are fun to be around. I also enjoy working with all the technology used to make SmartyPig go. I learn something new every day. There is no chance to get bored around here!

SF: Your family took a trip to DC this past summer with two tween-age girls. Any funny stories to share?

JM: Our daughters are 14 and 11, I was amazed at how quickly they adapted to the city, including mastering the subway routes well before we did! No funny stories to share, but our our trip did start with some local celebrities on our flight from Des Moines to D.C. The democratic and republican senators sitting across the aisle from each other chatting, laughing, and nodding in agreement with one another. When the flight landed, they stood in the terminal talking a few minutes longer, then went their separate ways.  I thought the whole scene was very ironic, considering all the partisan bickering that takes place in Congress. I told my wife perhaps this is the way we can get the two parties to work together on difficult issues like the budget – put them on a long flight together. If they all get along as well as these two did, I’m sure we would have bipartisan legislation by the time the wheels hit the ground!

SF: I hear you give the rest of the SP team a run for their money on the golf course. Is this true?

JM: We have several good golfers on our team. It’s not competitive. We don’t keep score and just like to have a good time. But they all know the truth!

 

 

 

Money = Happiness?

Thanks to Liz Proctor, SmartyPig Account Manager, for today’s guest post.

My first, and least daunting, resolution of 2012 is simple: Find more time to read. I thought it most appropriate to kick start the New Year with a book called The Happiness Project, by Gretchen Rubin. Throughout the book, the author shares what she calls “highly idiosyncratic experiences,” in hopes that the reader will learn to create their own form of Happy.

Each month Rubin explores a different facet of daily life, including very challenging topics such as Mindfulness and Attitude that left me thinking for days. July, or Money is titled “Buy Some Happiness” and probes the question: Does money buy happiness? In her studies, Rubin finds that the association between money and happiness is altogether quite ambiguous. Although the matter is not tied up with a pretty bow at the end of the chapter, the author does provide encouraging insight and practical suggestions for amplifying joy while spending or saving.

Rubin brings light to the notion that a lack of money adds much more to unhappiness than an abundance of money adds to happiness. When financial times are difficult, it’s hard to think of anything outside of money. But when finances are not a problem a person doesn’t think much about it one way or another. By planning ahead and expecting the unexpected, challenges with finances can be dealt with before they might occur and, thus, aren’t as challenging.

Lastly, Rubin recommends that you save for a modest splurge that enhances your happiness goals. Save so you can spend more time with friends and family, save for ways to support an important cause, save for experiences and memories. By taking the time to imagine and plan, you will avoid the remorse that clings to impulse purchases and you will form a much longer lasting feeling of happiness.

Whether your SmartyPig goals are for necessity or luxury, we wish you happy savings!

The Financial “Talk”

It’s the time of year when people begin making new financial plans, setting goals, and making resolutions. Additionally, it’s best to talk these pretty huge concepts over with your partner. There’s no better expert on the subject than MSN Finance guru, Liz Weston. In a recent article Liz urges couples to pick an opportune time, list the topics you need to cover, and dig in.

Not sure which topics to start with? Well, Liz helps you out there too. How was money handled in your family growing up? Share credit reports, make a debt pay-off plan, and talk about future savings needs. Liz says, “you may not come to an agreement — or at least an agreement that works with your current financial situation — the first time you discuss any of these matters. But understanding each other is the key to working out an eventual solution.” I couldn’t have said it better myself, Liz. As you get your financial ducks in a row this month, make certain to tuck your savings goals safely into SmartyPig. We’ll help you reach them faster and reward you, too!

Wishing you successful saving.

Sarah Foss, SmartyPig’s Media Mad Woman 
SFoss@SmartyPig.com

Quick Cost Cutting Tips

I’m guessing many of you resolved to “save more” come the dawn of 2012. Besides selling off everything you own, there are two simple ways to win this war: spend less or earn more. The recent economy makes the latter tough, so when I came across the “10 Things You Should Stop Paying For” on Yahoo Finance this morning, I had to share.

Kristin Colella, article author suggests cutting costs simply by decreasing your coffee house visits, using reusable water bottles, and cancelling magazine, newspaper or online subscriptions you don’t use. If you have a little more time on your hands consider making your own baby food or changing out all of your light bulbs to the more energy efficient alternative. Colella is spot on with her recommendations and taking her advice could save you a nice chunk of change. And that change would sure make a nice addition to a goal for a much-needed vacation or even something more practical like taxes or holiday gifts.

Cut the costs and add to your goals today!

Wishing you successful saving.

Sarah Foss, SmartyPig’s Media Mad Woman 
SFoss@SmartyPig.com

Piggy Bank Peer Pressure

 

 

Peer pressure can make you dress a certain way, or drive a particular car, but can it actually affect your finances too? “…a combination of support and shame, and the desire to conform to social norms, persuades people to publicly set a goal and then achieve it,” says SmartMoney expert, Jen Wieczner. Additionally, a series of studies shows that information comparing individual savings or financial behaviors to others in your peer group significantly increases personal efforts towards the same goal. Meaning, someone gives you a statement saying these inviduals in your peer group are saving X amount. You will naturally strive to save that amount too. Seems natural, right?

The abundance of financial news today makes this theory more prevalent. Most news blogs or information sites you visit have at least one tagline asking you to “compare your finances to your peers” or “see if your net worth/finances/savings are on track.” Sometimes it’s a tough outcome to hear; sometimes it makes you rest a little easier. Either way it’s information that can’t hurt, and like the studies say, it might actually help. So dig into the news today and then let your SmartyPig goals have it – in a good way!

Wishing you successful saving.

Sarah Foss, SmartyPig’s Media Mad Woman 
SFoss@SmartyPig.com

 

 

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