Why
do financial bloggers do what they do?
Do financial bloggers want to learn from each other, and make more money?
Do financial bloggers write to have fun?
Do financial bloggers write to affect policy?
Do financial bloggers write to further their own business interests?
Not exact matches
That was my first reaction when I started tracking this last month after seeing so many other
financial bloggers out there
doing the same.
I also subscribe to the
Financial Samuri blog and just posted a similar article on the Personal Capital retirment calculator... co-incidence or
did they pay
bloggers to write good reviews of their product??
I guess it sounds like some links for
bloggers sometimes
do have
financial or compensation related to them, but some (as this one on yours)
do not.
It can be frustrating to see your favorite
bloggers or Instagrammers constantly wearing designer duds that don't work with your income or
financial priorities.
The only person benefiting in the end are the tour organizers — they gain
financial reward while authors lose money and book
bloggers are often stuck reading and reviewing books they don't like.
Most
financial bloggers and journalists are NOT Certified Financial Planners and likely don't see client
financial bloggers and journalists are NOT Certified
Financial Planners and likely don't see client
Financial Planners and likely don't see clients at all.
I don't think of myself as one of the top
financial bloggers.
I didn't want to be like many
bloggers where over 50 % of their post is quoting others — I wanted to write from my heart, expressing my views on a wide number of topics relating to economics, finance and investment, from my unusual framework, which is Evangelical Christian, mostly libertarian (but not for
financials), actuarial, value investor, doubting neoclassical economics and modern portfolio theory.
So
do come to join us in this exciting event where you can get real investment knowledge from your local favorite
financial bloggers and influencers.
# 3 Most
financial bloggers surveyed
do not carry any debt at all!
Jamila Souffrant is a Certified
Financial Education Instructor (CFEI), podcaster,
blogger, money coach and founder of JourneyToLaunch.com where she shares her journey to reach
Financial Freedom and helps others
do the same.
As one of Canada's pioneering
financial bloggers, Ram Balakrishnan is a seasoned
Do - It - Yourself (DIY) investor.
Did you know there's a group of 200 +
financial bloggers who share their net worth on the internet?
I think many of the
financial bloggers who talking about jumping out can
do it.
Admittedly, I
did not start with nothing or even negative worth like so many of the
bloggers, but I was equally if not more «financially lost» than most of the
financial independence
bloggers out there.
But even more so, as a
financial blogger, how to manage the logistics of self employment seems like a daunting mystery (since I've never
done it).
I am also asking the
financial bloggers to ask their readers to
do the same thing.
We wouldn't make this move if it didn't make
financial sense (After all, I am a personal finance
blogger, who will be retiring early!).
William Mallers
did it last week in an impassioned rebuttal of
financial blogger John Lothian's criticism of the CME Group's plan to introduce bitcoin futures.