Not exact matches
You
now have three cost bases to
keep track of: the first, which has earned you $ 1,000; the second, which has earned you $ 23.50; and the third, which will earn (or cost)
money as the stock rises (or falls).
I have
now introduced a visual point scoring system to
keep track of how much
money the teams have earned.
Google has many fantastic tools to use for learning about and
keeping track of your market area, competition or products • Gmail, search on gmail, signup, Start here I opens you to the Google world • Google Alerts http://www.google.com/alerts • Google Analytics http://www.google.com/analytics • Blogger, an easy place to start with your web presence http://www.blogger.com • Google Trends http://www.google.com/trends • Google Images make sure your images are here, great place for research • Google Places, making sure your business is found, list it here • Google Adsense, make a little
money along the way • Google Keyword Tool / external, find your keywords, learn what new keywords you should be using and paying attention to, because
of recent changes I like the phrase match option
now.
When you buy new things you might sell later, you could consider adding them as assets to
keep track of this explicitly (but even then you have problems — the price
of things changes with time and you might not want to
keep up with those price changes, it's a lot
of extra work for a family budget)-- for stuff you already have it's better to treat things as you are doing and just treat the
money as income — it's easier and doesn't really change anything — you always had that in equity, some
of it was just off the books and
now you are bringing it into the books.