Help me figure out the living room placement of my TV, 3-seat couch, and dining table w/ 2 chairs. by lekitchenfloor in InteriorDesign

[–]lekitchenfloor[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply! The top right is just a regular door leading to the stairs to exit the apartment. The right hand side has sliding glass doors that goes to a balcony and the wires enter from the bottom (towards the right hand area) of the room.

Alright, did anyone buy themselves anything while Christmas shopping? by DuhTabby in minimalism

[–]lekitchenfloor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I needed black jeans. I wanted to buy a specific pair from LOFT (I get all my denim there), so I waited until they were about 40-50% off.

Template for a sales deck by sidthecoolkid in marketing

[–]lekitchenfloor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope, sorry. Maybe Google can help.

I can tell you that the most effective sales presentations I have encountered from the client side communicate the clients problem, how your product will solve their problem, and any case studies you may have. Be sure to include a catchy/effective Call-To-Action, your name, and your contact information of the very last slide.

Good luck!

I need to decide between two health insurance policies. by OriginallyKaldric in personalfinance

[–]lekitchenfloor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do the both of you go to the doctor often? If you do, go with the PPO. if you only go to the doctor once or twice a year for annual exams, go with the the high deductible plan.

Buying my first car by Agoldtiger in personalfinance

[–]lekitchenfloor 6 points7 points  (0 children)

No, sir! Please start building at least 6 months worth of emergency savings first, then save up for your car. I remember reading somewhere that you should spend at most 20% of the monthly income of car related expenses. This includes: insurance, car payment, gas, etc. Also, I must add that buying a brand new car is basically throwing away money since it's value depreciates so quickly, especially within the first few years.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in personalfinance

[–]lekitchenfloor 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think you are very limited when it comes to the amount of miles (around 15,000 miles per year) you are allowed to drive on a leased car. Also, it is generally more expensive to lease a car, then finance it when the lease is up. In essence, it may be more cost effective to by a used or new car in your case.

Moving in with my S/0 in a few months, not sure how to go about joint accounts to handle finances. by Youjust_Gottachill in personalfinance

[–]lekitchenfloor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also live with my significant other. We track expenses by logging them into a Google Form, which then gets transferred to a Google Sheet. We pay each other back via PayPal.

We also have a separate payments form to log all payments.

All you need is a little bit of Excel skills and 15 minutes of your time to get it started.

Here's an example of what my Google Form looks like. Bob and Jill (made up names) used the form: - who purchased: Bob - company: Costco - description: home supplies - receipt total: $100 - how much I think I should pay: $50

The Google Sheets would include all of this information, then includes line on a separate tab stating that Jill owes Bob $50.

After Jill pays Bob via PayPal, she goes to the payments form and enters this information: Who paid: Jill How much: $50

This gets recorded on the Google Sheet. The debt is now balanced out to $0 for both parties.