How two high-earners use convenience spending
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- Опубликовано: 13 май 2024
- Poor people trade their time for money. Rich people trade their money for time. Convenience spending is the closest thing to buying yourself time and energy. It's been the best luxurious way our family has started to spend our money as our income has increased. To some these conveniences may seem small, but the impact they make to our day to day life has made a profound impact. I hope this inspires you to look at ways you can adjust your spending to include things to save you time and energy (when you have the space in your budget for it, of course).
Products mentioned in this video:
Bluetooth over-ear headphones: a.co/d/95R478b
Treadmill: a.co/d/dZy42DC
Standing Desk: a.co/d/1Rohj7d
Roborock S4: a.co/d/8aBQnEJ
Roborock S5 Max: a.co/d/dMbRJqj
Roborock Q7: a.co/d/9DDfJZr
Litter Robot: a.co/d/iUvgLlQ
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I'm considering starting a personal grocery delivery business. I find that a lot of times, grocery delivery apps often pick the wrong items, particularly produce. As a convenience spender, would you pay for a personal grocery shopper?
Would really depend on my area and the quality of what’s in the market. The official Kroger Delivery people (who actually work out of their warehouse, not a specific store) do a significantly better job than instacart (who work out of a store and are sometimes clueless about produce quality). I’d be more likely to consider it for non-groceries (since there’s multiple good alternatives already) or something like package returns.