
10 December 2018 | 5 replies
Thankfully you don't have that issue.Ain't nothing wrong with dumpster diving, thrift stores, and 50 degrees in your house if those measures get you where you need to go financially.
11 February 2017 | 72 replies
I'd stick it out with your finance degree.
12 October 2014 | 47 replies
.: Yes, I was generalizing to some degree.
21 March 2023 | 7 replies
Dave Ramsey book "The Total Money Makeover: Classic Edition: A Proven Plan for Financial Fitness." and complete the baby steps there.Read Scott Trench’s book “Set for Life.”Finish the school and get your degree - you'll need it later, especially if it's business management.Get a job first where you have W2 income.

5 March 2022 | 4 replies
Either a structural engineer, or often times general contractors have engineering degrees so they can give you an idea on what it would take to fix the sinking issue and also have subcontractors to repair the interior of the house.

21 March 2023 | 9 replies
The good thing about the RE investing world is that you don't need a degree to get in, although you do need some degree of education in not just strategy and tactics, but mindset and understanding your ow risk tolerance.

23 January 2020 | 15 replies
I have an accounting degree and had to switch to a CPA this year because the complexity of my own return's exceeded what I learned in Tax 101 five+ years ago.

5 September 2020 | 15 replies
I have just started in the past couple of months doing this research and i'm trying to understand everything at least to a certain degree so that I can get started in the right way.

17 July 2017 | 14 replies
I will be adding into our contract a maxmimum amount of gas useage, and folks that go over we can bill an additional amount post-check-in in case someone decides to heat the pool to 100 degrees, while grilling constantly and simultaneously running the firepit LOL.

22 August 2018 | 23 replies
One of the best on the market and good to down to 0 degrees.