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A Purse of Your Own: An Easy Guide to Financial Security - Softcover

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9781416570813: A Purse of Your Own: An Easy Guide to Financial Security

Synopsis

THERE IS NO BETTER TIME THAN NOW TO STRAIGHTEN OUT YOUR PURSE

In A Purse of Your Own, wealth coach Deborah Owens draws from more than twenty years of experience in the fi nancial services industry for a revolutionary and simple approach to investment literacy: Women can take control of their lives and purses by leveraging the feminine powers of intuition, creativity, and empathy to build personal wealth.

Filled with quizzes (Pursercises), resource guides (Pursessentials), and examples of real women from housewives to executives who have drastically changed their lives (Purseonality Profi les), A Purse of Your Own will show you how to:

· Apply the 7 Wealthy Habits you MUST learn to be fi nancially secure
· Buy stocks, bonds, and mutual funds and create a well-balanced portfolio on any budget
· Understand the language of investing and how to manage risk
· Find a good fi nancial advisor (and recognize the warning signs of a bad one)
· Protect what you will build

Creating and maintaining wealth can come only from understanding how money works. Use Deborah's "Power of the Purse" wealth-building strategy and your money will work for you!

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About the Author

Deborah Owens is a 20-year veteran and former vice president in the financial services industry. She is the CEO of Owens Media Group, which creates financial empowerment content for the web, print, radio and TV.  She is a sought after speaker on the topic of financial empowerment and entrepreneurship and has toured nationally with TD Jakes Enterprises, Working Mother Media, and the NASD.  The Power of the Purse  Tour begins in 2010 with the mission of engaging, enlightening and equipping one million women to become financial empowered by forming Purseonal Support Groups.  For more information visit www.deborahowens.com.

Brenda Lane Richardson, an award-winning journalist and active public speaker, is the author of seven nonfiction books and Chesapeake Song, a novel.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

A PURSE OF YOUR OWN USING YOUR PURSE FOR PROTECTION


THE INCIDENT IS SAID TO HAVE OCCURRED ON A rain-soaked road near Dallas. Four older women were riding in an Impala when a vehicle sped through a red light and smashed into them, the impact sending their car spinning. Although clearly at fault, the other driver, a male, climbed out and approached with his hands thrown up, as if to say that he’d had it with women drivers. If this man hoped to intimidate these “little old ladies,” his plan backfired.

The Impala’s driver rolled down her window and when the man said something that made her feel threatened, she blasted him with pepper spray and jabbed him with an umbrella. According to an eyewitness, the women then climbed from their car and hit him with their purses until he fled for safety.

Admittedly, I have a different kind of protection in mind when I travel the country to speak about A Purse of Your Own or talk to listeners who call into Wealthy Lifestyles, my financial show on WEAA 88.9 FM, an NPR-affiliate station in Baltimore. But the idea of women banding together to become active participants in their own lives—in this case, clobbering a bully with their purses—offers an indelible image for a concept that I teach about how the purse can provide protection.

The purse of your own message has been especially welcome since 2008, when the world economy has seemed in free fall and millions have panicked as they watched their nest eggs and retirement funds shrink dramatically. These are the times when novices want to know how to hang on to their purses.

The financial meltdown that began in 2007 was caused by people leading what I call “unwealthy lifestyles.” Too much house furnished with multiple mortgage refinancing, and too much credit card use with ever-increasing interest rate terms. Those same exotic mortgages were then packaged into investment securities that Wall Street sold all over the world, which eventually turned into toxic waste on the balance sheets of icons in the financial industry such as American Insurance Group (AIG) and Merrill Lynch. The real estate bubble bursting impacted the financial system in ways no one could have imagined, and at this writing caused the stock market to lose more than half its worth in less than twelve months. As a result, people have become more averse to investing. But as the dust clears, you can be sure that new fortunes will be made. And why shouldn’t yours be one of them? Investing remains the best long-term vehicle for acquiring wealth.

Women in my audiences may be fainthearted, but they are comforted by the symbol of the purse, an accessory that is near and dear. They seem to get my message right away when I say that the financial sector became lopsided, with way too much debt and too little real wealth, like a purse weighed down by thousands of pennies. Purse is all about restoring equilibrium and creating financially and emotionally balanced investors.

I use the purse as a metaphor for wealth because it dates back to antiquity when it represented a woman’s dowry, her family’s way of making certain that she was entering a relationship with recognized assets. Today, when so many of us call the shots about our own lives, the purse speaks to our financial state of mind. A full purse can provide opportunities for leaving a bruising relationship; an empty one may mean having to stay and suffer more.

The purse has long been a reflection of our economic power. When husbands controlled the assets of Victorian women, the purse was dainty, designed for carrying calling cards and hankies. During World War II, as women took over nontraditional “Rosie the Riveter” jobs, sturdier purses became fashionable. At war’s end, when soldiers returned to the States and the workplace, women were again relegated to the home and purses dwindled in size.

Now, as if mirroring our move into the highest corridors of power, purses are built to accommodate everything from wallets, checkbooks, calculators, cell phones, and corporate reports to lipstick, earrings, tissues, and baby’s emergency diaper and wipes. Today’s purses seem to represent all the possibilities in our lives.

Whether you carry a designer knockoff or a high-priced object of impulse and lust, a purse is probably your most intimate accessory. If you can’t locate it, your heart races; alone on a dark street, you clutch it beneath an arm. And no matter how much you love someone, if that person rifles through our purse, you feel violated. There is deep sympathetic meaning to be found in our purses. More than a simple repository for objects, they are extensions of who we are. Freud interpreted the purse as female genitalia, but that was a nineteenth-century man’s explanation. More than anything, the purse represents our private financial identity. At the end of the day, creating wealth is about adding to the purse.

For the most part, purses have remained quintessentially female. One manufacturer tried popularizing the use of “man bags” for guys, but the idea never really caught on. In the United States, in particular, men largely view purses as girly girl, and that’s all right with me. I like the idea of having a financial identity that is distinctly female, like this investment guide. A Purse of Your Own accentuates investment strategies for building wealth based on our unique mélange of strengths, whatever that means for you as an individual. This work capitalizes on interests that include friendships, parenting, romance, dieting, and shopping.

Do those subjects sound familiar? That’s right, ladies, I’m throwing down the gauntlet and embracing what’s nearest and dearest to our hearts. From this point on, the purse stops here. I’m sick of hearing that we’ve got to act like one of the guys to get ahead financially. That certainly hasn’t been the case for two of the richest women on the planet, J. K. Rowling, of Harry Potter fame and entertainment powerhouse Oprah Winfrey. And you’ve got to wonder what Winfrey and Rowling know that others don’t.

Rowling was distraught after her marriage ended. She might have been written off as “too emotional” and too “clingy,” except she used her understanding of the universal need to feel loved to write Harry Potter into the world history of literature. Winfrey, among the first to insist that friendships between women matter, built an entertainment empire by using the alchemy of her body, mind, and spirit to make us feel that’s she’s right there with us when we need her guidance, laughter, knowledge, and inspiration—as a BFF should be.

It’s as if Rowling and Winfrey were listening to Nelson Mandela’s 1994 inauguration speech when he reminded the world that humans are powerful beyond measure and that it is our light, not our darkness, that frightens us. Rowling and Winfrey understand that the feminine spirit illuminates the world. These women are not afraid to let their lights shine.

Rowling and Winfrey exemplify generosity, creativity, and a desire for relationships—all of which are considered “feminine” characteristics. At the same time, they’re also ambitious, analytical, and fearless, traits many considered “masculine.” By drawing from these characteristics, each woman has created a purse that runneth over.

Just as there are two sides to every purse, there are two sides to every personality: female and male. That is not a new concept. Psychotherapist Carl Jung posited decades ago that both men and women are born with the psychological attitudes and feelings of the opposite sex and that a harmonious balance can only be established by expressing hidden traits. He was suggesting that we all embody a full spectrum of masculine and feminine qualities.

What is new is that Purse encourages the utilization of female/male energy to learn and practice balanced investment techniques. Consider the investors who’ve made headlines in recent years by contributing to a global financial malaise. The only kind of balance they focused on was the numeric value of their bank accounts. Purse stresses the importance of maintaining an emotional balance. Expressing one side of the personality to the exclusion of the other can leave people feeling disconnected from themselves.

All human beings are unique, of course. Our personalities are influenced by the interplay of hormones, genetic inheritance, family experiences, and societal expectations about female/male roles. Feminine energy isn’t limited to women, nor is male energy limited to men. In more than two decades as an investment specialist, I’ve run into many people who seem out of balance. The women are often reluctant to tap into masculine strengths that would allow them to take risks and go for their dreams. They often wind up desperately searching for men who can fulfill their dreams for them. I’ve also met male investors who took risks purely for risk’s sake, without any apparent thought about who might get hurt. Their absence of compassion and their inability to connect with others ultimately cost them everything, including their money and loved ones.

My purse strategy is designed to help people feel more balanced even in the middle of a financial storm. Feminine attributes can serve as a counterbalance to masculine attributes, and vice versa. Admirable female strengths include being adaptable, humble, empathic, compassionate, persuasive, spontaneous, receptive, nurturing, intuitive, verbal, and sensitive. Admirable masculine characteristics include being ambitious, assertive, confident, disciplined, courageous, decisive, organized, analytical, competitive, independent, and rational. Please note that while I believe that women and men possess all these strengths, I refer to them with “male” or “female” designations for the purpose of calling attention to propensities, not as rigid determinations of gender.

A Purse of Your Own taps into female/male energy and offers a practical application to investment basics. Tapping into feminine/masculine strengths has already helped men and women create fortunes. Mary Kay Ash, founder of Mary Kay Cosmetics, and Fred Smith, founder of Federal Express, both credit their success in part to knowing how to balance intuition with rational data. And the female genius of forming and nurturing relationships is increasingly touted in business schools. Dartmouth University Tuck School of Business Professor Vijay Govindarajan teaches future leaders that along with intellectual and physical infrastructures, successful companies also need emotional infrastructure.

I became interested in how people can strike a financial balance more than two decades ago, when life gave me an image of what I didn’t want my future to be like. Years earlier, my mother quit her job at the Chrysler auto plant in Detroit and moved to Hawaii with my father, who had long dreamed of living on the island. But the two later separated, and my mother had to survive on a small pension, Social Security, and minimal support from my father.

With family money tight, I dropped out of college to manage a women’s clothing store in Detroit, sometimes working sixteen hours a day. Though twenty years old, I realized that even by working excessively, I wouldn’t have enough hours in the day to create wealth. I was earning enough to pay bills, but it was obvious that if I kept going at this rate, I’d be carrying a “Counterfeit Purse”—that’s my term for the symbolic bag that some of us may carry, who might dress fashionably and drive a nice car but have nothing of real value. Like counterfeit purses sold on the streets, these bags might look great at first glance, but they won’t hold up to wear.

At some point I heard from a friend who’d been hired by Merrill Lynch, the financial management and advisory firm. She explained that wealthy people invested their money so it would work for them, rather than the other way around. I was thrilled at the idea that I could invest money in a business or government enterprise, with an eye on earning future potential profit. I didn’t realize it at the time, but this was when I began developing an understanding of the world that I would formalize into a defining set of behaviors, ultimately calling them the 7 Wealthy Habits. The first pertains to what I had searched for and then realized through investing: the ability to add value.

A WEALTHY OUTLOOK: This foundational habit gives us a macro or “big picture” view of the world. It is a habit that encourages adding value. It is characteristic of successful people and a core value of great companies, allowing them to move beyond boundaries.

I applied at Merrill Lynch and when I learned that the only job available was as a receptionist, I jumped at it so I could get my foot in the door. I loved talking to people and I was intrigued by the business of investing. In my spare time I read The Wall Street Journal so I could learn the language of finance and speak intelligently about what was happening in the industry. I couldn’t get enough information—another wealth-building behavior. This hunger to learn taught me another Wealthy Habit.

A WEALTHY APPETITE: The habit of acquiring knowledge. To add value, wealthy people continually increase their knowledge base. They gain insight by attending seminars, subscribing to periodicals, and reading books to stay abreast of the economy and to identify investment opportunities.

I’d been hired in what some people in the office viewed as a rather low-level job, but I didn’t let the job define me. The branch manager told me eventually that I was overqualified. I was encouraged to take the Series 7 securities certification exam to qualify to train as a registered sales assistant. This experience exemplifies another wealth-building behavior.

A WEALTHY VISION: Rather than the macro view required in the first habit, a Wealthy Vision encourages you to look inward and identify your comparative advantage—your unique gifts based upon a blend of innate characteristics.

I heard horror stories from co-workers about how difficult it was to pass the Series 7 exam. Some said it would take several tries before I could pass. That filled me with dread. Guys who had been hired as assistant brokers were allowed to study and take prep classes on company time. No such luck for me. My purse was running on empty. I was supporting myself on my receptionist salary. I studied when I got home, and all through the weekends. I couldn’t afford to fail—and I didn’t. I passed the exam on the first try, and was promoted to a registered sales assistant with a higher salary.

A WEALTHY MINDSET: This habit keeps you going in the face of adversity. Everyone else might tell you something is impossible, but a Wealthy Mindset keeps you moving to the beat of your own drum.

I was hired to train under and work for three male brokers, but the broker I most admired was a woman named Emmo. She was the first woman I’d met who earned six figures. More important, she represented a wonderful balance of female/male energy. She was assertive, analytical, fearless, creative, nurturing, and generous. Emmo was a phenomenal presenter and led seminars in schools and for many women’s groups. She would speak anywhere about her passion for investing, even when she might have stayed in the office and earned mon...

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  • PublisherTouchstone
  • Publication date2009
  • ISBN 10 1416570810
  • ISBN 13 9781416570813
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages290
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