“I feel so blessed to have the opportunity to speak to all of these people through the vehicle of the book, but when asked about my source of pride, it is undoubtedly them and the journey they have taken ownership of that will bring them so far.”
Think about it...
How many times have you said to yourself, 'This is the year when I finally get to grips with my finances'? But somehow time slips away and twelve months later you are no better off.
How many times have you decided to stick to a budget only to see events get in the way and your good intentions frustrated?
Do you have a nagging sense that you're not in charge of your money and that your future financial well-being is beyond your control? Even worse, in these challenging economic times, are you so stressed about money that you cannot even begin to see a way out of your situation?
Whether you're figuring out how to squeeze enough money from the family budget to save for a much-needed holiday, finally preparing to tackle years of lifestyle debt, or taking a leap of faith and starting your own business, The Savvy Woman's Guide to Financial Freedom is brimful of down-to-earth and encouraging advice, and practical user-friendly methods, to show you how to get where you want to go.
By following my guidance you could find that it takes
as little as an hour a week
to check your financial well-being, to make sure you are on track to accomplish your goals and to achieve ongoing peace of mind about money.
"If you read this book again after a month or after two years or after ten years, you'll read it with a more substantial bank of experiences and in a different way. However, the framework will work for you over and over again."
” To say Susan provides a hefty intravenous shot of positivity through everything she does, is an understatement. However, as we all know, positivity is a vastly abused and misunderstood word these days – so it’s important to contextualise Susan’s version of it. It’s an attitude of reality tempered by change and possibility – of newness and active engagement in making a difference in ones’ own economy.”
“This girl practises what she preaches, and she is on a mission to help women (and men) to gain financial independence, whatever that might mean to them. “It means different things to different people,” she said, adding that for one person it might mean the freedom to take Wednesdays off, or to earn another £5,000 a year, while for another it might mean making half a million pounds.”
“So I sat in a coffee shop and did all my figures, I worked out what I had earned and what I needed to earn to pay it all off and to be Financial free, even doing the exercise felt liberating, I took the first positive step to financial freedom and it felt good. I took my own advice and I got organised, I took Susan’s advice and got savvy.”