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Jennifer Openshaw : What's Your Net Worth? Click Your Way to Wealth
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Author: Jennifer Openshaw
Title: What's Your Net Worth? Click Your Way to Wealth
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Date: 2001-05
ISBN: 0738204439
Publisher: Basic Books
Weight: 1.3 pounds
Size: 6.0 x 9.0 x 1.3 inches
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Description: Product Description
Women are using the Internet more than ever-and more than men-to shop, chat, and, of course, to manage their finances. As founder and CEO of the pioneering Women's Financial Network (WFN), Jennifer Openshaw has made it her mission to provide women with all of the advice and access they need to achieve financial security.Much more than a catalog of sites, What's Your 'Net Worth is chock-full of tools to help women seize the opportunities that are available on the Internet, from IPOs and investment clubs to business financing, mortgages, retirement planning, on-line banking, and much more. It is packed with female-friendly advice and practical tips on money management that will guide women toward financial prosperity.


Amazon.com Review
Online investing may get the lion's share of attention, but Jennifer Openshaw says the Internet really is the perfect vehicle for managing all personal finance information--especially for women, whose fiscal requirements often are ignored by traditional guides to money management. In What's Your Net Worth?, Openshaw, founder of the Women's Financial Network and a frequent financial TV commentator, describes a complete 12-step wealth-building program that combines sound advice concerning women's precise needs with Web sites that should be helpful in addressing them. It boils down to mixing time-honored (albeit gender-specific) techniques with today's technology to develop a three-part game plan Openshaw calls "Earn It, Save It, and Grow It!" Toward the second goal, for example, she describes various ways that expenses might be trimmed to increase savings, "not only by using online budgeting tools to get a handle on your spending but also by devising an online strategy to spend less on the things you still need to buy." Other individual actions focus on eliminating debt and building credit, protecting assets, minimizing taxes, increasing earnings, and giving back through charitable contributions. --Howard Rothman

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