Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reviews. Show all posts

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Apps I Love: Envelopes 2

The biggest part of the last year and a half for me, since I finished college, has been getting my financial situation under control.  I put myself through private school, so I walked the stage with quite a bit of debt - almost double what the average Minnesota grad has.

Since I also finally got myself a smart phone, I decided to try out budgeting apps.  And I tried out a lot of them.  I had a general idea of what I wanted, but it was hard to get a firm idea of the important features without trial and error.  Plus I had the added difficulty of trying to figure out what features the app actually had - sometimes the descriptions in the App Store are pretty useless.

After trying a half-dozen or so budget apps, I've finally found one that I have stuck with and would recommend called Envelopes 2 by Emdentec Ltd.  As far as I know, Envelopes 2 is only available for iOS.



My basic criteria for a budget apps were:

  1. Defining my own categories - I live in a small town, so I shop at Walmart a lot.  I didn't want the kind of app that automatically drops certain stores into certain categories; sometimes I get groceries at Walmart, other times I get socks.
  2. The ability to "roll-over" unused funds/overspending from month to month - for big expenses, I save a little every month, and I wanted the app to reflect that.
  3. No need to connect my bank accounts!
  4. A free app.
The two biggest obstacles I ran into looking for my budget app were related to my third and fourth criteria.  Everyone knows that free apps are generally not full-feature.  Several free apps I tried only held so many transactions before you needed to upgrade to the paid version. (I know $0.99 or $1.99 isn't a lot of money, but I am being as frugal as possible to knock down my 50k+ debt.  Why should I pay for an app if I can find a free one or I can just do it the old school way?)  Other free apps only worked if I connected my banking info, and I'm sorry, but that's just shady to me.

In homage to the "old school way," one of the apps I tried to use for my budget was Apple's Numbers app, which is just a spreadsheet app that happens to have a budget template.  Personally, I found Numbers to be clunky and difficult to work with on my iPhone.  I think I used it for one month before I gave up.

I have lots of reasons for loving Envelopes 2:
You can have as many envelopes (categories) as you want, and they can be color-coded.
After you set up your envelopes with the specific amount per day, per week, per month, it is only two taps to fill your envelopes.
There are no passwords needed.
You can add a note right to the front of an envelope, which comes in handy if you owe someone money, and add notes to each transaction.


It rolls over the balance from month to month, as long as you don't clear the transactions.
You can empty the transactions from each envelope and start from scratch at the beginning of a new year with just a couple of taps.
Since you can personalize everything, the app is great for people who want to follow the Dave Ramsey system but would rather use a debit card than carry bunches of cash.

If you're considering trying Envelopes 2, here are two things to remember:

  1. Because there are no passwords/log-ins with this app, it's pretty much centralized to your phone.  You and a spouse can't both access the same envelopes on your separate phones.
  2. This app requires you to manually add transactions.  If you can't bring yourself to do that, you probably want to go find one of the apps that you have to connect to your bank accounts.

Envelopes 2 works great for me.  If you try it, let me know what you think!

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

CouponCabin App Review

If any proof of my less-than-hip lifestyle is needed, let it be this – I got my first smartphone about six weeks ago.

And with a brand-new iPhone comes the excitement of wading through the App Store. After downloading a game my friends got me hooked on in college and the Facebook app, my first addition was the app CouponCabin.


I was looking for an app that would help me save money on groceries and every day things, not just one that would get me a coupon code for Macy's or Sears. I searched blogs for app reviews to point me in the right direction, but the ones I found weren't very helpful. I went with CouponCabin because it has a dedicated "grocery coupon" category. 


Well, it may have a dedicated category for grocery coupon category, but that didn't mean it was simple. I ran into a long process with several problems:

1. To open the coupons, you have to email them to yourself. 
2. From the email, you have to follow a link to a website. 
3. Following the link does not take you directly to that specific coupon. You are taken to a general website where you have to search for the coupon you want. 
4. After finding the coupon, you have to print it, but printing requires you to download a driver (after following so many links through places I was entirely familiar, for computer and personal safety, I did not download the driver or try to print any coupons). 

Apart from the grocery coupons, I did have success using the "in-store coupons" at Jo-Ann Fabric, but it wasn't complete success.  When you search for coupons using CouponCabin, you end up with a page like this


Notice how they have the expiration date conveniently listed? Take it from me, they aren't always accurate. I opened one coupon for Jo-Anne that was supposed to be valid until December but actually expired in March, a week before I was going to use it. 

At the end of the day I wouldn't recommend CouponCabin – but I'm not going to delete it until I find something better. For now, I'll just search for in store coupons while I'm waiting in line for bigger purchases. 

If you have a coupon app you love, leave me a comment!