
How to Negotiate Your Next Raise Without Losing Your Mind
Raise conversations go sideways because most people pitch their boss like they're pitching a venture capitalist. Here's the quieter, more honest playbook that actually works.
The Archive
The whole archive, newest first. A small publication, so the list is short and every piece here earned its place. Pick one, pour something, read slow.

Raise conversations go sideways because most people pitch their boss like they're pitching a venture capitalist. Here's the quieter, more honest playbook that actually works.

Chase Sapphire, Amex Gold, Capital One Venture X. The same three cards keep showing up on best-of lists, but the rules for actually earning the points changed in 2026. Here's what we use now.

Index funds are the most boring, most powerful financial tool a normal person can use. We walk through what they are, why they win, and exactly how we'd set one up in an afternoon.

The standard advice is '3 to 6 months of expenses.' The real answer is more specific than that, and the where matters more than the how much.

With 30-year mortgage rates hovering near 6.5% and home prices still elevated, the old 'buy is always better' rule broke. Here's the five-minute calculation that tells you the truth for your situation.

We cut a four-person family's grocery spend from $1,400 to $950 a month over 90 days. Not by clipping coupons. By changing five habits. Here are all five.

'Always contribute up to the match' is the single piece of financial advice everyone gets right. But there are four subtleties about how matches actually work that cost people tens of thousands over a career.

A tour of real second-income paths that worked for people we know. Freelancing, tutoring, property, content, selling skills. What each one actually pays, and what nobody says out loud.

Credit scoring is simpler than banks want you to think. Five factors, weighted. Here's what each one is, how to move it, and which three things actually matter most.

'Should I put this $5,000 toward my loans or into the market?' This is the single most common finance question we get. Here's the two-question framework we use to answer it consistently.