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by Domenic_S
2302 days ago
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> As a result, most of the subs I follow are littered with the same questions over and over. I answer questions in r/personalfinance's "new" area, and the split is something like: "I am upside down on my car loan/loan is too expensive/want to get out of my current car" - 40% "How do I do I make [some crazy ROI]? I have [$small amount] to invest" - 20% "I have no money and need to pay my bills" - 20% "Can I afford to buy this house?" - 10% Novel questions - 10% So many car questions come up I'm tempted to write an ebook on it and sell it for $1 - I sold cars in college and have a lot of info on how the sausage is made. |
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You should, but charge the full price, if you genuinely have useful information. The perceived value of an item changes according to the price you charge.
Given that cars are multi-thousand dollar expense, investing a tiny fraction to get better information is a good return of investment.