January 4th, my boss gave me the heads-up that my role was on the cutting block and she thought it would happen in March/April. I am a single mom with one teenager so I immediately went into conserve mode and job search mode. I immediately cancelled HuluPlus, reduced my cell phone plan as much as possible (basically told my daughter she couldn't use data until I had a new job and I only used it when I had to), started playing around with using less electricity and heat, only let myself go out to eat once/week and all other meals were prepared at home (I was really shocked at how much of a cost saving this was). I also delayed the annual eye exam and dental cleanings as my insurance didn't cover these and neither were absolutely necessary at that time. I also traded my nice, luxury car for a very inexpensive leased vehicle that saved me $300/month. Honestly, I really am liking the new car
I also moved to a cash only basis instead of using my debit card for everything. I gave myself a budget for the week that included groceries, my one meal out, gas and whatever other expenses I had for that week (prescriptions, doctor copay, pet supplies). Using only cash also made me much more diligent about not overspending. I treated it as a game to see how I could make the money in my wallet stretch so I didn't feel like I was denying myself anything. It did work.
Every extra penny went into my emergency savings and I was psyched to watch it grow!
Beyond money saving, I also attacked my job search. I decided that I didn't have to make a change yet, but it didn't cost me anything other than time to job search. I figured I could interview as much as I could and I wouldn't have to made any decisions until I had an offer in hand. That made the whole job search feel less scary. It was more like an adventure to see if the grass may be greener elsewhere because I really did love my job. I started applying to job ads I saw on Indeed, Monster, LinkedIn, CareerBuilder and CraigsList. I also posted my resume on those boards minus CraigsList. It felt good to have people reach out to me saying they liked my background, even if the job was not something I would ever consider. Lastly, I researched who the other companies were who had the types of roles I did and I wrote an email to the owners of those companies, basically saying "don't you want to hire someone like me?" Of course, my email was much better than that, but that was the gist of my message.
What happened, was that one of the companies I proactively reached out to called. We chatted, had an interview, had a second interview and then an offer came early March. This really forced me to make a pro/con list for the new opportunity and my current job, and I surprised myself by deciding I was ready for a new challenge and I accepted the new job. I can't wait to start on Monday!
I ended up saving quite a bit of money and will leave some in my emergency fund and the rest will go toward some credit card debt. I also plan to continue with many of my new frugal ways as I found that I actually like saving!
Hope there are some nuggets here that may help/inspire you
