I have an addiction to trying out budgeting apps the moment I find a new one. It's like the search for the Holy Grail or something. I know that an app by itself isn't going to magically make budgeting a success, instead I see these them as sort of a financial sidekick, something that helps me out get out of my own way just enough so we can save the day (literally ).
The description is accurate. Putz is the simplest of budget trackers. Categories / Expenses and a progress bar. Nice. Fun to play with but won't unseat my current toolset.
I'm curious about that, never heard of it. Can you elaborate or if you have a spreadsheet to share, my address is thomas@budget-fox.com (yes, I'm working on a household budget app)
How do you measure "success" in your budgeting? Is it a short-term monthly basis or a longer one?
Putz literally means penis but is commonly used to as a pejorative for a foolish man. Then again "git" is British slang with similar usage and we all use that product.
I recently started using this and love it. It may sound silly, but I've found that the most effective way to stick to my budget is using a checking account for expenses that is separate from my direct-deposit account. Simple tells you how much money you have left (that isn't earmarked for something else), and that's it.
Really cool! I'm also big into playing around with budget apps and seeing what works.
Few suggestions I have from playing around with it:
1. It's not clear when I click the "add a budget" what it's for. There's the top-level "November 1-15" type of budget and then those budgets have categories, but the terminology could maybe use some work here. The term "budget" to me is usually synonymous with how you're using "categories" - e.g. we have a grocery budget.
2. I wasn't really expecting the ellipsis button to be a delete. I usually expect it to be like a context menu. In general it seems like the ellipsis button does different things in different locations, which is a bit of a bad pattern IMO.
3. There's a few spelling errors, e.g. "ammount" in the "add a budget" overlay
4. It's a bit weird that when you start a new budget it's immediately in the red (color-wise, at least). I feel like $0.00 left to spend should still be in the black.
5. "Track Spending" is only available for the first budget, but you can imagine that I might make next week's budget before this week is over, so it's a bit annoying that there's no "Track Spending" button on the previous budgets. I realize you can still click into the old budget, but still.
6. There's no way to edit expenses in the budget if I mistakenly add a wrong number, or if there is it's very unclear to me.
7. Negative numbers aren't allowed but you can imagine that this would be pretty useful for things like rebates or if I get a refund on something (though this is pretty related to the last item).
Anyway, love the idea for sure! Short-term budgets are pretty helpful and not something that Mint really provides, so excellent idea.
Expense tracking seems to be a trend recently! I myself use HelloExpense [1] (just a happy user) and I recently developed a small tool to analyse my expenses. It handles a simple csv format (from the hello expense export, but could be generalised). I thought I might share it in this thread. If people are interested, I put a demo at https://expenses-analysis.herokuapp.com/
About your website: I would have liked to get info without registering. The explanation is short, and the only links are to sign up or sign in.
A little off-topic, but really wondering; am i the only one annoyed by the fact that 9 out of 10 apps these days are:
1. cloud based/harvesting as much data as possible
and/or
2. subscriptions
I prefer apps like for example Omnifocus [1], that give you:
1. the ability to client-side encrypt your data so your data won't be sold/misused, and
2. instead of making profit of selling your data, simply let you pay a larger amount upfront for it instead. Thus, you also know exactly what features you're paying for - as opposed to subscriptions...
You often pay much less upfront for a subscription than you do e.g. purchasing an app "full price".
You might pay more over the lifetime of your subscription than you would paying full price for something, but in terms of your parent's comment, that is why a subscription is seen as preferred over paying for something upfront.
For example, $7/mo is a lot more palatable than buying some software for $80, especially when you're in the stage of "I don't know if I'll use this or not".
Well this is the game being played. If you run a business you don't want customers like me who seek value and privacy. You'll make a lot more money from those with plenty of disposable cash who don't mind adding yet another $10/m SaaS to their monthly expenses.
I thought about creating a budget SaaS but what puts me off is
(i) Your target money is in a budgeting mindframe and so yeah they are going to be looking for the cheapest option.
(ii) There are so many budget apps and they are good and fairly cheap.
YNAB4 is the best as far as I am concerned, unless you need full double-entry accounting. The user interface is superb. It is going to be hard to come close. My ideal budget app is YNAB4 but with some of the opinionated envelope-based budgeting calculations being more flexible for those who do have some cashflow buffer.
I'd literally keep a Windows 10 VM for the next 20 years to run it :-) unless something with a better UI comes out which I doubt.
You're certainly offering a good value but you don't have a good business. I guess you can jump around from app to app but you'll just get outcompeted by people who have better revs and more resources to plow into r&d or distribution.
I actually signed up for Standard Note yesterday and have been evaluating Todoist due to those privacy concerns.
My SO and I used Wunderlist for a number of years. After my wife noticed a very unexpected advertisement on Facebook, I read the privacy policy. At that point, I didn't feel comfortable putting even basic groceries in anymore.
disclaimer: working on something similar to putz but way more sophisticated.
my webapp is cloud (old style webapp, not that much cloud if you ask me) but for the simple reason that I allow users to cooperate (couples, families). I'm going for the subscriptions model because I'd like my customers to be those who actually use the app and not some effing corporation leeching more profits from my users.
I did wonder though about the hyper-sensitive users who prefer running the app and data themselves. To be honest, the answer is to use a different, ideally open source, software like gnucash, ledger/hledger, or beancount (I used the first two myself). which all come with their own limitations.
Would there be a market for me to offer my rails/mongodb/... app as a docker container that you deploy wherever you like? I'd not even bother about DRM.
When it comes down to ad-based revenue versus subscription-based revenue, I'll choose the subscription (almost) every time. I'd much rather pay (some amount) for a high-quality product than not pay for a subpar product (assuming, as I do, that ads detract from an app's experience in most cases).
I'd also prefer that service be the one "mining" my data (to provide a better service to me) than being a middleman ferrying my data off to advertisers and third parties. Honestly, if the app/service can really make use of my data, I'd usually prefer handing it all over to them so they can do their job better over having some kind of offline experience for the misguided sake of trying to protect my privacy. Give me the option to give you data and show/tell me what you're going to do with it, and I'll happily give it to you 9 out of 10 times.
My ideal price is somewhere between a subscription and a one-off payment for something for most things, with no ads in either and some kind of cloud-based storage/backup/assistance in both. Obviously there's a lot of context left out here like how one-off payments don't work when you're paying server fees each month, etc.
Good job on shipping something but I have to say that this space is soon going to be owned by the banking services who have the data on the category of your spending. And most importantly, requires no data input from myself.
Let me be frank here: The app is too simple, unpolished and I don't think you've used it for yourself long enough. Here's my list of complaints, please know that I'm working on a similar app with a lot more features:
* no way to copy a budget (it's the same categories every month!)
* colour scheme isn't that great (lack of contrast, but that might be me)
* only $, no € or ¥. currency is a text-field!
* no date on the stuff I spent, sure I could use the Note field but it's cool enough
* can't "end" a budget prematurely. sure, there's "custom" but no big phat arrow pointing me at the same default which is "1st of this month to the end of this month".
* can't do negative amounts. yes, I'd like to do that
* having upcoming or past budgets feels weird, the blue (why blue?) "Track spending" button only shows for the oldest one.
* no reports at all
I've gone through a few applications/services like this - YNAB, Mint, and a handful of Mac App Store applications that tried to accomplish more or less the same thing. They all requested some sort of subscription or hit me with ads every chance they got. Auto-import features usually end up being lack-luster for me as well, forcing me to log in every time or something along those lines.
I've come to realize that for the gainfully employed, above-average computer user, Excel/Numbers/LibreOffce (but mostly Excel because of PivotTables) is probably the way to go for a few reasons:
- You're looking for a post-mortem/retrospective on your spending as a way to adjust habits accordingly, not a way to pay off huge debts (YNAB is actually quite good for this latter part, but that's not what I'm looking to do)
- You don't want some program's buggy workflows getting in your way when the data is /right there/ and basically just a table of CSV values
- You want custom reports, charts, and other things
- It's just really not that hard. Any bank will allow you to export financial data in CSV or a similar format.
I just export my data every month and do a post-mortem. Easy enough. No extra cost.
Are you the primary spender in your household or is it a team effort? I've found that what helps me may not help her due to different upbringings and mindsets about money.
I agree with you that the CSV the primary valuable artifact. Most of the pie charts and such don't add any value. The real opportunity to improve lies in the thought process I face at each individual spending decision.
45 comments
[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 104 ms ] threadThe description is accurate. Putz is the simplest of budget trackers. Categories / Expenses and a progress bar. Nice. Fun to play with but won't unseat my current toolset.
I'm curious about that, never heard of it. Can you elaborate or if you have a spreadsheet to share, my address is thomas@budget-fox.com (yes, I'm working on a household budget app)
How do you measure "success" in your budgeting? Is it a short-term monthly basis or a longer one?
For all the emphasis we put on design principles and naming conventions, we collectively suck at naming our products.
Then again, maybe that name is genius.
I'm starting to feel I've "outgrown" it, but it's been literally my hub since 2012.
I also use Personal Capital, but Simple's new protected goal isn't exposed there, so I just... stopped using it.
Few suggestions I have from playing around with it:
1. It's not clear when I click the "add a budget" what it's for. There's the top-level "November 1-15" type of budget and then those budgets have categories, but the terminology could maybe use some work here. The term "budget" to me is usually synonymous with how you're using "categories" - e.g. we have a grocery budget.
2. I wasn't really expecting the ellipsis button to be a delete. I usually expect it to be like a context menu. In general it seems like the ellipsis button does different things in different locations, which is a bit of a bad pattern IMO.
3. There's a few spelling errors, e.g. "ammount" in the "add a budget" overlay
4. It's a bit weird that when you start a new budget it's immediately in the red (color-wise, at least). I feel like $0.00 left to spend should still be in the black.
5. "Track Spending" is only available for the first budget, but you can imagine that I might make next week's budget before this week is over, so it's a bit annoying that there's no "Track Spending" button on the previous budgets. I realize you can still click into the old budget, but still.
6. There's no way to edit expenses in the budget if I mistakenly add a wrong number, or if there is it's very unclear to me.
7. Negative numbers aren't allowed but you can imagine that this would be pretty useful for things like rebates or if I get a refund on something (though this is pretty related to the last item).
Anyway, love the idea for sure! Short-term budgets are pretty helpful and not something that Mint really provides, so excellent idea.
- a default set of categories would be useful
- I don't always add expenses immediately, so being able to change the date would useful.
- the ... in the overview window prompts you to delete a budget! seems dangerous
- ditto on another comment, there's no way to edit an expense.
- It might be interesting to setup Income and then allocate budgets based on % of income to automatically calculate budget targets.
Nice work.
About your website: I would have liked to get info without registering. The explanation is short, and the only links are to sign up or sign in.
[1] https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.helloexpen...
Website: "You want new clothes, an iced coffee, but does it fit your budget?"
Oh the irony if the user were to get ads for new clothes and iced coffee...
1. cloud based/harvesting as much data as possible and/or 2. subscriptions
I prefer apps like for example Omnifocus [1], that give you:
1. the ability to client-side encrypt your data so your data won't be sold/misused, and 2. instead of making profit of selling your data, simply let you pay a larger amount upfront for it instead. Thus, you also know exactly what features you're paying for - as opposed to subscriptions...
[1] https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/omnifocus-3/id1346190318?mt=...
You might pay more over the lifetime of your subscription than you would paying full price for something, but in terms of your parent's comment, that is why a subscription is seen as preferred over paying for something upfront.
For example, $7/mo is a lot more palatable than buying some software for $80, especially when you're in the stage of "I don't know if I'll use this or not".
I thought about creating a budget SaaS but what puts me off is
(i) Your target money is in a budgeting mindframe and so yeah they are going to be looking for the cheapest option.
(ii) There are so many budget apps and they are good and fairly cheap.
YNAB4 is the best as far as I am concerned, unless you need full double-entry accounting. The user interface is superb. It is going to be hard to come close. My ideal budget app is YNAB4 but with some of the opinionated envelope-based budgeting calculations being more flexible for those who do have some cashflow buffer.
I'd literally keep a Windows 10 VM for the next 20 years to run it :-) unless something with a better UI comes out which I doubt.
My SO and I used Wunderlist for a number of years. After my wife noticed a very unexpected advertisement on Facebook, I read the privacy policy. At that point, I didn't feel comfortable putting even basic groceries in anymore.
https://standardnotes.org/
You basically can't format notes at all on mobile and changing a note on mobile for me just borked the desktop formatting.
Will be great all-rounder when that is sorted though.
my webapp is cloud (old style webapp, not that much cloud if you ask me) but for the simple reason that I allow users to cooperate (couples, families). I'm going for the subscriptions model because I'd like my customers to be those who actually use the app and not some effing corporation leeching more profits from my users.
I did wonder though about the hyper-sensitive users who prefer running the app and data themselves. To be honest, the answer is to use a different, ideally open source, software like gnucash, ledger/hledger, or beancount (I used the first two myself). which all come with their own limitations.
Would there be a market for me to offer my rails/mongodb/... app as a docker container that you deploy wherever you like? I'd not even bother about DRM.
I'd also prefer that service be the one "mining" my data (to provide a better service to me) than being a middleman ferrying my data off to advertisers and third parties. Honestly, if the app/service can really make use of my data, I'd usually prefer handing it all over to them so they can do their job better over having some kind of offline experience for the misguided sake of trying to protect my privacy. Give me the option to give you data and show/tell me what you're going to do with it, and I'll happily give it to you 9 out of 10 times.
My ideal price is somewhere between a subscription and a one-off payment for something for most things, with no ads in either and some kind of cloud-based storage/backup/assistance in both. Obviously there's a lot of context left out here like how one-off payments don't work when you're paying server fees each month, etc.
The homepage doesn't provide enough information to convince the user to register.
I saw a registration form without knowing anything about the service/app/features/prices/benefits.
Revolut already does it, so does my bank.
* no way to copy a budget (it's the same categories every month!) * colour scheme isn't that great (lack of contrast, but that might be me) * only $, no € or ¥. currency is a text-field! * no date on the stuff I spent, sure I could use the Note field but it's cool enough * can't "end" a budget prematurely. sure, there's "custom" but no big phat arrow pointing me at the same default which is "1st of this month to the end of this month". * can't do negative amounts. yes, I'd like to do that * having upcoming or past budgets feels weird, the blue (why blue?) "Track spending" button only shows for the oldest one. * no reports at all
I've come to realize that for the gainfully employed, above-average computer user, Excel/Numbers/LibreOffce (but mostly Excel because of PivotTables) is probably the way to go for a few reasons:
- You're looking for a post-mortem/retrospective on your spending as a way to adjust habits accordingly, not a way to pay off huge debts (YNAB is actually quite good for this latter part, but that's not what I'm looking to do)
- You don't want some program's buggy workflows getting in your way when the data is /right there/ and basically just a table of CSV values
- You want custom reports, charts, and other things
- It's just really not that hard. Any bank will allow you to export financial data in CSV or a similar format.
I just export my data every month and do a post-mortem. Easy enough. No extra cost.
I agree with you that the CSV the primary valuable artifact. Most of the pie charts and such don't add any value. The real opportunity to improve lies in the thought process I face at each individual spending decision.