The Money Mustache Community
Learning, Sharing, and Teaching => Ask a Mustachian => Topic started by: taking fire on November 10, 2015, 06:36:25 AM
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I'm going to do a case study, but I am terrible about putting out more than enough information. Should I stick to the case study guideline or would it be okay to throw in a little back story? Be warned, if I do, it will be a book. lol
Would more information about my situation be helpful or a hinder?
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Since we have no way of knowing what information may be present in your book there is no answer to give.
What I would do is just follow the template and answer any follow up questions people may have. Take some time with that though, as in wait a while and see if there are any common follow up questions or confusions that may be clarified with a little background. Then give that background/answers.
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I think this may be the best course of action. I really don't want too much personal info on the internet, but I know that the details are needed to get accurate answers.
Thank you.
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Potentially a little back story is helpful, but not so much that it sounds like excuses. If it's something like, "I didn't start my career until age 27 because I was in grad school" to account for lower savings and higher student loans, that's fine. Or "I'm disabled so I have to stay in my house that's equipped for my needs" kinds of things. But not, "I have to keep my Mazda sports car because I want to" kinds of things. :)
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Also remember that walls of text are a turnoff. We're internet peoples. Short and snappy. ;)