Search Articles from our Finance Blog By Month
At Sapience Financial, much of our advice involves helping people learn new skills and insights.
- We have a range of individually hand-crafted Financial Blog Articles relevant to our client's needs and lives.
- We also have separate more in-depth Key Articles to help you understand some of the practical details of our specialty products and services in greater depth, specific to the needs of many of our small business clients, friends, and supporters.
Use the blue site Search Button at the top right corner of our site. And if you really want to drill down through our data for something very specific, you can also search by Article Tag here. Alternatively, if you're looking for something in particular, just get in contact here.
Below you can search our archive of Blog Articles by title or date published.
Selling half-truths to whole questions
In our connected world of 30 second sound bites and increasingly shortening attention spans, it's difficult to think that some things can't be explained in a tweet and require more discussion. But sadly that doesn't stop some people from trying to sell half an answer to a whole question and expecting nobody to notice.
Perhaps the only thing that makes a half-truth more dangerous is the fact it makes the half-lie more convincing.
Do you have to be brave or be safe?
The Snakes and Ladders board game has been a traditional favourite for thousands of years. Like all good board games played with dice and others, it’s a game of chance.
Budgeting for Big Picture People
It's not the amount, it’s the percentages that count
There are some numbers in life you should always remember. Your PIN numbers, your spouse's birthday, (maybe your mother-in-law's birthday), the number of children you have, their birthdays, and quite possibly the annual date for the football grand final.
The new problem of liking working from home (WFH)
When it comes to building robots that look uncannily similar to humans in facial appearance, the end result usually makes even the most stoic of people uncomfortable, and simply creeps us out. Our sense of being uniquely human is core to our understanding of self, our personal autonomy and our sense of innate value.
Robots purposely made to look a little too human, seem to violate that sensibility.


