By G. Ruga, Editor, Paying for Private School: Tips and tricks for sending your child to private school
An article on the Joshua Kennon financial blog made me rethink my entire financial approach, and for the better. He argues that is it better to purchase higher quality items and have them last longer than to always purchase the lowest cost item.
He used the example of Allen Edmond dress shoes for those of us slogging about the office and noted that Michael Bloomberg has had the same pair of dress shoes for 25 years.
There are two concepts behind it that work together. The first concept is high enough quality to be repaired. The second concept is cost per use.
I had first noticed the cost per use factor when I purchased high quality wood furniture years ago (on sale of course) when I moved in college. A few years in, the draw pull broke off the desk. Previously, with my half glue, half sawdust furniture, that would be it. Eventually the whole thing would get moisture in it and then crumble requiring a new outlay of cash, gas, time and energy to replace it and send the old one to the landfill.
This desk seemed, well, stable. And there appeared to be a real nail there still sticking out! Bravely, I grabbed a hammer and 30 seconds later it was fixed. This was quite pleasing to me and I recorded two points on my man card.
This sequence with the furniture has been repeated many times and it still looks great 20 years later. I would have easily have gone through 3 sets of replacement furniture during that time frame – all of it lower quality and ended up spending more money over time. My cost per use is now just a few pennies and dropping each day.
So I diligently checked my expenses for the last few years on that shoe question. Couldn’t be much right? My lower-cost shoes treads wore out often making them dangerous in wet weather and junky looking. I was stunned to see an annual outlay of $200 for a set of shoes (a black pair and a brown pair). Over ten years I had dropped $2000 on work shoes alone. What? And attempts to re-sole them as part of us trying to pay for private school (cut all the expenses was our mantra!) failed as the fine cobbler declared them to be too low quality to repair. Compare this to the Allen Edmonds which uses what they call Goodyear welting that enables them to repair and restore shoes repeatedly.

Indeed, they offer a repair service and have a fancy name for it:recrafting. As an extra bonus they are made right here in the USA so I am supporting local companies.
This in turn results in a longer life for the shoe. You end up wearing a higher quality shoe that costs less per wear over time. Indeed, my fancy shoes have already lasted longer than my previous set would and, at this point, have paid for themselves.
Change your mindset from the cheapest item on sale to cost per use. As a delightful side effect, you will send less stuff to the landfill (your an environmentalist now!) and spend a lot less time replacing your stuff.
You can do this.