Chief Change Officer - #229 Michael Sakraida: Change Your Money Mindset, Change Your Life – Part One
Episode Date: March 13, 2025Michael Sakraida believes wealth isn’t just about your bank account—it’s about how you spend your time and who you spend it with. In Money, Balance and Joy, he exposes why traditional financial... wisdom misses the mark and why the real key to happiness lies in balancing money, time, and relationships. He also dishes out some well-aimed criticism at Wall Street, personal finance “experts,” and the media’s obsession with financial doom and gloom. This episode might just change the way you think about money forever. Part One.Key Highlights of Our Interview:Zen and the Art of Smart Change: Why You Shouldn’t Waste Emotional Energy“Think of change like triage. Some things are worth saving; others, not so much. It’s about focusing your energy on the changes that actually count.”The Happiness Equation: Why Money Alone Isn’t Enough"Money buys happiness when it’s part of a three-part ecosystem—monetary wealth, time wealth, and social joy. Balance the three, and you’ve got the real happiness equation."Feeling Alone in the Crowd: Why Money Isn’t the Only Problem“Inflation, Wall Street, and the financial media don’t get it—people feel isolated and misunderstood. It’s not just about cash; it’s about finding control and direction when everything feels chaotic.”Wall Street’s Blind Spot: The Emotional Toll of Inflation“While Wall Street and politicians stay comfortable, most people struggle, feeling alone and powerless. The key isn’t just money; it’s reclaiming control in a system that’s stacked against you.”_____________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Michael Sakraida______________________--Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Deep Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives, Visionary Underdogs,Transformation Gurus & Bold Hearts.6 Million+ All-Time Downloads.Reaching 80+ Countries Daily.Global Top 3% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>100,000+ subscribers are outgrowing. Act Today.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it is a modernist humility for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
Today, I'm chatting with Michael Seycrata, the insightful money philosopher and author
of the book titled Money, Balance, and Joy.
Michael dives into the philosophy of financial well-being, showing that money alone isn't
the golden ticket to happiness.
He talks about the need for a balanced ecosystem, which includes monetary wealth, time wealth,
and social wealth, explaining that full fulfillment comes when all three work together.
The also takes on Wall Street, the financial media, and financial influences, pointing
out how they often miss the emotional side of financial planning. From risk tolerance questionnaires that don't account for real-life
feelings to the misleading advice all over social media, Michael gives a candid and refreshing take. He also shares practical advice
on how we can reclaim control of our finances,
build meaningful legacy,
and manage life's financial curveballs with confidence.
Michael, welcome to our show. Let's start with your journey, your money journey, your life journey, and your career
journey.
And looking at my journey to where I am today with the mission of trying to help over a
million individuals and their advisors, there's really three key segments to it.
And the overriding theme in each of those segments is an extension of the Robert Frost
poem of taking the road less traveled.
I guess I took the road that wasn't completed and the parts that were completed had some
potholes and other damage to it. And so the first part of my journey to how I got here today was the
developmental years. My childhood, I had lots of mentors and guidance and muses from people both alive and dead.
Had two great grandfathers who were very successful businessmen, one who came over from
Eastern Europe, civil engineer. So he did build roads actually and made his fortune and went back to the old country, which was unusual.
And then another great grandfather who was in banking and finance and extremely wealthy and
unfortunately was killed when his bank was robbed back the Bonnie and Clyde days with that. But my childhood, my neighborhood, neighbors, my parents,
kind of what came out of that was not, I can't do this.
I'm not able, how can I possibly do this?
It was more, why can't I do it?
And would sit around with some neighbors
at our beach club in the south shore of Long Island.
And I would listen to their stories,
because I always had that curiosity.
And in those stories and just observations,
I saw that these were people, yes, they had the money,
but they had the balance, and they had the joy and fun
in their lives.
They had a range of interests that, besides being CEO of a bank,
they also had a jazz that they orchestrated music
and performed.
Even in college, making sure I took
not just the business courses, the finance, the accounting,
but also taking philosophy, having a history major.
And there's a lot that people don't understand about history
in terms of the value of it,
because it's not just remembering regurgitating dates
and locations and activities, but what led to it?
What really caused it?
With history, you have the advantage of that time so that you can
have now the revisionist with the more accurate view of that history. So I applied all this
to that, which took me to my second stage, and that was the kind of the learner's permit, as someone told me at my beach club. And that is
going out there, working for companies. When I started, I had two job offers. One was with
a brokerage firm and being a stockbroker, the other was an investment management firm. Brokerage firm paid more, but I didn't see the same growth and development and didn't
like the whole, at the time, brokerage model.
So I took the lower paying job and was very successful with that, again, because I didn't
know I was too young.
We had this mutual fund that was started to take advantage
of foreign tax credits for US based companies.
We started cold and had all these companies interested,
but no one wanted to be first.
And so I'm doing a cold call to a treasurer
of a large corporation in the
Northeast. He hung up the phone on me and I called him back. I said you just made a
big mistake. So I took him off guard. I said yeah I understand nine out of ten
times person calling you doesn't have anything really unique and that's not going to really help you.
Well, this time it's I'm that one out of 10.
And so he was like, OK, go on.
And he not only was one of the larger investors in the fund, but he was the first one.
So everyone else was standing around the pool waiting for someone to jump in.
He is the one that jumped in, then everyone else jumped into the pool.
So I had this ability through looking at the human element of sales, the human
element of working with financial advisors, getting sub advisory work with
large mutual fund companies
and other institutions,
that human element I quickly realized was,
make it about them, not about their company,
but what do they want in life?
And everyone wants more money,
they want more balance or time,
and they want more joy or social wealth.
And so trying to show that to them,
this big discovery incorporating this into all these programs,
and huge success with this.
But total fights every step of the way because I was the change agent.
And by me being successful in implementing this change in the eyes of
these people that were there for years and years, I made them look like failures.
That they couldn't do it and this non-insurance guy had to do it. And after a while, I got tired of working
at these different companies, doing wonderful things
for them, for their financial professionals
that we sold to, for their clients,
but always being sniped at.
And so I just got tired of always fighting that fight
and actually having a target.
The more successful I was, the more I helped my companies, the bigger the target was.
So then decided to go into the third stage and that is having consulting business and
going out there and working with different financial companies.
It's really funny, as an employee, they swipe at you, they don't want to listen to you,
question everything you say.
As a consultant, all of a sudden now they listen, and they want to do what you have.
Everything based on what the three key things people want and
taking into account its money balance and joy and taking into account their emotions and
just human nature.
And so many times I saw people that oh, it's all logical.
It's no it's not logical and I could talk more about that later, but it's all logical. It's, no, it's not logical. And I could talk more about that later.
But it's about human nature.
It's about people's individual needs.
So that has led me up to where I am right now.
Your book is called Money, Balance, and joy. Let's start with an all-kind favorite question.
In what ways and to what extent that money can buy happiness?
Sure, money buys happiness when it's part of this three-part ecosystem and that three-part ecosystems
working in harmony, working holistically. And the three parts of money,
monetary wealth, second is time wealth, and the third is the social wealth or the
happiness or joy. So we all know the stories of people.
All they do is work.
And the thing is, especially my generation,
the boomer generation, had a lot of people like that.
But the thing I learned from the greatest generation,
my parents' generation, was no, you had to have that balance.
You had to have that joy.
You had to have that balance. You had to have that joy. You had to have that range of personality
and not just be the single mind in this focus.
So money per se doesn't buy happiness.
You can't go to the happiness store, but it helps you.
You can hire someone to do the cleaning, mow in the lawn,
different painting, hire, buy pre-made food,
or go to restaurants versus booking everything from scratch.
So that can buy you the time, then the joy that comes from it.
You can get involved with volunteer work,
being part of the community.
But the great thing is, each helps the other so that
the people who are very successful,
the time part helps them make more money.
The joy part helps them make more money.
So it's this wonderful merry-go-round, if you will.
You have to have that range.
You have to have all that in your life,
because otherwise it's just not a joyful life.
Why bother?
Tell us about your value systems in managing personal wealth.
I believe you call this the total wealth concept.
When I was at this big insurance company.
My boss was just this rightly wound person.
After you knew him for 10 minutes, this is not a guy that really was fully enjoying life
and that the old school of, oh, work is work.
I put in the hours, I do the work.
I really don't like it, or I tense up and stress out about it.
Then I go home and then I could have fulfillment.
If you look at some of the great people out there,
they are much more broad doing activities.
They start with not, I wanna make money,
but I wanna help people.
I wanna change the world.
Steve Jobs, I wanna change the world.
That's what he wanted to do.
I, it wasn't, oh, I wanna be rich.
Now the money part, of course, comes with it,
but when you look at some of those leaders,
you look at Elon Musk who will at the drop of a hat
with flooding in North Carolina say,
hey, I'll reassign my satellites
to help with communications.
He's not doing that for the money,
he's not doing that for the publicity.
He's doing that to be a good citizen to help people.
So it's just a much more enjoyable
life. It's not nine to five of misery, clock out and then have joy. But why can't you have that joy?
Why can't you have that fulfillment and meaning in your job as well? If you could do that,
you're going to be better at your job, better able to
help people, you'd be better for your fit and really enjoy yourself.
And one of the things I saw with a lot of financial advisors was they were
holding the golf club really tight.
They didn't take into account, they became advisors because they love
math or they love investments.
And the advisors that I worked well with were the ones that became advisors because they
love their clients.
They love how they could go from having somebody be a total stranger to a great friend, client
and great friend within months.
And the kind of the rush you get when you realize that your client trusts you.
So these are all the things with me, my upbringing, that this is how people should work,
and that holistic wealth or the total wealth with everything.
It's so simple. Things that really help are simple.
It's so simple, things that really help are simple. When we are not wealthy, why aren't we unhappy?
So you take out the wealth component, why are they unhappy?
They don't necessarily have to be unhappy, but they are unhappy because we have Wall Street, we have advertising.
Look at what's been going on with inflation.
So we have this huge cumulative inflation.
The American population went from like 40% living from paycheck to 70%. And do you really see anything from Wall Street, from the politicians, from the financial media,
just about what a devastating effect this is having on people and just the psychological
and emotional effect. So these people feel like no one knows them,
no one appreciates or understands what they're going through. I did a cartoon on Instagram
yesterday making fun of this, how you're supposed to be happy. And somebody commented,
I thought I was the only one that felt this way of being alone.
People not understanding what I'm going through.
That loneliness, that feeling that, oh, I'm doing something wrong
because why?
The financial media, they're that top 10 percent.
Wall Street, the top 10%.
Inflation hasn't impacted them on an emotional level.
It's an inconvenience, but it said damage their lives and soon we're seeing it now with the employment numbers.
Soon there's going to be more and more layoffs, especially in the tech area and in other areas.
And it's not the lack of money.
It's that I don't have, it's my fault.
It's something I'm doing wrong.
Look at all these other people.
All right.
I made a poor choice and becoming a coder, whatever it might be.
And, oh, I wish I can go back.
Coulda, woulda, shoulda is an awful feeling to have instead of just looking forward and saying,
all right, this is the lot I have right now.
Let me just figure out a way.
Take inflation, for example.
With that, I have the three E's, how you perceive.
So you're looking at it and saying,
OK, this is actually an opportunity.
Where there's crisis, there's opportunity
for me to improve my life, get me to focus on,
what am I wasting money on?
What should I do differently?
Should I have a side job?
What have you?
What things can I do?
So I'm sending my kid to a private college,
doing an in-state college where it's either free
or very low cost, then coming up with the conceiving ideas
of how am I gonna to implement all these changes and then the creativity
of that and doing that. Now, so this person is going to be happier. So they still don't have the
money, they still are getting killed by inflation, but they are now taking control. Most stress, most depression comes with people feel
that they don't have control of what's going on around them.
So now let's give them control.
Now you don't see any of this anywhere.
You don't see articles on this.
You don't see Wall Street saying, you know what, we're going to donate
and create a program to help people like Elon Musk donating satellites for whatever, helping Ukraine,
helping flood victims from in North Carolina. Wall Street doesn't do that. And so that's why,
but it's a little complicated answer.
It's a simple question, but when we lose control,
we stress, we're unhappy, money helps us have control.
In the absence of money, we need to find other ways
to get that control so that we're happier, we're not frozen,
that we're actually moving forward.
Don't let a good crisis go to waste.
According to your approach,
there are three types of change.
Why does change matter in managing personal wealth?
It's everything.
It changes everything.
That's why the first chapter of my book is called Zen and the Art of Change.
The greatest misunderstanding with Wall Street and the financial media is that they don't
understand that the three E's of investing are the motions.
And so it's the same with change. So we have to have this Zen-like state of calm.
First of all, don't have that state. We're gonna be holding that golf club too tight
and we're not gonna get much distance in swing.
But there's always so much time and there's always so much emotional energy to changing.
You want to focus, have that laser focus, if you will, on the changes you should make.
And ignore the ones you can't change.
So your personality, you're going to try to change your personality.
No, it's just not going to happen.
Work with your personality.
Don't waste time trying to change your personality.
Then there's the change that you can and should make.
And then there's the one that also trips up a lot of people
waste that emotional capital and that is change you can do
But don't waste your time on it because it's like triage you look at the old
Mashed TV show mashed actual hospitals in Korea
You couldn't care for every soldier that came in injured.
So you had to say, this one I could save, but it's going to take three hours.
And in that time, I could have saved six other soldiers.
And if I do this person save them, then those six soldiers are going to die.
It's that triage you need to look at and say, yeah, I can do that, but it's
going to take too long. It's going to take too much emotional capital to do it. So now we have
this smaller focused types of change that we can and should do and then set about doing that.
And too many times we try to change our outlook,
change our view.
I've done some work with the whole ESG movement.
The criticism I have of it is too many times
they're trying to change people's minds, change their view.
No, what you first do is you change people's minds, change their view. No, what you first do is you change
people's actions and then by changing your actions, getting up earlier,
allocating certain time, reading certain books, hiring somebody to be
your accountability partner and to generate ideas. You want to do that and then through those changes
your outlook's going to change. Your perception of things, its actions change thoughts.
You can't change your thoughts very easily without doing that.
without doing that. In our next episode, part two of our interview,
Michael will take on Wall Street, the financial media
and financial influencers, pointing out
how they often miss the emotional side
of financial planning.
From risk tolerance survey that don't even account for real life emotions and behavior,
to the misleading advice all over social media,
Michael gives a refreshing and honest opinion. Subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated reviews,
check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.