Chief Change Officer - #327 Collin Plume: Golden Rules for People-First Wealth Building
Episode Date: April 27, 2025Collin Plume didn’t build Noble Gold to chase hype—he built it to restore trust in a system Gen X knows can break. In this first of a two-part series, Collin shares how early lessons from insuran...ce sales, real estate, and recession-era survival shaped his people-first approach to wealth building. He explains why real assets like gold and silver aren’t just investments—they’re anchors of ownership in a world increasingly built on debt and paper. For Gen Xers who value resilience over rhetoric, and control over hype, this episode delivers the human side of financial security.>>Learning the Hard Way“Customer service wasn’t a department—it was survival.”Collin reflects on early lessons selling insurance and real estate, where trust and loyalty mattered more than shiny marketing.>>Why People Stay—and Why They Leave“Employees don’t stay because of ping-pong tables. They stay because they’re seen.”He shares how mentorship and genuine relationship-building shaped his leadership style at Noble Gold.>>Selling Without the Sleaze“I don’t care what you’re selling—if you don’t care about people, you lose.”Collin talks about why prioritizing people over products isn’t soft—it’s the only strategy that survives downturns.>>Precious Metals: The Ownership Play“When everything else feels intangible, gold and silver are still yours.”He explains why real assets like precious metals offer Gen Xers a hedge—not just against inflation, but against an unstable system.>>Family, Fear, and Financial Freedom“You’re not just buying an asset—you’re buying options.”Collin connects gold ownership to a deeper human need: protecting family, future, and dignity through real, controllable wealth.______________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Collin Plume --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.EdTech Leadership Awards 2025 Finalist.15 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 3% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>150,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Oshul is a modernist community for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
I used to work in Los Angeles for TCW Asset Management, where I managed billion-dollar funds for institutions
alongside the bond king, Jeffrey Gunlock, focusing on bond and credit portfolios. Today, I'm meeting someone else from LA but with a different angle on investment.
Precious metals like gold and silver. Our guest Colin Plume is here to talk about something
often overlooked and undervalued.
But don't worry, this isn't a sales pitch on buying gold or silver.
Colin and I will dive into more personal topics.
Family, parenting, retirement, and the sense of control over personal finance,
as well as financial education for future generations.
So if you have kids, care about your financial future,
are looking after elderly family members,
or are simply concerned about financial and family planning in general.
Join us and get inspired by Colin's journey imbuing wealth from scratch.
This is part one of our two-part series on Colin and his golden rules of people-focused finance.
Let's get started.
Welcome to our show, Colin.
Good morning.
Thanks Vince.
Excited to be here.
Today, we are diving into a topic that's really important, not just in business, but also
in every family.
Finance.
And it's also right at the core of what you do.
But before we get into that,
let's start with you.
Could you share a bit about your background,
your career journey,
and the story behind
how you got to where you are today?
Yeah, so in one form or another Vince,
I've been in the sales side of pretty
much every business, which I do believe allowed me to try different careers,
learn from people, high-level people. I was in the insurance business selling
insurance, property and casualty insurance. I learned very significant things from my bosses early in my career.
My first boss in the insurance business was, I would say, the most beguiling, the most lovable
person on the phone in an industry where people dislike you.
Most people don't love their insurance agent because your rates go up every year
and you don't typically see much coming out of it.
But this gentleman had a way with people on the phone.
Even when they were upset, he could turn a conversation into a likeable conversation.
And I watched him do this and learned from him for many years and really learned the art
of customer service.
Interestingly enough, off the phone,
or not when clients, he was a kind of a difficult person
to be with and he could into the person
that he needed to be on the phone.
I learned that, yes, you were selling something,
but really what was important was the customer service
aspect, especially in that business,
and treating people with respect,
and really listening to them.
And so I learned from them for many years in that business,
and then transitioned over into commercial real estate.
And again, selling commercial real estate,
I was selling apartments, shopping centers,
triple net properties.
In that business, I learned from my mentor, the owner of the business, he was an incredible
gatherer of talent. He would interview people in a very in-depth way. He spent time with people.
He did a lot of events outside of work. He even did an event that I copied, which is we do a sales trip every
year for my current business.
The reason he did is he wanted to spend time with people and really get them to
learn about him, his philosophy, and also create loyalty to him and his business.
And that was something that he did.
And I use it currently in my company, Noble Gold.
But in that business, I learned a lot from him on how to have loyal employees and how
to treat people with respect, which he always did.
But I also learned something really interesting, which is what not to do.
Because as much as he had loyalty and he created this environment where everybody had these
great employees, he was a terrible marketer.
He did absolutely no marketing.
He didn't see the sense of that.
He didn't want to spend the money.
And he didn't realize that sales and marketing are so intertwined that you have
to do both and every industry and every business is different, but he did it.
And at the time before I left, I didn't really know what mistake he made in that
business, but later on I learned as I went into the precious metals business,
which was the career before I started my own business, I learned that the
marketing actually was even more important than the sales in some ways.
I watched my boss before I started my own business struggle with marketing, learn
how to do marketing. He even was the first one to create affiliate marketing online,
which was something that nobody had ever done before. He actually created some success for
himself by diving into internet marketing in a much different way. And basically, the
precious metals business was a brick and mortar
sort of old school business.
And he created a new digital marketing way and had some early
success in that business.
So I think all of the careers early on led me to starting noble gold.
And the experience that I had was perfect in that I learned that early
customer service and client relations are your most important asset and I learned that in the insurance business.
When I got to real estate I learned about employees and hiring the right
employees and having employee loyalty and creating a good environment and then
with my third boss I realized the importance of marketing. And I basically took all of those lessons and put them into my first very successful company, which was
Noble Gold. And I wouldn't have gotten there without those three separate experiences that I had.
They really were perfect to start the business Noble Gold that we started in 2016.
Noble Gold, just the name, sounds like it's all about investing in gold and precious metals.
I'll let you do the pitch, why is now the right time?
What is the opportunity in gold investing?
But before we get into that, I want to ask you about your leadership style.
While you're running an investment firm focused on financial products, I've heard that you're really a people first leader.
Whether as your clients, customers, or employees,
would you say that's an accurate way to describe your approach?
I always realized that very early on that actually it does not matter what
you're actually selling, what product you're in.
It is all about the customer.
Everything is about the customer and everything we do at Noblegold is to
create the best possible customer experience.
And that's why we've gone the opposite way with a lot of companies where we've actually
just hired more people, actual people.
Whereas a lot of people are going towards AI, we really focus on that customer experience
because I do think that there's so many financial products, there's so many things out there
where they don't want to talk to you.
And I believe that people want to build a relationship and they want people to talk to you. And I believe that people want to build a relationship and they want people
to talk to. So it is absolutely the most important thing for us to make sure that when they buy
the metal from us that we help them through the whole process and get it to their doorstep
safely and they feel that it's a special experience. It's a white glove experience. So yes, on
the consumer side, it is absolutely our number one focus.
On the employee side, I think I was already very employee friendly, but I learned so much
during through COVID.
I think that employees really at Noble Gold bonded together through COVID because I had
a very distinct policy, which was, you go if somebody's sick or if you have an issue you go and we figure out we'll
cover you we'll figure it out later and we did that and we did that no matter
what and anyone in any position no matter if they worked in the vaults
shifting metals or they were on the phone or any position if somebody had an
issue where they were sick or they had a family member that was sick the
philosophy was you go and that I think safety that people felt they weren't
gonna lose their job they felt like we were around and on top of that we would
do monthly zoom parties we do some kind ofat-o-gories and we did all these fun
events through Zoom to keep everybody together because there was a lot of
people that were either living alone or living far from family and they were
going through it. They were going through the sadness, they were going through
people dying. So we really tried to create a culture of family.
And I think COVID created that bond in a unique way for us.
And I think that's a big part of the success we had
is that people felt like we were there for them above
and beyond them just working for us.
And Sharon and I, my wife have always had this philosophy.
And if something was going on, we called people, we checked in on people.
And the clients had similar things going on.
And so I think a lot of our growth in the 2020 and today was shaped by, you know,
what was going on with COVID and us being able to create this family environment
for our clients and also for our employees.
And it also taught me a lot that I am responsible in so many ways to these people that work
for us.
And I have a big responsibility to make sure that they have the things that they need, which is a retirement plan and health insurance
and a safe environment for them to work
and also a wage that's above the market.
We pay above market wage in every position
because we can and I think it's the right thing to do
if you can do it. Those are some of the things that I learned and the company learned over the last few
years that I think shaped who we are today.
When we first met, I shared a bit about my own background in finance, which has been
more on the traditional side.
By that, I mean I've worked with mainstream investment products like bonds and credit,
and my focus has mostly been on big institutions. I haven't had much experience dealing directly with individual investors
or in the precious metals space.
So I'm curious, why precious metals?
I think this question has two parts. First, why did you choose to set up this firm
focused on precious metals instead of other investment products?
And second, when you're talking to your customers,
why do you recommend precious metals?
Why gold? Why gold?
Why silver?
Has viable investment options for them?
I think the reason that I got into precious metals is that I had some experiences as a
child.
My grandfather collected silver coins.
Up until 1970, our U.S. coinage actually had silver in it. So there's these coins before 1970,
they call them junk silver bags. And they're bags of silver coins that have some percentage of silver
in it, either 40 or 90% of the coin is silver, depending on the age of the coin. And I got some
of these coins as a child and as a gift and learned a little bit about
it that this quarter that I was receiving even though it's a quarter on the face it shows 25
cents it's actually worth at the time it was worth 50 cents let's say those quarters today
because of the price of silver could be worth five or $6. They have a face value on the money,
but because they're silver in it, it's worth a lot more.
And I learned that as a child.
When I decided to go into precious metals later in my life,
a lot of it had to do with what happened to me
in commercial real estate,
in that I realized that my clients
in commercial real estate were business owners.
Most of them were immigrants that had come to the United States with most, I can't even
tell you how many came to the United States with zero money in their pocket and had built
wealth.
And all of them would build the wealth and buy assets.
And the asset that they would buy would be real estate.
And what I realized is as much as that had helped them build more wealth, I also realized
that there were other assets that could do something very similar.
And I think that the thing that I've learned over the last 16 years being in the precious metals industry is that
gold and silver and platinum and palladium have been seriously overlooked
by mass media because it's the way that we sell gold and silver.
It's not a derivative.
It's not a stock.
It's not a fund.
It's not an ETF and really the big money in advertising and dollars
All over the US. I mean if you go to Fox News or any of those channels
They're all pushing mutual funds or some kind of fund or stock
Because there's so much money. There's so much wealth created in
derivatives of things where you don't own it all or you
put it in a big pile.
And the thing that I loved about precious metals when I started in it 16 years ago was
that this is actually one of the few assets that you can own by yourself.
And it was against the grain, this idea that you can own the physical gold
and silver by yourself, that we would help you get it, acquire it, but it's yours. And
there's no middleman. That was very appealing to me. What I learned from these very wealthy
business owners when I was in commercial real estate is really the most important thing as you build wealth is to buy assets.
And I felt that gold and silver and platinum plating was an overlooked asset that people
weren't really talking about it.
It fascinated me as to why.
And a lot of it has to do with people are used to the stock market or they're used to
certain things that they've done.
But I think that alternative investments have really made a push.
You've seen cryptocurrencies obviously go wild and that's a big part of the market now.
But gold and silver and platinum plenum in a way are so simple and yet feel so foreign
to people. And so that was my goal was to give as much education
on precious metals as I could
through videos and emails and books
and everything that I could possibly do
is educate them on something that's simple,
but in a lot of ways is so present in what we need today.
If you think about the problem with the world
in terms of the economy, the biggest issue is debt.
The biggest issue that we created is this debt cycle
that we can't get out of, that everyone is living on.
Every country in the world is living on tremendous debt,
more debt than we've ever seen.
And the numbers are staggering.
If you go in terms of the debt that was created
since 2000 to today,
we've created 30 times more debt in the last 24 years
than we did in the hundred years before that
in the United States,
which is quite shocking considering we went through
multiple world wars. We went through Vietnam, we went through multiple world wars.
We went through Vietnam, we went through the Cold War, and yet in the last 24 years,
we've created much more debt than what we did in the hundred years before that.
And so I think gold and silver and platinum pladium are perfect in today's
environment because it goes against the idea of debt
because you actually own the assets by yourself and they're assets that are
needed in today's environment. Gold is used in so many industries,
silver is the list goes on and on, platinum and palladium is also, but it's
nice to know as an investor that you have
something in your portfolio that is not tied to any debt instrument.
I think it's the number one thing that make what we do very interesting is that you have
this ability to acquire an asset that gives you some freedom from the traditional markets,
that you're not tied to any companies
that could have like an end-ron situation
or you're not tied so heavy into tech stocks
and it gives you a little hedge
and I would say some type of insurance
against some of the things that can happen
with some of the other traditional investments.
And so that's what made me get into it and fall in love with it.
And it's become my number one thing of learning is continuing to learn about these assets
and also educate people about what they can do for them in today's financial environment.
So, let's say I come to you with a chunk of money,
and I'm considering buying gold or sulfur.
Can you walk me through the process?
You've mentioned things like acquisition.
So I suppose after that comes storage.
Because obviously, I can't just keep it in my basement.
Then, is there some kind of monitoring?
Like do you send reports on prices every month or so?
And at some point, I'll probably be concerned about liquidity.
How easy, how cost-effective it is to sell when I'm ready to cash out?
First in terms of liquidity and the risk of liquidity, gold and silver, what we sell are
bullion coins and bars, which these are the highest purity, best condition products.
These are what the banks buy.
These are what the large institutions buy.
This is what ComEx buys.
So the items you buy from us are liquid anywhere in the world.
That being said, we will buy back anything that we've sold to you at any day, at any
time.
But we have focused on items that have liquidity, regardless of you selling back to us. That was one of the differentiators when I started the business was that
many of people in this space, they sell many products.
I've seen companies sell 5,000 different coins and bars.
The problem is that a lot of them that you could buy,
they may not be liquid because
there may not have the desirability at the time you want to sell it.
The items we sell all have the highest desirability on the market and that's something that's really
important is that people have liquidity and that is something that we really focus on and we do
have people that are retiring or need money and it's important for them to have that liquidity at any moment of the day.
In terms of how it works, there's two ways you can acquire it. One would be in an IRA
and so if you do an IRA in gold or silver, you're actually buying the physical bars and coins
and we help you through that process, but we do in the IRA, we do have to store it until you retire.
So once you retire and you're above the age of 59 and a half, you can actually take possession
of the items that you acquired. So it's only in storage and it's in segregated storage
until that time and all the paperwork and everything we
do we walk you through that process. You have an online system to actually see the price of your
inventory and what you own any day. You can log in there and do that and those metals would be
liquid at any time for you. The other way that you can do it, and the IRA is very popular because a lot of people
have a lot of their retirement funds in IRAs,
and they may wanna change some of it.
So maybe they have some of it in the stock market,
and they wanna diversify,
and they don't wanna have all of it in the stock market.
They can diversify with us
and put some of their holdings in precious metals.
And it's actual physical precious metals.
When it arrives at the depository, we have two, one in Texas and one in Delaware, we
actually take a picture of the actual bullion coins and bars that the client acquired.
We send the client that photo so they can see the actual metal that they own, but it
is theirs, it is segregated, and they will metal that they own. But it is theirs.
It is segregated and they will be able to get access to it at retirement.
The other way you can do it is we actually can shift the metal directly to
your doorstep, and that is a very popular option.
Also, people love getting it at home.
And as funny as it sounds,
there are people that probably have some of our gold under their mattress. Now, I don't know if I'd recommend that location, but we do have thousands and thousands of clients that have acquired
precious metals and we've shipped it to their doorstep.
And the reason they want it is because they want control of it, which is the thing that I mentioned earlier, is that the idea of control is the beauty behind this type of investment in that you actually can control the investment on your own.
And it's not controlled by the government. It's not controlled by us, you actually control it and hold it. And that is very appealing for a lot of Americans to have an investment that they can hold and touch.
And if they had to flee the country or go anywhere in the world,
they would have access to that liquid wealth.
I can definitely see the appeal of control. If someone owns a gold bar and keeps it at
him, they obviously have to figure out security. Not just a regular safe, but maybe something
really sophisticated. Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if some people still do what they did back in the day.
Like in China, for example, keeping large amounts of cash, good bars, and other valuables
at home, even in the bedroom.
Is that tangible feeling of having something you can physically hold onto.
It's more tangible than even owning a house because a house, while you can see it, is
tied to a bunch of paperwork, just like stocks, bonds, and funds.
They are all backed by legal papers and financial systems. So I get
why some people prefer to have something they can physically control right at
their fingertips. Yeah exactly and I think also when things are not going well,
for instance, like last year,
there was multiple banks that were in trouble.
And right now there's lots of banks that are in trouble
because of what's going on in commercial real estate.
And I think that when you see any kind of banking situation where
banks are going out of business or not doing well, it doesn't give a lot of
confidence to people leaving money in the bank. And you saw three very large
banks last year that went out of business and you saw videos of people
waiting in line to get their cash out.
And I think that is another reason that people have liked the idea of gold and
silver because a,
you don't want to have it controlled in an entity that could potentially go out of business.
And the Dodd-Frank Act had some language in there that leads people to believe
that if a bank truly did go out of business, FDIC had some problems that in essence they
could potentially take your money.
So the desire for control often comes from a lack of trust and confidence in the system.
And I think when you look at the idea of the dollar itself,
the return is so low in the bank also,
relative to what you could make out there.
This year, gold is up 27 percent.
Even though the banks are paying 4 percent in the bank right now, they're only paying
that 4 percent right now because they know that there's so many other investments out
there that yields a much higher return.
And so with inflation being something that everybody is talking about, everyone's talking about
the price of energy and the price of food and all of these things have gone up.
They've skyrocketed over the last few years.
People also are saying, I can't make 4% in the bank.
And I think the returns of the banks in the US are going to continue to go down.
I would not be surprised if we see 3% savings returns by next year and even lower. So the other idea too is I just can't
leave money in the bank because I need to keep up with my quality of life. And I think that's
the thing about gold. If you go back over time, if you go back the last 150 years, gold
has been able to keep up with inflation and the cost of living in a way that most other
items have not.
And that is also the big idea with investing for retirement is you want that same quality of life in retirement
that you have while you're working.
That's why you're working so hard, is you want to be able to have the things in retirement.
And yes, you may have to downsize your living to afford to live as long as you may live.
With that being said, the idea is you want items that are going to keep up with the
costs, the increasing costs of everything that's going up out there.
And so that's another reason why a lot of people, if they were hitting very heavy
in cash, they've been looking at gold and silver as another way because they
need to make better returns.
So obviously nobody has a crystal ball of where things will go. But typically during
heavy inflationary periods, gold has performed very well. You can see the late 70s, early 80s
is a perfect example when inflation was in the 14-16% range and gold was keeping up with
that and outperforming those numbers.
Just now, Colin shared how he got into the gold business and why investing in precious
metals is timely, especially in this era of change and uncertainty.
In part 2, which will be released tomorrow, we'll dive deeper into the risks and opportunities
in the precious metal market. Colin will also share his insights on financial influences, parenting, retirement, family
wealth building, and financial education.
Don't miss it!
Come back and join us again tomorrow.
See you! check out our website and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.