Epic Real Estate Investing - Encore - Garrett Gunderson - The Wealth Factory | 517
Episode Date: November 8, 2018Meet Garrett Gunderson, a financial advocate and a founder of Wealth Factory, who brings energy and excitement! Discover how his great-grandfather inspired him to create Wealth Factory, the widely acc...epted myths and fabrications that undermine people's prosperity, and how Garrett plans to help one million entrepreneurs achieve economic independence. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is Terio Media.
Today I'm joined by an entrepreneur, financial advocate, and founder of Wealth Factory.
He brings energy and excitement to debunking the many widely accepted myths and fabrications that undermine the prosperity and joy of millions of business owners.
I'm very excited to have him on the show today as it fits, writing about what we talk about on a weekly basis.
So please help me welcome to the show, Mr. Garrett Gunderson. Garrett, welcome to the show.
what's up man imagine if like you you know the the intro is I bring energy and excitement and
I was just as monotone and boring as could be like you'd be a man he lied right that's funny though
no it's good though because I think this is sometimes as a it's a subject where it needs a little bit
of excitement brought this man I mean it's something we all know we need to face but not many of us
want to face because most of time finance means separating ourselves from our money cutting back
scrimping, being overrelying on the stock market, like retirement plans, all the kind of stuff
that hasn't really led to wealth, but it's still been a predominant part of the conversation, unfortunately.
We just started a weekly episode called Tax Hacker Tuesday, and I was really, it was that kind of an
experiment because it's taxes. Who gets excited about taxes, right? And it's been one of the most
popular shows, so I think, you know, the audience has been prepped for you, and I think this is going to be
fantastic. I know a lot about tax, even though I'm not a CPA or a tax attorney, because
is there's really about no other expense we have in our life
that's significant as tax.
And 93% of people pay more than they're supposed to.
They tip the government unnecessarily.
And it's just, it's the ignorance tax that costs us.
It's like, so once you're in the know,
and I've built like a really simple framework,
two things to avoid three things to do,
just so people keep more of what they make.
Awesome. So I want to get into that for sure.
We're gonna get into all of that.
Let me ask you though, what were you doing
just prior to becoming a financial advocate
and running wealth factory?
I was a college student at the time.
I had won $5,000 for being young entrepreneur of the year and I wanted to invest it.
My mom wouldn't sign off as a custodian.
So when I finally turned 18, I invested in the very first thing.
Someone told me it was an investment.
Fortunately, I only was putting 70 bucks a month away from it.
And then I had an econometrics class in college and realized, wait, there's no chance this is going to do what it's supposed to.
Go to ask them more questions.
And then ironically, got offered an internship.
which was really just, hey, bring your family and friends to us so we can peddle them life insurance and mutual funds.
But when I was 19, I got started that way.
And then when I was 22, I saw a family office for the first time for people worth 50 million or more and then decided that's what I wanted to build for entrepreneurs, people that normally wouldn't have access to that.
And that was ambitious.
It took me a whole hell of a lot longer to do than I originally thought it was going to.
Mm-hmm. God, well, that just kind of answered the next question. I was going to ask you, what
was it that inspired you to go in and build Wellfactory? And maybe you can start by backup just a little bit
and explain what Well, Factory is. I think what really inspired me to do Wellfactory was
my great-grandfather came over from Italy in 1913 because of corrupt government and excessive
tax and it was crippling his fishing business. So he ended up leading his family behind for seven
years, getting on a train in the United States to become a goat herder in Utah, of all places,
and then became a coal miner just to save up enough money to get his family to come over and meet
his daughter for the first time because he left when his wife was pregnant. And that's where the
passion comes from because I think when people don't have, like, you can work so hard, you can work
your ass off and have the wrong financial philosophy and still have it be devastating or caused bankruptcy
or separation from your family. And so,
I'm not really concerned about this old money, you know, highly affluent inherited type of wealth
people because they get pretty good financial advice and everybody's trying to work with them.
I want to work with guys like my great-grandfather, bold entrepreneurs that went out and
tried to do something and started from scratch and they just need the resources and support
and they've got to have people stop pillaging them of their money into faulty plans.
So wealth factory was really born of understanding my great-grandfather never had that
opportunity or insight. And it was my grandfather that asked me for financial help when his
sister got put in the hospital and all their money was in one account. And that's when I truly
became a financial planner instead of a product peddler because I found out how to protect
two-thirds of it. I ended up protecting all of it when it was all said and done. And it felt
damn good because they had spent a whole generation building that wealth. And because of one misstep
that they didn't have it protected when she got put into a hospital and was potentially
you can go to a nursing home, it was all at risk.
And so I was like, wait, I can actually change people's financial future for generations to come
and really help them emphasize legacy because most people don't.
We're off to a good start.
I'm really excited what's going to come next because I think we're of the same mindset.
And sometimes when you talk to people about finances, you can get polarizing opinions,
but this is good, right?
So what are some of the widely accepted myths and fabrications that are undermining people's
prosperity and the ones that you enjoy exposing and debunking the most.
Well, I think the biggest one is that people believe there's a finite high,
which is really born of a scarcity mindset and a scarcity kind of thought process,
where their perspective is there's not enough out there.
It's a zero-sum game, so everything's win-lose.
People in that mindset believe that profit is evidence of deception or coercion or something
wrong.
They feel like money's bad.
And the reality is it's an abundant world.
Even if there's a finite amount of resources, there's human ingenuity and innovation,
and there's all these different ways that we can accomplish things, and we all value things differently.
So my belief is, look, money can exchange hands multiple times.
The more times it exchanges it's from value creation, the more wealthy we all become.
So it's not a finite pie because there's all these other ways to do things,
and that we all have got a lot more wealth today because of our predecessors and the previous generations,
because we build upon ideas, we learn things more efficiently,
we inherit certain things that give us a head start,
that, I mean, people that are poor today
would have been like the upper middle class 200 years ago.
And, you know, that's like, so I think that the biggest thing
is that no one shrinks their way to wealth.
And if we could get really clear that it's a production-based economy
where value creation is the king
and that we deliver that value through serving others and solving problems,
it changes our mindset to one of much more abundance
And everything else in the book is secondary to that major concept.
I go through why it doesn't take money to make money.
Sure, you can have your money make money,
but it takes mental capital and knowledge or relationship capital and people
and that value exchange to make money.
Or there's some people that believe that high risk equals high return.
Actually, we lower our risk with knowledge.
We lower our risk with our investor DNA and understanding what we're investing in.
And risk isn't in the investment.
It's in the investor.
So I want people to become better investors.
And so, yeah, I guess I could overwhelm everyone with these, you know, excitement of these myths out there.
But once someone sees the myth, they can avoid it.
Because the myth is not an obvious lie.
It's a subtle lie.
And when we look at the world through the myth, we see evidence that supports that.
And sometimes that comes from well-meaning, well-intentioned, family, friends, preachers, teachers,
teachers, and all of a sudden we adopt their worldview or their view of money.
And because we want to be good people, but we have the wrong philosophy,
We tend to lower our standard of value and wealth based upon who we've associated with a lot of times in our life.
Right.
I can't find one thing there that I can disagree with.
So good stuff.
Good.
What is one piece of, and there's a lot of things in my world in the real estate world that really kind of get under my skin when I see people out there.
You know, peddling certain types of advice that just makes me cringe.
I was like, please don't follow that.
What is one piece of advice you see out there that just kind of makes you.
you cringe.
Retirement plans?
I think retirement plans are problematic for about, I've identified 15 major reasons
why they're problematic, but I'll nail a few of them.
Number one, imagine I come to you today, Matt, I'm like, hey, why don't we get
to a partnership?
Here's the deal.
If you want to leave the partnership early, I'm going to charge you an extra 10%.
I get a higher percentage.
When you go to exit this partnership, I'll tell you my percentage based upon my economic
circumstance, which is bound to change because I'm $20 trillion in debt.
right now. And, you know, so when you enter those plans, they're government plans and the government
becomes your partner. And they're not actually tax deductions, they're tax deferrals. You eventually
have to pay taxes when you pull the money out. There's a lot of undisclosed fees that are barely
being disclosed in the last couple years, like 12b1 fees with the funds or legal and admin fees and
all these kind of things really hurt the performance. And there's no ability to, there's limited ability
of where you can invest the money and you're stocking it away till at least 59 and a half and the
government might change those rules and if you're successful hopefully it'll be a little higher tax
bracket in the future let alone if the government raises taxes which you know the average top tax bracket
61.7 percent that's a lot higher than we're at today so what if you defer your taxes into a future
where you have a more money or b the government raises the taxes or c you have less tax deductions
and you don't have as much access to your money between now and then and I think that
feel like everybody's in store for at least 20 big opportunities in their lifetime. What if your
money's all socked away and sucked up in a retirement plan? And even worse, what if you put
real estate in it? Now you took a capital gain asset and made an ordinary income. You eliminate
the depreciation if it's a commercial property. You can't cost segregate it to accelerate the
depreciation and get more tax advantage. You can't 1031 it anymore because it's even if you do,
it doesn't matter because it's stuck inside of you who eventually have to pay ordinary income,
which is probably going to be a lot higher than long-term capital gains as it is today.
And those are just a few of my issues with them.
I like it.
I look at retirement plans as you're retiring your money before you get to retire yourself.
Right.
And look, here's why retirement plans are so effective as far as people putting money into them.
I mean, if we're a financial institution, Matt, what do we want from people?
Is a financial institution?
Yeah.
Bank, mutual fund.
What are we want from the banks or we're the banks?
Yeah. If we're the bank, what do we want from people?
I want them to give me my money. I mean, they're money.
How often do we want their money?
I want it all the time.
How long do we want to hold on to it for?
Forever.
And if they come to take a withdrawal, how much do we want to give them back?
As little as possible.
Okay, so that's exactly why 401Ks, RSP's, Kyo, Simple, Seps, suck, is because now you're
automatically putting money away.
Institutions love it.
They get to invest your money, or they get a fee off your money and the government's money.
You're discouraged to take any money out of it because there's penalties.
And when you go to take it out, you still have to pay tax, which means you're probably going to leave it in there.
It is a brilliant plan for them.
And when they tell you it takes money to make money, it didn't take any of their money to make money.
It took your money to make money.
So it's a completely different set of rules.
And so that's why I don't really like those plans.
Got it.
Yeah.
I didn't like them either before we talked, but now I'm liking them even less.
Yeah, and I mean, for those people that are now very upset,
set with me because they have these plans like, A, I acknowledge it's good that you put away money
that you're trying to do the right things. B, there are things you can do. You can move to self-directed
plans, which mean that you have a better universe to invest in. You can do a 72T distribution,
which means you can start taking money out before 59 and a half without penalty. You can look
about other exit strategies. Like if you're a real estate investor, which hopefully you are watching
this, maybe when you sell some real estate, you can donate to a charitable trust, create a tax
deduction that offsets some of the money that comes out of your retirement plan. And then when you
sell the property, you pay zero tax on the property, but you get to take an income off of the
full gift while you're alive. And the charity just keeps at least 10% of that gift by the time
you die. Like, there are strategies. There are solutions. So don't be mad. Just be informed and
know that, you know, probably stop contributing today and start allocating those dollars somewhere else.
You said, don't be mad. It's funny because of all of the YouTube videos,
I have, there's one that has the most views and it's caused the most dissension between the
viewers is what they're not telling you about your 401K. And people just really hold on to these
myths and they get so angry if you tell them anything to the contrary that they've been told.
I got in an argument. I was in Steamboat speaking and we were talking about defined benefit plans,
which are even worse and other pension plans that this really successful individual was putting money.
He goes, that's all going to be tax free. I'm like, oh, actually it's not when you pull it out.
going to be taxable. He's like, no, you're wrong. I'm like, cool, man. I didn't realize you're a
financial person. That's awesome. Tell me how you get it out tax free. He goes, well, you put it in
and then he just starts, and I'm like, dude, I'm like retirement plans are like strippers. Like,
you know what? It may look really nice, but it's not someone that you're taking home to marry.
And it's long term. At front, it is nice. You get to put it in pre-tax. Long term, you have to pay
tax on the back end. So, you know, your money is going to be cheating on you. That's the bottom
line. Right. Great metaphor. I don't know if it's a great metaphor, but I appreciate the sentence.
I get it. It's memorable at least, right? Very clear. So we've talked about what people need to know.
So what do people need to do to get their wealth journey headed in the right direction?
A couple of steps that are simple yet profound. First off, any time you take personal income,
set up a separate account, it could be a savings or money market account, a checking account for
for all I care, but every time you pay yourself, take a percentage off the top. My recommendation
is 18%. That might seem like a lot. And it's not business income or business revenue, it's
personal income and set it aside. So you automate your savings, number one. Number two, when you
have at least six months of liquidity, then you can deliberately allocate your investing money.
Most people jump the shark and they are automatically saving. They're automatically investing
instead of automatically saving. Automatically save first, deliberately invest second. Then
focus on cash flow first.
Get to a point of economic independence
where we have enough recurring revenue
from investment income or entrepreneurial income
to cover your lifestyle expenses.
When you can do that with your assets
rather than your active income,
you have enough permission and freedom
to swing for the fences and everything else
and rather being like the rest of the population
where they're trying to save 10% of their income
and earn 10% on it,
you now can save 100% of your income
and you don't even have to get that high of a return
to have exponential growth because it's no longer required to live off of your income,
your assets are producing your lifestyle.
That is the biggest game changer in finance.
And most of financial planning is this great felt financial experiment of accumulation,
compound interest, setting money aside, locking it away, neglecting cash flow,
and 30 years is your best case scenario.
You can get economic independence somewhere between three years and seven years.
Seven years if you're deep in debt and a bit of a train wreck,
Three years if you're already pretty frugal and maybe you have a couple assets to work with.
There's a guy, Del Clark.
He got there in 362 days with less than a six-figure income,
less than six figures of net worth,
simply by spending 20 hours a week,
which takes some time to buy enough real estate to cover that.
But once he got there, he created his own business,
and he's making 10 times more than he did as an airplane engineer designing airplane engines,
and he's a lot freaking happier.
So cash flow, cash flow, don't just accumulate.
Accumulation is the enemy.
It is the disease.
It is the slowest, dangerous track that you could take in the world of finance.
Go cash flow first.
This is just amazing.
You know, I interviewed about three years ago.
I interviewed Robert Kiyosaki.
Yep.
And, you know, his book, it started for so many people.
And I'd ask him, I was like, you know, the principles that you have there are so clear.
And I've built my entire business off of your principles of focusing on the cash flow first
and then let the cash flow build your piles of money later.
folks on the piles to build the cash flow.
Just exactly what you just said.
And I've been talking about this for, you know, we're on ninth year of our podcast.
And I was like, why don't more people promote this?
Like, I don't know anybody else out there.
And now I do.
So I'm really excited that there's someone else out there because it's felt,
it's been a lonely world and I've had a lot of battles and arguments with people.
I just created a product for the Rich Dad Company that, I mean, we filmed that it's
in editing right now.
It's not released.
We've done it.
I've done this podcast a few times.
I like that book saved my ass because I was going down the millionaire next door book in high school,
which I was just going to be a miser that pinch pennies tell I got blisters on my fingers.
But hey, if you've seen Christmas Carol, Ebony's or Scrooge was a miserable miser.
So just never spending money isn't the key.
The key is get assets to produce cash flow and then enjoy life along the way and be okay spending on yourself when you're not borrowing.
Too many people borrow to consume and it destroys their wealth.
Banks don't borrow to consume.
If they do, they go out of business.
Banks don't put money in a retirement plan.
Banks work on cash flow.
They think about mitigating risk.
They ask for down payments, taxes, credit scores, appraisals,
private mortgage insurance,
and they want to get as much cash flow as possible from you.
Start thinking more like a bank,
not in creating false accounts, but in cash flow.
Got it.
Yeah, my audience is going to love you, dude.
This is a great place for you to be, actually.
And thank you for what you've shared.
And you've written two books, right?
was sacred cows, or killing sacred cows, and what would the Rockefellers do?
And I have another book that's coming out right now called Five Day Weekend.
Five Day Weekend.
That's going to be all over stores and airports and everywhere.
We got 20,000 copies in distribution out the gate.
So that's the next book.
I also wrote a book called Portal to the Genius that I co-authored.
So I've written a few, but my big ones were, what would the Rockfellers do in killing
sacred cows?
Got it.
You know, and embarrassingly a little bit, I have a little bit.
I have both of those books in my Audible library in the queue, and they've been there for a really long time.
Maybe I motivated you today, though.
Oh, yeah, no, they're going right up to the top of the list.
I got stacks of books I haven't got to that I know it would be good, but there's only so much time in the day and I got two kids.
So if I get a book in per month, I'm pretty happy.
Okay, awesome.
We need to hang out.
So, yeah, if you want to grab Garrett's books, it's killing.
sacred cows. What would the Rockfellers do? He's got the new one coming out, the five-day weekend,
which sounds very exciting. If someone wanted to get in touch with you sooner than that or directly
learn more about what you do, what would be the best way for them to do that?
Wealthactory.com forward slash podcast. I'll give them the books on me. They don't have to go
buy them. They can learn the tax framework that I mentioned. We'll give them a bunch of cool
things to build a relationship because I want one million entrepreneurs to economic independence.
I'm not going to be able to do that one-on-one.
So I'm out there just giving people resources.
My key is just make sure you do something with it.
Wealthactory.com, for it slash podcast.
Or if they want to get an immediate download of the book,
they can text 4-4-22-wealthier in the subject line,
and they can get what would the Rockvillers do
and start reading it now.
Got it.
What was the subject line again for the text?
Wealthier.
Wealthier.
Yep.
Got it.
All right.
All right.
I'll order together.
I'll just make sure it's clear.
Super.
All right, Gary, it's been a pleasure.
And thank you.
Let's do this again.
Hey, that was fun.
I'd be glad to you, man.
I really enjoyed it.
It was fun.
Super.
All right, that's it here at the Epic Real Estate Investing Show.
I'll see you next week for another episode of Thought Leader Thursday.
Take care.
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