On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Nischa Shah: #1 Financial Mistake People Make in Their 20s & 30s (Fix It With This Simple System)
Episode Date: March 23, 2026Today, Jay sits down with his dear friend Nischa Shah, a former investment banker and accountant who walked away from a high-status corporate career to help people rethink their relationship with mone...y, success, and freedom. Nischa reflects on the “dark phase” she experienced while climbing the corporate ladder, realizing that the prestige and polish of banking had created a deep disconnect from her true self. Nischa invites listeners to confront a powerful question many of us avoid: “Would I still be happy if I were living the same life five or ten years from now?” Jay and Nischa shift into practical strategies for navigating money anxiety. Nischa introduces the “ostrich effect,” which is the psychological tendency to avoid looking at our finances out of fear. She shares her simple but powerful “three-bucket” approach to personal finance, where income is intentionally divided between fundamentals, fun, and the “future you.” By reframing the goal from financial success to financial happiness, Nischa offers a clearer, more intentional way to manage money, one that prioritizes peace of mind over status or external validation. In this interview, you'll learn: How to Assess Your Career Alignment How to Calculate a Financial Cushion How to Manage Income Using the Three-Bucket Method How to Audit Spending with Three Key Questions How to Turn Financial Knowledge into Action How to Strategize Paying Off Debt vs. Investing How to Increase Your Value and Earning Potential It is never too late to begin reclaiming your narrative, whether that starts with building a small financial safety net for peace of mind or finally turning knowledge into decisive action. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty JAY’S DAILY WISDOM DELIVERED STRAIGHT TO YOUR INBOX Join 900,000+ readers discovering how small daily shifts create big life change with my free newsletter. Subscribe here: https://news.jayshetty.me/subscribe Check out our Apple subscription to unlock bonus content of On Purpose! https://lnk.to/JayShettyPodcast What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 00:54 Questioning the Traditional Path 03:22 The Courage to Walk Away 06:14 Calculating Your Financial Runway 07:04 Separating Your Self-Worth from Your Title 10:49 What is the Ostrich Effect? 13:45 Fighting Instant Gratification 14:28 Ask Yourself These Three Questions Before Buying Anything 18:30 Micro-Habits That Build Real Wealth 21:29 Spending With Intention 23:33 Why More Money Doesn’t Always Fix Money Problems 28:49 Financial Success vs. Financial Happiness 31:03 Is there Such a Thing as Passive Income? 34:06 Mastering Long-Term Investing 36:42 Should You Buy a Home? 37:42 Breaking the Scarcity Mindset 42:01 Stop Spending to Impress People 44:31 The Problem With Constantly Upgrading 45:55 How Can You Be of Value To Others? 49:07 Focus on Earning More, Not Just Cutting Costs 53:40 Defining Your Personal Freedom 54:52 The Entrepreneurship vs. Employment Trap 56:37 Investing in Your Own Skills 58:47 Short-Term Joy vs. Long-Term Security 01:00:50 We All Make Financial Mistakes! 01:01:31 It’s Never Too Late 01:02:48 This or That: Money Edition 01:06:34 Nischa on Final Five Episode Resources: YouTube | https://www.youtube.com/@nischa Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61567018784328 Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/nischa.me/ TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/discover/nischa-shahSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Hart podcast, guaranteed human.
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We often think that to reach financial freedom,
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It's about how you manage what you make.
What does the top 1% understand about money that most of us don't?
The single easiest way to get rich long term is like...
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose.
Today I'm sitting down with Nisha Shah,
former investment banker and accountant
who left the traditional path to help.
millions rethink money, success, and freedom. Nisha breaks down how to stop letting money anxiety
run your life. Nisha is a dear friend and I love welcoming friends to On Purpose. Please welcome Nisha
Shah. Nisha, it's great to have you here. Thank you so much for having me. I was so excited.
I want to talk to you about this transition you went through. We know a lot of the same people.
For me, going to a good university, getting a good job was like the pinnacle. You did that. You
achieve that, why would you leave behind a great job with a great salary?
There's so much more to life than following the traditional path where you get a job,
qualify, keep going, climbing up the corporate ladder. And there was a point in my life where I felt
like I had to really look inwards and ask myself, what am I actually doing? For a good part
of it, I was really enjoying the banking lifestyle. There was glitz and glam to it. There was
business trips. There was a status. And for a while, I convinced myself that this is what I want.
this is the life I want to live. And then as I went on, I felt like there was a massive disconnect
between what I wanted to do and what I was doing. And I felt as I kept going, that misalignment
kept getting louder and louder and louder. I had to go through quite a dark phase to understand
that this isn't what I wanted. And it was at that point where I had to look inwards and ask
myself the difficult questions. Like, am I living a life that I actually want or one that everyone else
expects me to live. Am I buying things that I want to buy for myself or what I want to show other people
that I have? The question that really, really changed everything for me was, would I still be happy
if I was living the same life in five years or 10 years time as I am today? The fear of that was so much
greater than the fear of anything that I had to do. And it gave me the confidence to say, no, I'm walking
away. I'm walking away from this job. I'm walking away from this lifestyle. I'm walking from this
identity because there's so much more out there for me. And I had a bigger why that overtook anything
that that moment had in store for me. I feel like there's probably a lot of people listening right now
who are thinking the exact same thing. They've got the traditional degree that they were expected to do.
They've got the job. Maybe they're five years in, ten years in, and they're thinking,
I'm not in the right place. But you've got all this sunk cost bias, this idea that I spent all
those years studying for that. All my friends thought this is what I was going to do.
I've even got a partner, maybe I've got children. This isn't the right time to rock the boat.
Like, talk to me about the bias that we have of, I've invested so much time and money into this,
everyone in my life understands this. How could I possibly dream about doing anything different?
I mean, it's the hardest thing to do, living life because of what everyone else has told you to do.
But if you don't have the courage to write your own story, someone else will always write it for you.
And I think what most people think of as bravery or courage or doing something new and leaving behind what you've created is actually just having a financial cushion in place and having the safety to be able to walk away from situations you might not like or environments that you might not enjoy.
But we put a lot of pressure on ourselves today that we have to do all or nothing.
We've got to quit our job and follow our passion.
So for someone in that situation or that position, I would say, A, get your financial cushion in place.
that gives you more peace of mind and sanity than anything else that you could possibly think of.
And the second thing I would say is that when I, what is in banking, there was a lot of comfort
that came from having a salary, which let me have a lot of tiny experiments on the side.
So it was my evenings, my weekends that I just spent trialing and testing and doing loads
and loads of different things. And when you do it that way, you actually look at your job and think,
oh, I'm so grateful that I've got this salary coming in that lets me do all these things on the side
without thinking, oh, I've just got to somehow figure out a way to pay my bills and it makes
everything just a lot less enjoyable. I fully agree with you. That was the same path for me. I was
working my day job and then doing this on the evenings and weekends, I at the time making videos.
And I don't think I would have been as creative if I had been financially crippled. Now, I wasn't
making that much money, but I was making enough to pay my bills and take care of things. And I was having to
edit my videos because I couldn't afford to outsource it to someone. I was having a friend
do me a favor by shooting my videos because they're going to afford one. But the idea was I wasn't
creatively starved because I wasn't scared that every video had to make money. And I think people put
themselves into these positions where you take this big leap and now the dream has to pay the bills.
Absolutely. And now the dream doesn't feel like a dream anymore. It feels like pressure.
Absolutely. It turns into a chore when you don't have that money coming in. And so I always like to
of different things that you're doing that serve different purposes. And sometimes your job
just serves the purpose of paying your financial life. And then a passion project can be the purpose
of your creativity or whatever without, like you said, feeling like, oh, how am I going to,
or going into survival mode. Is there a good way to calculate what a financial cushion should be
for someone? Typically, you'd recommend three to six months of your living expenses. So you calculate
what it costs for your basic living expenses in a month and you times it by three if you're feeling
a bit comfortable with a lower cushion, or six, if you want to be a bit more safe,
I went all the way for the nine months because I'm super, super calculative, but it really
comes down to what makes you feel comfortable? What makes you feel like you can walk away
from this and be like, I've got a good financial runway ahead of me. Yeah, yeah, that's smart.
That makes a lot of sense. What was the cost? What were the things that were sacrificed in
switching away from the life you thought you'd lead? I'd say the biggest thing that I sacrificed
at that moment in time was this identity that I'd built around myself. And when you don't spend time
to look inwards, you find a way to have external noises define who you are and what you do. And
without knowing for the good part of nine years, which is how long my banking career was,
my identity was around what I did for a living, knowing that when I walk into this other path,
all of that is going to be stripped away from me. All of what I thought defined my worth had to vanish. So you find a way to get that fulfillment and that validation from within you or you find something that is so much bigger than what has defined you up until that moment in time.
That's such a great point because that is the biggest thing you're giving up is what you've defined your identity to be.
I didn't get to the point where it was complete like breaking point, but I did see that the ladder.
that I was climbing was leaning up against the wrong wall. And that's when I thought, okay, I could
either keep walking, but it's just not a situation I want to be. So in that sense, it was, yeah,
it was great that it wasn't complete breaking point, but it was very near. I really wanted to
understand that. I wanted our audience to really understand because I do think that the majority
people are in that position. And I love this few takeaways that we've already had, which is
you don't have to quit your job. You can build something on the side. You don't have to go all or
nothing. And it is okay. You do deserve to ask the question, do I want more? Do I want to be more
aligned? Do I deserve a better life? Can I leave this behind? Like, I think sometimes people don't
feel worthy to ask that question. They feel like they don't deserve it. Talk to me about the biggest
money mistakes people make in their 20s. Avoiding looking at their finances. That is the number one thing
that sets people back. It's very easy to do to just ignore it. And
because it makes you feel a bit uncomfortable sometimes looking at your finances. I mean, there's
a psychological bias called the ostrich effect where we actively avoid information that makes us feel
uncomfortable in the hope that if you ignore it, it sometimes disappears. And it's the reason why
you don't check your bank account after a weekend of spending. Don't check your credit card
statement because you're scared of the damage on what it will do. But in your 20s, you are
creating the habits that will either over time compound for you or compound against you.
The stakes aren't that high, so you want to be able to learn and learn the small habits early.
Look at your finances, all the small gaps are happening and solve them or improve them before it compounds against you.
Why do people avoid looking at their bank account?
Because it almost shows them sometimes what their priorities are and what their focus is.
And that might be completely out of alignment of what their core values actually are.
and they might impulse purchase
or they might buy things that they didn't actually think of at the time
and then looking at it and seeing actually these are all the things that I've bought
but all of the things that I wanted to do for myself, for my future self,
have taken the back seat.
So I think that's a big part of it.
Yeah, I even saw this study years ago which talked about how money has changed.
So for example, before when you paid for something,
you took cash out of your purse or wallet and gave it to someone.
So you actually had to count how many dollars.
how many cents, how many pounds, wherever you live, right? And you had to count. And you'd be like,
oh my gosh, this is a lot of money. It's a hundred dollars. It's $50, whatever it is.
Then we had cards. And so now you can't see money anymore. And so it's so much easier to
tap your card and put your card into a machine than it is to actually count the dollars. And now
you just do an online transaction. So you don't have to give anything. You literally just type in a code
or press buy and you click or whatever it may be. And the next thing you know, it's already there.
And so spending money has become so much more easier.
And so I get why people are scared because it's like you've gone from having to count to
to having to give to having to click.
Absolutely.
And now you don't even have to think about it.
Yeah, you can literally buy a car from your phone at 2 a.m in the morning.
And not speak to anyone in the process.
And so it requires effort.
It's friction.
And so the uncomfortable thing to do is create friction between you and a purchase.
But that's the hard thing.
It's hard to wait 48 hours before you make an impulse.
purchase and then decide if you actually want that thing or not. It's hard to say no to an Instagram
ad that pops up multiple times and decide you don't want to buy that thing. This is the hard
things to do that it's more important now than ever, like you said, because everything is so
frictionless. And would you argue that is it a willpower issue or do you believe if we looked
at our finances, we'd make better decisions automatically? I definitely think it's a combination
one of it comes down to willpower and being able to say no to things at the time. The world at the
moment, it's built in a way to take your money for you to spend. That's how the economy runs. So a lot of
it requires you to have the willpower. But a good way to stop that is actually looking at your
finances, spending 20 minutes at the end of the month, looking through what you spent and saying,
okay, do these purchases line up with what I wanted? Did they bring me happiness? Did they actually
improve my life in any way, shape or form? And then deciding, do you want to continue that habit in the next
month and the next month? Or are you going to start making some changes? If someone listen to this
podcast and they go, okay, Nisha, I'm going to start looking at my finances for 20 minutes at the end of the
month. Is that the right time to do it? Yeah. What is the plan? Talk to me through a really simple
20 minute plan of what someone should look at when they're checking their finances. I would say there's
probably two types of people. And one type is they absolutely do not want to look at their finances.
The idea of budgeting or looking at the numbers just makes their skin crawl. They've tried to romanticise
it. They've tried to do it with a glass of wine. They tried to do it with a girlfriend and it just hasn't
worked. For them, I would actually recommend taking a step back, zooming out, and thinking about
what's the objective of looking at your finances. Why do you want to budget or look at your finances?
And the main objective is so that you save a portion every single month. I would recommend,
if you fall into this back at the back of a napkin approach, take your take home pay minus an
amount that you want to save every single month. Start with whatever you feel comfortable with,
whether it's $50, $100, whatever it is. $50, $100, whatever it is.
is that's your saving. Put that away. Don't touch that. The rest you could spend.
Important thing to do here is with that amount, as soon as your money comes in on payday,
set up an automatic transfer. So it's out of your amount, out of your bank account into a
separate bank account that you cannot even touch. If you hate numbers, if you hate looking at
your finances, if you don't want to look at your bank statement, do that. And then as the
months go on, you could try and tweak that saving amount. If you are someone who's like,
you know what, I want to look at my bank statements, I want to look at my numbers. I want to,
I want to understand this a bit better. Then I would recommend a, a,
less restrictive way of looking at your finances that makes you feel like taking control is a way to
say yes rather than saying no to buying stuff. And so I would recommend if you fall into the bucket
where you're like, okay, I want to optimize my finances. Looking at your take home pay, once again,
this is a number on your pay slip, not on your job description. And splitting that take home pay
into three buckets. These are three numbers that everyone should know. The first would be your
fundamentals. These are your must-haves in life. The things that you need for day-to-day living,
mortgage or rent, groceries, car payments. That's your first bucket. The second bucket is your
fund bucket. So these are leisure, travel, manicure, pedicure, spa, massage, all of that. That
pulls into the fun bucket. And then the final bucket is the future you bucket. So this is anything
for you tomorrow. Savings, investments, even extra debt payments. When it comes to your spending,
allocate a percentage of your spending to each of those three buckets. One that I recommend is around
65% for your fundamentals, 25% for your fun, and then 10% for your future you. So that's what
you want to look at when you look at your bank statements. The first thing is, are you saving enough?
That's the first category. And then you want to look for patterns in your other spending.
What am I consistently spending on? What can I cut out? And if you're looking at your items,
line item by line item, ask yourself three questions. Do I need it?
If I do need it, can I live with less of it or can I get the same thing for cheaper?
Say those three again?
Do I need it? Can I live with less of it or can I get the same thing for cheaper?
Those are great questions.
That's that perfect break between about to click and buy and actually creating some space in your mind.
Yeah.
Because as soon as you say those three, I'm like, yeah.
Yeah, it makes you question whether you want to buy that thing or not.
Yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
And I love your breakdown because one of my favorite quotes is from Warren Buffett where he said,
don't save what is left after spending, spend what is left after saving.
Yeah, I love it.
And that's exactly what you've just shared with us, which is you have to put aside your saving first.
And I think most of us just spend and then see what we have left at the end of the month and then put it away.
And of course, that never grows up.
I think one of the biggest things, niches, when it comes to finances, and I know I was like this, honestly,
I used to feel like you had to wait for a big payday to make money and save money and invest money.
And until you got that, it didn't really matter.
Like, you're not really going to do, you're not really going to save that much.
And little amounts, what are they going to do anyway?
What are the micro habits that actually make us rich?
Because I think we think it's these big things that happen, like getting a promotion,
somehow selling an amazing company or like, you know, all these things that you see online
that you think are going to make you rich.
But what are actually the micro habits that make people rich?
A couple of weeks ago, I was in a hotel lobby.
And this lady came up to me, she was super sweet.
She said, I'll watch your videos and I've been wanting to invest, but I need to know a little bit more.
I just want to learn more about it. And as you got speaking, I realized that she knew what she wanted
to invest in. She was following the recommendations that everyone says online, the S&P 500.
She knew how much she wanted to invest. She even had an investment app downloaded on her phone.
And she hadn't turned that knowledge into action yet for whatever reason. And we were standing
there. We were both waiting for our taxis. And so I just said, okay, why don't you just do it right now?
Why don't you just invest right now? You know what you want. You know what you want to do.
We could do it together. So she did it. She got a phone out. She bought what she wanted to buy.
And within three minutes, she had invested. And it was like this thing that she built up in her head for so
long, this analysis paralysis, this fear, it just collapsed the moment she actually took action.
And that is one of the micro habits that actually put people so far ahead, taking what you've learned,
and turning it into action.
Because so often we just learn for the sake of learning
and we don't actually do anything with it.
So that is one of the main things.
Every time you learn something new about personal finance,
action it that day and then refine it as you're going.
It might not be the thing that works for you,
but it might.
But as long as you keep moving and keep implementing your own life,
that's what makes someone who's sitting in the backseat
and doing nothing from someone who's actually taken the driver's seat
and carving the way for their life.
And another habit I would say is they create goals
but have concrete plans to follow up with those goals.
So how often do we say, I want to save more or I want to invest more?
All the time.
Or I want to reach financial freedom, right?
We say all the time.
But one of the habits that people could get into the mindset of is following that up with the really, really concrete step.
So instead of saying, I want to save more, it will be, I want to save 5,000 over the next 12 months.
That's just over 400 a month.
And to do that, I'm going to do X, Y, Z.
I'm going to cut my subscription stack. I'm going to negotiate this bill and I'm going to automate my savings.
That's a completely different situation now.
Absolutely. Yeah, that's huge.
Huge. You've now got a clear goal and a path to get there.
The people who are good with money and not good with money or bad with money, it's not about different goals.
It's just the follow-through plan of those goals.
Getting ready for a game means being ready for anything.
Like packing a spare stick. I like to be prepared.
That's why I remember 988, Canada's suicide crisis help.
It's good to know just in case.
Anyone can call or text for free confidential support from a train responder anytime.
9-88 suicide crisis helpline is funded by the government in Canada.
I'm Clayton Eckerd, and in 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor.
Unfortunately, it didn't go according to plan.
He became the first bachelor to ever have his final rows rejected.
The internet turned on him.
If I could press a button and rewind it all I would.
But what happened to Clayton after the show made even bigger headlines.
It began as a one-night stand and ended in a courtroom with Clayton at the center of a very strange paternity scandal.
The media is here. This case has gone viral.
The dating contract.
Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you.
Please search for it.
This is unlike anything I've ever seen before.
I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trapped.
This season, an episode.
epic battle of he said she said and the search for accountability in a sea of lies.
Listen to Love Trapped on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You're right. We do throw out these goals all the time. Like, I wish I had more money. I want to save up for this.
But you haven't really broken down what it looks like. And like you said, it could be as simple as
the automatic savings, cutting your subscriptions. Talk to me about how much does having a coffee
every day, actually negatively impact your bank account.
If you're really, really, really feeling like you're living paycheck to paycheck and you actually
have cut everything out except for coffee, then maybe you want to look at the coffee bill.
But actually, it's a lot more about alignment when it comes to spending and intentional
spending. Because what you want to do is you want to look at the things that bring you joy
or bring you happiness and then deciding for yourself whether that's worth keeping.
or we're cutting out on.
So I wouldn't say,
oh, take out those coffees
and instead invest that money.
It's just looking at every single decision
or every single pound or dollar
that comes into your life
and asking yourself,
or what do I want the purpose
of this pound or dollar to be?
Because if you don't define its purpose,
it will end up defining yours.
So just be more conscious
and more intentional with how you're spending
rather than cutting things
because that's what everyone else online
is telling you to do.
What happens to someone who says
I'm going to save up one month,
three months for a bag. How do we improve our willpower towards the expensive things that make us
happy? Yeah. So for someone who's like, I do want that pair of shoes, I do want that bag, I do
whatever it may be for anyone, you can afford it, but can you really, like, is it really creating
a better life for you? Are you more financially safe? How do you control your willpower when it
feels so addictive? It's a lot easier to spend on things when you know that the future you
has been taken care of. And when you know that, okay,
the first thing I'm doing is saving a portion
and that money is compounding for the future me,
you feel a lot more happier
to spend on whatever it is in that moment in time
that will make you happy.
And I do encourage everyone to have a look at their life,
their goals and decide,
is this bringing me closer towards my life goals
or taking me further away from them?
Do you need a six-figure salary
to achieve financial freedom?
This is such a common misconception.
We often think that to be better
with money to reach financial freedom, you need to earn more. Whilst that is great, earning money
doesn't actually make you better with money. And it's not actually about how much you make. It's
about how you manage what you make. So someone on 100,000 who is spending 100,000 is actually
worse off than someone who's on 50,000 and saving 10% of it. So if you want to reach financial
freedom, you've got to be saving and investing a portion every single month. And then really,
what the market rewards is time and consistency. So even small contributions today, leaving it for the
future, leaving it for 10, 20 years can massively compound over time. And it's such an unfair advantage
that people don't make the most of using the money that you have right now and using leverage
to let it multiply in a way that doesn't require you to keep working and training your time for money.
Yeah, I love what you said about the habits because it feels like that's what it really comes down to
where just because you earn more money doesn't mean you're better with money.
And I think that's what happens is that you can go from making 50K.
And even if you went to make 250K, if you were used to spending everything you had at 50,
you do the same.
And that's so fascinating that we ultimately just have more to do the same thing with.
And so we've got to sort these habits out early it feels like.
And it's hard right because I feel like money mindset's built from families.
It's built through trauma.
It's built through our relationship with money.
over the years. Like, it's not easy. Like, I grew up in a house where we always had just enough.
And so I grew up with zero in my bank balance often growing up. And I started working when I was
14. I delivered newspapers. I then worked in Morrisons, which is a grocery store in the area.
I then worked in retail. Like, I basically worked every year since I was 14 years old.
But even when I was working, I was paying for my phone bill and I remember paying for my car insurance
and all the rest of it, I would end up with zero in my bank balance a lot because that's what
I was always trained to have.
And so it took me years of like changing my relationship with money to actually understand
what to do with it.
And it was almost like an emotional relationship more than even a, it was definitely a tactical
practical relationship, but there was also an emotional relationship I needed to work on.
Do you touch on that in your work?
Yeah, I do.
And you know what?
It's so much easy, no matter where you are in your financial journey, it is actually
so much easier to feel behind financially than it is to feel ahead financially.
And a big part of that is because we compare how we're doing, not based on how much we have,
but how much we have compared to those around us.
And there's research on this.
There's research that shows that two people could earn the exact same income and report different levels of satisfaction,
purely based on whether the people around them are earning more than them or less than them.
So you could be on 50,000 and you would feel and could feel happy about your finances if everyone around you is earning 45,000,
or feel less happy about it if everyone around you is only 55,000.
That's wild, yeah.
We measure our success based on, we're humans, where social creatures,
we measure our success based on what's happening around us.
And previously, this wasn't such a bad thing when our social circle didn't extend
beyond our local town or our local neighbourhood.
You could be a baller blissfully unaware of the bigger fish down the road.
But now, with the internet, it exposes us to everyone and the most successful outliers,
the most successful anomalies are there for everyone to see.
So yeah, it's really, the emotions are a big part of my work, but I want people to understand that
there are things that drive their emotions that are outside of the control and to always remember
the checkpoints that matter and come back to the finance part of it to understand if you're doing
better or you're doing okay financially. Yeah, I'm really glad you raised that too because I also
think that it shows a kind of flaw in human training in that you'd hope that that you'd hope that
if everyone around you is making more than you, you could study them and learn from them and also
grow. Yeah. But we just end up envying them or being jealous or being jealous or jealous or
of others, we kind of become harsh on ourselves. Like, oh, you should be doing better and you're
behind and everyone's ahead of you. And it's almost like if we could learn to study people instead of
envy them, criticize them, or be upset at ourselves, then it would be healthy to be around people
who are doing better than us because we also always hear the famous quote of you're the average
of the five people you spend the most time with. If you're trying to grow your finances and I'm not
telling people to change their friends, but if you're trying to grow a certain area of your life,
you will have to be around people who are excelling in that area. Absolutely. And just knowing,
or people are excelling in that area. Sometimes you are at a certain level of your finances and you
don't realize what's possible because everyone around you is also at that same area or same stage.
And I remember the moment when I heard someone earning X amount per month, that's when it clicked
from me that I thought, oh, that's actually possible.
And then when you get there, then you hear someone else say, oh, this is how much I earn per month.
And it just changes your view on what normality is.
And yeah, like it's not about changing your circle to try and find brands that make more
money.
But just understanding that this is the things that are possible.
And none of that is out of your reach.
None of it is like you could do whatever you set your mind to and surround yourself with.
What does the top 1% understand about money that most of us don't?
There's the 1% of financial success and then there's a 1% of financial happiness.
And the two different things.
Financial success is society's definition of happiness.
Financial happiness is your intrinsic definition of happiness.
And the people who are in the 1% of financial happiness,
they get A really, really clear on what they want out of life,
what a good life means for them.
and going back to my banking experience, this is a lot easier said than done, because if you don't
take your time to look inwards, then you're just going to follow what is outlined for you and
the path ahead of you. So that's the first thing that people do who are in the 1% financial happiness.
And the second thing is they understand that every money decision they make, every pound or dollar
that they spend is either working for them to get closer towards that level of happiness or further
away from that. And that's the thing. If you, if you don't know what you're doing or why you're doing it,
you're going to be spending many carelessly, not realizing if it's bringing you closer to your life
goals. But you can't have number two without having number one. You've got to get clear on
your why first and then spend an alignment with that why. I love that redefinition. I think that's
so important because I think social media has also made us more focused on the top 1%. And here's
the billionaire list and here's the millionaire list. And the reality is that living an aligned life and
living a life based on your values and what you care about is far more within your reach and grasp
and is going to make you happier. And I love that reframe from financial success to financial happiness
because I think that's what we're all actually looking for. And it comes back to your same point of
just, it's not just about making more. It's about knowing what you're doing with what you have and then
allowing that to expand. And I'm so glad that you're kind of pushing that conversation out there as a money
expert because I think it's easy to get excitable and just talk about like how to make like
a hundred million dollars or a million dollars or 10 million and whatever and it's like well
a that may be a long road and you know this comes back to all the get rich quick schemes it comes
back to like people promising you you can make a million dollars in a week like all that kind
what's your take on passive income is it even possible there is no such thing as past completely
passive income there are different forms of income but none of
them are completely 100% passive without requiring a lot of upfront work. So, so glad you said it.
It's just not. And the most passive way of actually making money, where the least amount of work,
is investing. It is the easiest to get into, the easiest to understand, and you can make
extraordinary amount of wealth through small amounts of income. So passive income in the way
that is marketed online or through what we see on the internet.
It's take it with a pinch of salt and understand who's saying it, why they're saying it,
and nothing is passive without a lot of work.
The easiest way and the single easiest way to get rich long time is by investing in the stock market.
Yeah, and I feel like that's again, if you were exposed to that as a kid and you knew about it,
then you know.
Otherwise it feels like this wild, wild west.
It feels so scary and you're like, how do I know what that means?
Like where do people start to give them a 60 second master class on investing?
Where do people start?
So we believe that to start investing, we need to pick individual stocks.
We need to find the next Tesla, the next NVIDIA, the next Amazon.
But the truth is, that could work, but it's very, very hard to do.
And it requires a lot of time and a lot of energy to do it even semi-safely.
And you can still get it wrong.
Even experts get it wrong.
Actually, an example of this, a great example of this is in the 2008, Lima Brothers,
just before the financial crisis, just before they collapsed, which triggered the entire financial global crisis.
And lists at one of the largest investment banks in the world gave Lehman a buy rating.
A buy. A couple of months later, it collapsed. These are some of the smartest people in finance
and they have access to information, to data. They have experienced that most of us don't have
and they still got it catastrophically wrong. That's to say it is very, very hard to do.
It's almost impossible to consistently get it right. If they can't get it right, it's very hard
for normal people with less information, less time to be able to do it consistently and reliably.
So the way that I recommend for people to start when it comes to investing is through index funds.
Index funds is just, instead of buying individual companies, you're buying tens, if not thousands
of companies all at once. So for instance, an S&P 500 is 500 of the largest companies. You're buying
a small slice of 500 of the largest companies, Coca-Cola, Amazon, Tesla, Johnson and Johnson,
all in one go. And there's the safest and most reliable way to build long-term wealth.
Even Buffett, Warren Buffett, he's instructed for 90% of his wife's inheritance to go towards
low-cost diversified funds. For the majority of people, that is the way to go. Once you have that
foundation set up, once you've got that set up, then sure, you can have your fund money and play
around with some stocks that you might think are high growth. But you can't do that without having
a solid foundation in place. It's just not worth that level of risk that comes with individual stock
picking. And is that money that you're planning on leaving there for like a decade, two decades?
Like this is money you're not touching and how much do you need to get started?
Yeah. So I recommend not investing anything that you're going to need in the next five years.
Because historically, the stock market has averaged 8 to 10% over the long run. That's the
average annual return of the stock market. But that is over the long run. If you look at any given year,
the stock market could go up 30%, it could be down 40%. So if you need that money,
in the next five years, say you're saving for a home, you're saving for a car payment,
you're saving for your kids' education. If you need that in the next five years, you don't want to
put it in the stock market because the last thing you want is to save money and then need it in the
next couple of years and actually at that time, the stock market is at a dip and you have to pull out
a loss. You want to avoid that. So any money that you want to invest, but you want to make sure
you don't need that money in the next five years, and you want to keep it there for 10 years,
20 years. The longer you keep it there for, the closer you get to the average stock market returns.
Yeah, great advice.
You can start with a dollar. You can start with the price of a loaf of bread. The hurdles that we had to invest back in the day just don't exist anymore. You could do it within a second on your phone with as a look at as a dollar. You just brought this up. Should people even plan on buying a home? You do not want to look at a home as an investment opportunity. There was a time when I thought buying a home was a really, really good decision. And when I bought my home, I thought that was a great financial decision and it gave me a lot of comfort and peace of mind knowing that.
no matter what happened, I will always have this roof over my head. That psychological comfort
is hard to put a number on. Now I rent. And that gives me a huge amount of psychological comfort
because knowing that I could pick up and leave if an opportunity comes up, that I'm not tied to a
certain place. That gives me a lot of freedom. So there's two ways to look up at the buy and rent
situation. First is actually when it comes to your home, it is a psychological part of it. That plays a
big, big role. And the second part then comes the numbers. You want to figure out,
okay, does it make sense to be for me to be putting this money towards buying a home?
Also taking into account the cost that most people forget, which is stamp duty,
buying all the furnishing, legal fees, surveyor fees, all of that comes into the cost.
Maintenance, yeah. Or does it make sense for me to rent and invest that difference?
So those are the ways you want to look about the buy and the rent situation. It's not a,
what we used to think, which was just buying is the way to go. And if you're paying someone,
If you're paying rent, you're just paying someone else's mortgage.
There's so much more that comes into the emotions and the psychology of making something like a house purchase,
which is one of the biggest purchases you're going to make in your entire life.
A few decades ago, it felt like that's what you had to do.
Why has it suddenly become a debate over the last five to ten years, maybe?
A decade ago, even for our parents' generation, it was a lot easier to get onto the property ladder.
And if you compare the way house prices have gone up since then,
the way everything has gone up.
up since then and compare that to wages, it's not the same anymore. And for the majority of people,
it's not as easy to do as it was for previous generations. And actually, with the way the stock
market is going, it might make a lot more sense saving that money, but you have to be disciplined
enough to save the money that you would have otherwise put in towards a mortgage or the
difference between a rent and a mortgage and saving that money and then putting towards the stock
market. So it's a very, very different economy that we're in. And whilst having or buying a home,
If that's your goal, that's a great goal to have. But I don't think it's the be all and end all
if you don't get onto the property ladder. There's other ways to make a lot of wealth that doesn't
require you to buy a home. I think you've acknowledged something really important there. Like,
the reality is it feels like the cost of everything is growing up, like the cost of fuel, the
cost of rent, the cost of a mortgage, the cost of living. Like, everything's on the rise.
No wonder everyone's stressed. Like everyone is so stressed. And so,
no wonder we're getting more scared or insecure about our finances and we don't want to look at
them because everything's just fear-based, right? So it's like the cost of living is going up,
the cost of raising kids is going up, you're not getting paid more necessarily to catch up
up with that rate. So then, of course, we're like, what do I do? And I can empathize and I understand
that. It just leads to this like freeze, right? It's like that fight or flight. And we're just like,
we're kind of stuck in freeze because we're like, well, nothing I do makes a difference.
If someone wants to completely transform their finances in the next six months, what's the plan?
There's a specific order of steps that I'd recommend people take.
And especially the first bit, I think a lot of that fear comes from the first thing, which is not having an emergency cushion in place.
So saving your expenses.
The first one that I recommend or the first step that I recommend anyone saving is $2,000.
And Vanguard research shows that just by saving that $2,000, that increases your financial well-being by up to 21%.
Wow.
from saving $2,000.
And then if you up that amount to three to six months, that's a further 13% on financial well-being.
We don't realize the extent of having that cushion has to not operate from a place of scarcity.
Just 2,000 to start.
That's amazing.
After that, you want to make sure that your high-interest debt has been paid off.
And by high-interest, I mean, anything above 8%.
This is credit card debt.
This is consumer debt.
And I say at 8% because historically, the average...
stock market return has been 8 to 10%. So if you have debt that is more than 8%, you're actually
worse off financially by keeping that debt than by paying it off. So that's the first thing that
you want to do. And then for interest or for debt that is less than 8%, again, this is where
the mathematically smart choice is to invest instead of paying off the debt below 8%. But again,
we're not robots. We're not AI. We're humans with emotions. And one of my, we have a,
a WhatsApp chat was some of the girls I've known for like 13 years. And in that, in that WhatsApp
chat, we talk about our investments and what we've been investing, give each other ideas. And one of
the girls, she has invested a far, a far little amount. She's just dipped her toes into it.
But she spent her whole time paying off her student loan and has nearly paid off her mortgage.
For her, sure, the mathematically right choice would have been to invest her money. And we look at
finances in terms of optimizing revenue, expected value, expected rate of return, but peace of mind
has value too. Yeah. And if you've got debt that keeps you up at night and that stresses you out
and that adds to the way you're feeling, then who's to say that you should be investing first?
Absolutely, yeah. You want to be doing the things and making sure that your finances are set up in
the way that helps you sleep at night. And then once you're comfortable on that debt position,
then you want to start investing and going on towards your long-term wealth journey. But that's
what I recommend. I love that plan. That's such a great plan. It feels so achievable in the beginning.
It gives you a step-by-step process because I think sometimes people are debating, do I save money
first or do I pay for my debt first? And you're like, well, actually, you'll feel much better
if you just have that cushion. That's important. You need that. Next thing, start paying off that
debt. And now once you've done that, now further down the line, we can start thinking about investing
and everything else. And I think you're so right that often we do it the opposite way. We think,
if I invest first, then hopefully one of these things will make me a bit of money, obviously,
doesn't or it takes five to ten years or even longer.
Yeah.
And so the fear doesn't go away, the insecurity doesn't go away, and now you're not saving
right either.
Exactly.
I really like that reframe because I'm really hoping everyone who's listening and watching
right now, like niches just laid out an absolute masterclass of what to do with your money
right now if you're in that tight position.
And I couldn't agree with you more.
Sorting out your financial well-being and your peace first is a much stronger foundation
to build from.
Sure.
People need to get better with their finances, but I want them to use their finances to
build a life that's more aligned for them, more bigger, more bolder.
And that comes with deciding what peace of mind means for you and then doing what works for that.
Yeah.
What are the three things we should stop wasting money on that most of us don't even realize?
The first thing people need to stop wasting money on is anything that they think increases
their value by showcasing to others what they have.
Oh, good answer.
I mean, it's one of the quickest ways to save money by saying, I'm not going to buy this thing
to show other people that I've got it.
And actually with every purchase that you buy,
ask yourself,
am I buying this for me or am I buying it?
Because I want other people to know that I have it.
So that's the first overall thing that I'd say for people to do.
I'm remembering a purchase I made early days.
Like it was just like this early days watch that I bought that I thought everyone would notice
and everyone hated it.
Like, first of all, no one noticed it.
And so then I'd try and like be like, you know, like just trying to like just hope
that it would be.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah. And then when people saw it, they just, they weren't impressed by it whatsoever. And I was like, wow. And that was like, it wasn't even that expensive, you know, even at the time it wasn't. And I was just like, oh, wow, like that did nothing for me. Yeah. Because I didn't even like it myself. I bought it because everyone think it would be cool. And now it's, you know, I don't even know where it is anymore. And it's like, no, let me buy things that I think are cool. And I know the value of. And yeah. I think that's the difference. If you do it, if you buy it for yourself and it makes you feel good or it makes you enjoy it.
it, then go for it. But if you're purely doing it, thinking it's going to bring you happiness
based on other people's expectations or opinions, don't bother. It's not. And I've made a similar
mistake. My first three months on my paycheck when I started at the first investment bank that
I worked out, went straight on a new car. And it was the most ridiculous purchase I could make,
but I didn't have that introspection at the time to know whether this is what I wanted or
if it was in line with my goals or not. The second thing that people shouldn't waste their money on
is upgrades. I actually believe that when you buy something for the first time, your level of
happiness increases massively. But then for every marginal upgrade that you have after that,
there's this diminishing law of return where the amount that you spend in proportion just doesn't
match up to the extra happiness that you get. So actually, rather than spending that money on a new
thing every single time, spending it on experiences or memories has a way bigger impact on your
happiness and overall life satisfaction than buying spending it on the next big thing yeah yeah absolutely
the new iPhone for example like it's going to be the same for the next four years anyway yeah and every time
you've bought the upgrade it you really can barely tell the difference between the first one
getting ready for a game means being ready for anything like packing a spare stick
I like to be prepared that's why I remember 988 Canada suicide crisis helpline it's good to know just in case
Anyone can call or text for free confidential support from a train responder anytime.
9-88 suicide crisis helpline is funded by the government in Canada.
I really appreciate that you're thinking about this advice because the quality of insight you're giving is allowing us all to reflect.
It would be so easy for you to just say, cancel your subscriptions, cut out the coffee.
And those are basic things that, sure, people can look at.
But the questions you're making us ask are actually the drivers of how and why we spend money.
And I feel like that's so much more at the root of it.
And the third thing I would say is actually when you're buying something,
understand are you buying it for the name or are you buying it for the purpose that it holds,
the utility of it?
So are you buying a designer purse because of the designer of it?
Or is it because you like the purse and it can actually help you carry your money around?
Having that way of thinking actually can shave off a lot of the spending that you're unnecessarily doing in your day to day.
Yeah, absolutely.
I've had so many friends I remember who've bought sunglasses or wallet.
that they thought looked cool, but then they never wear them or use them.
Yeah.
Because they don't actually like it the way it looks on their face.
But you made the purchase that day.
You exchanged and now you can't give it back and all the rest of it.
And you're stuck with it.
No, those are absolutely great.
And I feel like it's so true that so much of the money we spend is either things that we're
unaware of or because we're doing it based on some subconscious need that we're trying to figure out.
And even if you do that, it's good to just know.
So even if you're spending based on some subconscious need, it's like, it's good to just be aware of it and accept that that's what it is.
What I want to do with Enochia is I want to talk about saving that actually works.
And so this is a little bit of a quickfire session on saving specifically because I feel like so much of your work is based on helping us save better.
Okay, what habit do successful savers do?
Hold on, hold on.
But I also want to say that you only save so much in your life.
Okay, go on. You're flipping the script. I like this. Yeah, you say that. And I, one thing I want people to understand and to know is that saving is only going to get you so far. You could only cut so many coupon codes. You could only find so many offers. After a while, you realize that you cannot cut your costs beyond a certain level. Whereas the other side, the earning income side, that side is infinite. And there is unlimited potential. And I actually feel like a lot of people miss the earning income side. And that has far more scum.
to change your finances than saving money does. We just think about when you're saving,
if you think about saving literally, what is it? If you think about it more broadly is the difference
between your income and your spending. And one way to increase your saving is sure by cutting
your spending. The other way is by increasing the amount you're making. The easiest way to
increase your income is by creating more value. Money is just an extreme.
exchange of value. And the amount of value you could create as a byproduct money will come from that.
So with that in mind, how can you increase your income firstly? How can you think about increasing
your value? If you work in a day job, what can you do to make you more indispensable to
your corporation if you work for a company? Can you take on projects that no one else wants to
take on? Can you increase the revenue for your team? Can you cut the stress for your boss? What are
these things that can warrant a pay rise or a promotion. And if you're working in a place or a
situation or an organisation where you're almost capped with your increases and your income and
you can't get pay rises or promotions as you can in other industries, then the same still applies
is how can you increase your value, but you want to look for ways to do this outside of your day job.
Look at your friends, your families, your colleagues and ask yourself, what do they need and what do
I have that can solve what they need? What skills can I charge for? If you think of your saving as
the difference between your earning and your spending, if over time you keep earning more, you get
those pay rises, you get those promotions and your earnings increasing and you keep your spending
somewhat the same, sure, enjoy upgrades. If you get a small bonus, spend a little bit to make yourself
happy. I don't believe in the notion of just completely cutting out and just making your life consistent.
but if the gap and the difference between your earning and your spending keeps increasing
and getting wider and you keep banking that difference and saving it away,
that is rocket fuel for your finances.
That is going to make a way bigger difference than just focusing on cutting back and finding
ways to save because you could only save as much as you earn, but you could always earn more.
Yeah, I'm glad you did that reframe and I'm glad you went there after talking about the habits for saving
because like you said, the habits will expand into wherever we are. But I couldn't agree with you more.
I remember in my family it was always about like making sure we saved every penny that we could
and that was really important to us. But what I found was that the amount of time dedicated to savings,
so for example, if you'd bought something from the supermarket or whatever and you had to return it
or it wasn't perfect or there was some, it was passed it sell by day or whatever. And I remember
like sometimes my family would like sit on the phone for like an hour,
or two hours trying to save like 30 pence a pound, whatever it was.
Yeah.
And as I grew older, I started to realize, well, if you put that two hours towards making money,
it would just, and I'm not saying this is easy.
I'm not saying that you're stupid if you're doing the opposite.
That's not the point.
The point is time is money.
We've heard that for years.
And you can either put two out, once you've done everything Nisha said,
you're either spending two hours trying to save an extra X amount,
which, like you said, is limited.
Or you have the ability to use that two hours, to use your creativity, to use your passion,
to use your energy, to use your skills, to use your whatever it may be to actually create value in
the world, which has no limit. And I love the way you put that, that saving has a limit,
earning has no limit. But I think that's where it comes back to what we talked about earlier,
where it's like, if you don't believe that you can make more, you listen to this conversation
right now and you go, yeah, easy for you to say, you know, and it's like, and I remember being that
person and that's why I'm raising it in a vulnerable way is I grew up in a town where the most
the wealthiest person I knew made a hundred thousand a year and I believe that if you were
anywhere close to that then you had made it in life and that was the pinnacle and I know that
for some places that's a high amount for some places that's a very low amount but that was
the amount where I grew up yeah and I knew one person that made that everyone else was making
50k or thereabouts I knew one person who made 100k and and everyone just thought he'd made it
And then as time went on, I met people who made 100K, not in a year, but in a month.
And I was like, what?
Like, I never knew someone could do that.
I didn't even know an entrepreneur growing up.
Like, everyone I knew pretty much worked at companies.
So I was like, oh, you can be an entrepreneur.
Oh, you can run your own business.
Like, fascinating.
Then I met someone who can make 100K in a week.
Yeah.
And then I met someone who made 100K in a day and then an hour and whatever else it was.
And I was like, oh, my gosh, I have been living on this tiny little island,
even though it wasn't, not knowing what.
was possible. And I say that with empathy and love and compassion to tell you that no one who's
making that much money is that much smarter than you or better than you or knows more than you.
They have just found a skill and figured out a way to use that skill to add value to other people.
And school didn't teach us that. Chances are our parents didn't teach us that, not as a dig,
just as they didn't have the skills either and they weren't given that training. And so don't limit
yourself by that voice in your head that just goes, you can't do that. You can't do that.
You don't deserve it, right?
Yeah, and sometimes you have this voices that telling you, if you want more money, you're a bad person.
Or that you're looking forward to earn more, you're, there's something about you that's not right.
That is also completely wrong.
That quote that is, money is the root of all evil, which is not money is the root of all evil.
It's the love for money is the root of all evil.
But trying to earn more isn't actually about the money necessarily.
It's just about even it just, for a lot of people, having more money just exasperates who you are at your core.
And if you could do more with the money that you have, then actually there's no harm in also
wanting more for yourself. And a lot of people say, oh, I don't know if I can earn more or I don't
know if this is for me. I would recommend even setting yourself an hourly rate in your head,
putting an hourly rate for yourself. And anything that you can outsource for less than that
hourly rate, outsource it. So even, for instance, if you're spending three hours trying to save $10,
What is your hourly rate? Because you just spent three hours trying to save $10.
Whereas if you spent that three hours trying to earn more, that would change your finances.
That would have a way of thinking about it. I like the hourly rate breakdown because you basically
just said your hours are worth $3 each. And you know that you could go out there and add more value
and make a lot more. I feel like there's a lot of talk about in our generation right now and
the generation that's growing up around the value of money. And that's why I love your reframe of financial
happiness, I think you're spot on to talk about financial happiness over financial success.
What are the keys to people who are financially happy, not just financially successful?
I'm just going to be talking from my experience here, where I've almost felt like I've lived two
lives in a way where I worked for a corporation for nine years of it. And part of that,
I loved what I did. I found it really intellectually stimulating. I enjoy the work. I enjoy the
environment. And this is not to say that working in a corporation is not the thing to do at all.
If you're an employee own that and you enjoy it, that is totally for you. If you're an entrepreneur
and you enjoy that, totally that's for you. But for me, I found that my version of financial
happiness was to be able to work on things that genuinely made me happy, to be able to take on
projects that I wanted to take on and that I knew I can do really well at. And also just being able
to have more control, freedom, options, independence with my life.
And whilst I don't necessarily think you have to get that from outside of, as an entrepreneur or doing your own thing, I do think that a lot of people do look for the same things.
Yeah.
And that comes from getting your finances and check and setting it up in a way where, like we said before, you can, you can carve a life that's more aligned to what you want.
I also think there's so much of an idealization around being an entrepreneur today.
Yeah.
Like we're living in that era where it's like, quit your job, do what you love and whatever else.
is. And I think about this two ways. One is I worked inside organizations with people who are really
smart and sharp and are still at those organizations doing really well for themselves. And I have an
amazing team that I couldn't do what I do without. And they're incredible and I'm very lucky to work
with them every day. And I look at that and I go, this pressure that's on people today for everyone to
figure out what their own path looks like, I'm like, I don't think it's fair to put that on everyone.
And I don't think everyone's meant for it.
And I don't think it's better than someone who succeeds inside an organization.
Like, you know, Steve Balmer was inside Microsoft.
He didn't invent Microsoft.
It's one of the wealthiest people on the planet.
And Bill Gates invented Microsoft.
And he's one of the wealthiest people on the planet.
And I'm like, who's done it better?
Who's done it worse?
It's like, well, no, maybe they were just playing to their strengths.
Yeah, exactly.
And survivorship bias is real.
We always see the wins and the people who have made it online
and the people who have made entrepreneurship a thing.
but you don't hear about all the losses and the failures that happened.
And even if you look at content creation,
the amount of people that actually make money through creating content,
which is what we usually see on social media,
it's such a small, small percent.
And even that, most of them don't earn more than paycheck to paycheck.
So I think there's a lot of, a lot to say by having that regular paycheck coming in,
that security coming in,
that knowing that you don't have to put a huge amount of capital at risk
and that there is very little downside, at least in the short term.
So, yeah, I don't think that this whole message about doing your own thing
and being an entrepreneur is a way to go at all, at all.
What's the best investment you ever made?
The best investment I've ever made is in myself.
And when I had to change what I do, what I did from banking to what I do now,
I mean, I spent my days on spreadsheets and doing presentations and speaking to clients.
I don't know how to use the camera.
I didn't know how to edit.
I didn't know how to do any of the things that comes with content creation.
And I spent a lot of money behind it.
I spent a lot of money learning it.
I spent money on how to edit because the first five months I was editing myself.
I spent money on like everything you could think of, a new camera, a new mic.
And that was all to fulfill this creativity for me.
And so it was, even though I didn't know if I was going to make money from it,
it took me 11 months for me to actually start making money through social media. I didn't care
because for me it was such an escape from my day-to-day job. I'd go to work and I'll be doing my
job and I'll be crushing it there. But I know deep inside that part of me wanted more. And for me,
going home in the evening and spending my weekends working on this creative passion project
just gave me life. It was kind of like this escape from my day to day. And actually, I spent money
on this project, not knowing if it was going to bring me anything in return.
but it increased my happiness massively.
And then over time, it's, yeah, it's completely changed my life.
But that investment was in myself and just to keep improving in my skills and knowledge.
And we really are so afraid to spend on our skills and knowledge.
And we really, sometimes we look at courses and online programs as like the scam,
but really someone's condensing so much of the information into a short space.
And I bought so many.
And if I didn't, my trajectory and where I would have got to would have been a lot slower.
I'm just learning other people's knowledge.
And so that's one thing.
Investing in your skills and your knowledge, that's one thing that no one can take away from you.
You could go bankrupt, you can lose everything.
But as long as you have those two, you can start and build yourself up.
Yeah.
With everything else, it can be taken away.
It can be stolen.
It can be robbed.
But you own those things for life.
And I think that is hands down the best investment I've made.
Yeah.
Great answer.
I feel like it's, that's like a critical.
pattern in all high performers is that they'd also the best investment they're made is investing in
themselves like it's not a tech investment or something that made them a billion dollars or a million
dollars whatever it's always this investment they made in themselves because they know that that's
all they have yeah and everything came from that and i think we're so quick to again this isn't a
criticism it's it's a reflection point of it's really easy to spend a lot of money on a vacation
vacations are important rest is important yeah i'm i am completely a proponent of a
avoiding burnout. But at the same time, there may be a period of your life with that investment
in yourself may pay off for better future vacations. And I think there's this challenge we have today
of this short-term, long-term thinking. Like, I think maybe for our parents and those generations,
they thought too long-term, and they didn't have any fun in the short-term, and they didn't really
create those memories. And then for our generation, I think the pressure is the opposite. It's like,
have fun now, do everything now because you're not going to be around forever. And the reality is,
chances are you probably have a few more decades left.
And that's going to be really stressful.
So I feel like we've got to find this middle ground as always is, the balance.
And I don't mean work-life balance, but I mean the balance of like short-term and long-term thinking.
Like, I know I want to be happy today.
Yeah.
But I want to be happy tomorrow.
And in 10 years' time.
Yeah.
And you can't take your money to the grave with you.
Like you've got to be spending it in your lifetime at some point.
And there's that, Bronny Ware, who's written that book, The Top Five Regrets of the Dunds of the
dying. And for those who
anyone listening that doesn't know, she
wrote this book, Top 5 Regrets of the
Dying, where she, based on her experience
where she was a nurse and spent time
with people who were in the last weeks of
their life. And what she found was that
the main regret for people was that
they didn't have the courage to live a life true to
them. No one spoke about
earning more or making more money or
wishing they beat the S&P
500 or any of that. It was just
living a life true to them. And so
always using money in a way to live.
a life that's true to you. Yeah. What's the worst thing you've ever spent money on? Or the
worst money you've ever spent? The worst money I've ever spent was on a, on a, my first
couple of months of paycheck going towards the new car. Okay. I mean, at the time, it was the best thing
ever. I mean, and I think there is a time and a place when you can do that. But at that point in my life,
it wasn't necessary. And I could have spent in so many other ways where sometimes I look back and I say
to myself, oh, I wish I took some risks
earlier on in my life, but I wasn't able to
because I didn't have my finances set up in a way
that enabled me to do it. And
if I was a bit more conscious earlier
on, I might have been able to play a little
bit less safe
early on. I think there is a feeling of
being behind. Yeah. And you raised this earlier,
but just going back to it, like, there's
this feeling of like, I wish I started
saving when I was 25. Yeah.
I wish I started saving when I was 35. What would you
say to that person who's saying, I'm listening
to Nisha, I wish you were in my life.
20 years ago. The best time to plan a tree was 10 years ago. The second best time is today. You can't
turn back time. But if you're sitting there watching this in your like 30s and 40s, you have so many
other things that are going for you. You probably have a higher income than when you did when you were
in your 20s or 30s. So you might be able to afford a bigger portion of your paycheck. And secondly,
you have likely a more clearer definition of what you're aiming for and what you're, you're
you're aiming towards. And that can be very, very powerful in the long run, because a lot of saving
comes down to having something that you're saving towards and knowing why you're doing it. And when
you have a very strong reason why you're doing it, you're a lot more likely to keep it up or keep
with it. So for anyone listening who says, I wish I'd started this 20 years ago, you're in a
place where you can, you have a lot of unfair advantages with the place of the life you're in at the
moment and use that to help yourself with where you are. Right.
All right, we're going to play a game that me and the team came up with called This or That Money Edition.
So we're going to give you a choice and you have to decide.
So, Nisha, this or that money addition, financial discipline or financial flexibility?
Financial flexibility.
Explain.
You've got to live life in seasons.
There are different parts of your life where spending on different things will have outsized benefits and spending on it later on in your life.
and when you're so stuck in discipline and structure, you forget the whole serendipity of life.
You sometimes aren't so spontaneous.
You miss things.
You don't take on opportunities.
When you're flexible with your spending, you're flexible financially, you want to take a broader view on life.
You want to zoom out.
And at times in your life, when it's times to save, you save.
On times in life, when it's times to spend and make the most of life, you make the most of it.
Well said.
You get a $500 bonus, invest it or use it to pay off debt?
Me personally.
No, anyone.
Depends.
I mean, this is the boring answer, but it depends what debt you have.
If you have debt over 8%, pay that debt off.
If it's less than 8%, I mean, I'm a mathematical person.
I always go for the financially optimal decision when it comes to debt and investing, so invest it.
Expensive wedding or save for the future?
Save for the future.
Talk to us about that.
I do love the idea.
I do, I'm not against weddings at all.
I love the idea of having everyone in your life.
on both sides together in one room and it's probably the only time where both of your partners
will have, or you and your partner will have all your friends and family in one room. And that doesn't
come around again. But I don't think you need to spend a lot of money to be able to do that. And
there is a lot more that comes from a return on a relationship when you spend towards the life
that you're trying to create with someone than just hosting a big wedding. I think about all the time
just how much you spend on weddings and even compared to how much we had the time, me and Radia,
had at the time when we got married. And how much we spent on our wedding? I'm like, I look back
and I go, that was so irresponsible. And I look back and I think, oh my gosh, like I can't
believe no one just talked some sense into it. And we didn't even spend that much, but we spent
a lot for what we had is what I'm saying. Yeah, no, same here. And it's because that's what
everyone around you is doing. And so when you're not doing it, you feel like you're behind or
something's not going right. But yeah, I, it's something that you always reflect on looking back.
Yeah. Credit cards only or debit only?
If you know how to use credit cards in a way that can stack up for you, credit cards, only if you are paying them off in time.
Because if you use credit cards correctly, the bonuses, the advantages that you get from it is way bigger than what you'd get from debit card.
Not to mention also the insurance and the protection you get from credit card spending as well.
But if you are someone who thinks that with a credit card you're just going to spend unnecessarily with money that you don't actually have, then debit card.
Yeah.
seeing a high balance in your bank account or knowing your money is working by investing it.
I mean, it's so rewarding looking at your bank account and seeing that go up in value.
But it's a very almost irresponsible way to look at your finances.
And when you invest your money, you can still think of that money as yours.
It's just in different forms.
Rather than in cash, it's growing for you in assets.
So 100% anything over your emergency fund.
and money that you don't need in the next five years, invest it. Let that money be working for you.
$1,000 online shopping for a dress or $1,000 invested?
$1,000 invested, hands down, unless you're going to a place where the way you look might generate more than $1,000 for you.
Good answer. Good answer. I love it. Well done, Nisha. I think you did great on this or that. You're fantastic.
We end every episode of On Purpose with a final five. These questions have to be answered in one word to one sentence maximum.
need to show out, these are your final five.
Question number one, what is the best financial advice you've ever heard or received?
Best financial advice I've ever heard of received is you can't take money to the grave with you.
You've got to spend it in your lifetime.
Second question, what is the worst financial advice you've ever heard or received?
The worst financial advice I've ever received is save your way for retirement.
You cannot save your way to retirement.
In this day and age, it is just not possible.
With the way things are going, where the way cost of living is going, you have to be investing your money.
question number three, what would you do differently now looking back on your financial journey?
I mean, there was a period of my life where I spent a lot of money on material items and design items and looking at the part.
Since then, I've made quite a lot of good money decisions, I'd like to say, and I use it in a way that really, really does bring me happiness today.
But if I could go back in time, I would have spent more money on things that drive me in transing happiness, which I didn't at the time.
and it would have changed those years for me.
Question number four,
if you could give your younger self a piece of advice,
what would you say?
Lil Nisha.
If I could give you a piece of advice,
I would say,
and it's that quote,
which is leap and the net will appear.
There have been so many times
where I feel like I'm standing at the edge of a cliff
and I don't know if I can take the leap
and have it in me to do whatever the thing is.
And as I've got older, I've just found that as long as you're in motion, you will find a way to make it work.
You'll find a way in motion to make that net for yourself.
A fifth and final question.
We ask this to every guest who's ever been on the show.
If you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow, what would it be?
I'm going to make this a financial one.
Yeah, please.
And I'm going to say not to treat other people with the amount of money that they show that they have or that you think that they have.
I think so often we assign a value to someone based on the dollar number in front of them.
But actually there's so much more that comes with a person, so much more characteristics that define a person.
And I also think it will solve so many issues about not having to spend money for external validation.
That would probably be a law that I would love to create.
Well said.
Yeah.
Nisha Shah, thank you so much.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much.
Everyone who's listening and watching, make sure you subscribe to Nisha.
his YouTube channel. You can follow her across social media and of course check out her programs
all about financial training, financial savviness and creating a better future for yourself.
Nisha, thank you so much for being so open, thoughtful, insightful. I felt like I learned so much
and I'm so grateful we've got to spend this time together. Thank you so much. And even for you,
Jay, you're exactly the same person as you are online and offline. Like, you could tell that your
whole why online is trying to serve as many people as possible and to give back as much as you can
And even offline, you do that in your day-to-day.
And everything you do is about helping other people.
And I'm so grateful to be to see both sides of you.
So thank you.
Well, I appreciate that.
And congratulations, dear.
I can't wait for so much more to come.
Thank you.
So excited for you, Nisha.
Amazing.
If you're ready to take control of your finances,
create freedom on your own terms,
you want to hear my conversation with Cody Sanchez.
If you want to be successful today is that there's really,
there's two type of people.
One type of person will be really successful.
And one type of person will never be successful.
until they change their mentality.
And we call these fixers versus freeloaders.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
