The Oprah Podcast - What Parents Get Wrong About Money and Their Kids | The Oprah Podcast
Episode Date: January 28, 2025BUY THE BOOK! "Priceless Facts about Money" by Mellody Hobson, published by CANDLEWICK | PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE, is available wherever books and audio books are sold. ... In this episode of The Oprah Podcast, financial expert and Co-CEO and President of Ariel Investments, ‪Mellody Hobson, offers practical advice to simplify financial conversations for families. Mellody shares details about struggling with money as a child, lessons she's taught her daughter and fascinating historical facts about money from her New York Times best-selling children's book, "Priceless Facts About Money." People from around the country join via Zoom to ask Mellody how to address financial questions and situations with their children. Follow Oprah Winfrey on Social: https://www.instagram.com/oprah/ https://www.facebook.com/oprahwinfrey/ Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@Oprah Listen to the full podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0tEVrfNp92a7lbjDe6GMLI https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-oprah-podcast/id1782960381 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone. Welcome to the Oprah Podcast.
I'm so glad to be here with you,
and hello to everyone watching us on YouTube.
I'm talking with the brilliant and most effervescent
Melody Hobson, who is the real maven of money.
I know that for many of you, talking about money,
especially with your children, can bring up a lot of stress and anxiety.
Out of nowhere, they're going to ask you questions you're not prepared for.
Melody grew up the youngest of six children to a single mother who struggled to pay the bills.
She has her own painful memories of being evicted from their homes in Chicago.
This lack of agency fueled Melody's awareness of what money means in the world,
so she made it her mission to
succeed. Shortly after graduating from Princeton, she joined Ariel Investments. It's a Black-owned
global asset management firm. Melody quickly rose through the ranks there, sharing her
formidable knowledge on shows like Good Morning America. When you use a lot of the credit that has been extended to you,
it lowers your score.
Melody is now the co-CEO and president of Ariel
and served for over three years as chair of the board of Starbucks.
She is married to legendary filmmaker and Star Wars creator George Lucas.
Together, they have one daughter, 11-year-old Everest.
She is the inspiration behind Melody's latest project,
the New York Times bestselling children's book,
Priceless Facts About Money.
MUSIC
So when I first read Melody's book, Priceless Facts About Money,
I was so surprised and delighted because what you did was you made learning about money
fun.
And I know you were originally writing this book for children.
And I'm reading it like, well, I don't know how the stock exchange started.
I didn't know.
So, there were many things I didn't know.
And I think, are you finding that a lot of adults are saying, thank you for this book?
That was the goal. So, I was using the children and I have been using children that a lot of adults are saying, thank you for this book? That was the goal.
So I was using the children,
and I have been using children as a gateway to adults.
I thought if I could have parents think,
I've got to teach this to my children,
when I in fact know they don't know the subject matter,
they'd be de facto learning.
That is the exact answer that I'm getting.
That was the goal.
And that has been from the most successful people you could possibly imagine to people
who are struggling every single day, where both sides have said, I've learned so much
from this book.
Yes.
I liked it so much, I chose it as one of the favorite things.
Thank you so much.
Because I think to be able to give it to yourself and then share it with your children is the
ideal.
So what inspired you?
I know that money has been a part of your calling
from the lack of money as a little girl.
So let me start off with the fact,
and this is one of the ways I anchored the book,
no matter where you live, an African village or Chicago,
you have to deal with money no matter who you are.
It is fundamental. It's like oxygen.
It is something that is fundamental around the world.
I just want to start with that piece, as that was part of the inspiration for this.
It's not an issue of a developed country or an emerging market.
It's the whole world, every person, every family has to deal with money in some way every single day. That's number one
Where I was rooted in this story and where this became my calling was how I grew up and how money affected my life and created
Quite frankly a great deal of trauma for me because you were the youngest of six children
Yeah, and you and never had it, right?
And so I grew up with a single mom and there was just a shortage at all times.
So we would get evicted. Our phone would get disconnected. Our lights would be turned off.
There was a time we were living in an abandoned building. I mean, I could go on and on and
on. Really traumatic when you're a child because when you're a child, you have no control.
You can't go get a job. There's nothing you can do. On top of that, I had a mother
who was incredible in so many ways, but made really bad money decisions. And that was hard
to watch even as a child. And I kept thinking, this isn't a good idea. So my mom would buy
Easter dresses instead of paying the light bill. I had that mother.
Yeah, because the Easter dresses, everybody gets to see you and you look like a church.
Correct. You had to go to church looking a certain way. Yeah. But we were-, everybody gets to see you and you look like a church. Correct.
You had to go to church looking a certain way.
Yeah.
But we were-
Did you have the patent leather shoes too?
Of course, Mary Janes.
Yes.
But we didn't have lights at home.
And so that was one of those things that caused me so much anxiety.
So at a very young age, I said, I want to understand money.
I want to understand it.
I want to not repeat what I'm seeing all around me.
I want to make better decisions.
It wasn't about an amount of money.
It was about truly breaking it down so that I could do and live life in a different way.
And so I think that it's no accident I work in the investment business and have my entire career.
My trauma in life became my purpose.
Oh, I love it when that happens.
When you take the thing that made you feel so powerless
and you turn it into your real power.
And obviously you have done that.
And now you say 77% of adults,
I would think it's even more, are anxious about money,
that they don't want to talk about it.
And parents don't want to talk about it to their children,
parents who have the money don't want to discuss it
because they don't want their kids to feel entitled,
parents who don't have the money don't want to discuss it
because they don't want their children
to have to worry about that.
Yes, 77% of people say they have anxiety about money,
a lot of it is rooted in a lack of knowledge and information.
And why are people so uncomfortable talking about it?
Because we don't grow up in schools where we learn about money.
That's why I really do believe, and I've said this behind your back,
this should be taught in schools. This should be a part of the curriculum for young kids
because learning in a fun way like this makes it accessible.
It makes you not have fear about it.
Correct. And I think the thing is when you can anchor it,
not only do you not have fear,
you're kind of excited about what you're learning
because everyone who's read the book,
and I've had so many different types of people read the book,
they always say to me, who knew?
And they feel so empowered by knowledge that they think that they hold that other people don't have.
That's right.
And it makes it, especially for kids, kids love facts.
But this is not an encyclopedia.
The facts are all quirky and different.
And one of the reasons why I think it's so fun
is because you actually used your daughter, Everest, who
is 11 years old, to help you in writing the book
and also helping to understand
what was accessible for her, right?
Yes, so my first draft of the book I gave to my husband.
And who knows a thing or two about telling stories.
And he looked at me and he said,
it's too sophisticated.
And I was like a little offended.
I was like, I know how to talk about money.
I think it's a little sophisticated.
So I gave it to Everest who was eight years old, nine years how to talk about money. It's like, I think it's a little sophisticated. So I gave it to Everest, who was eight years old,
nine years old the first draft.
And I said, because I started when she was eight,
I said, read it and circle every word you don't know.
And it came back with a lot of circles.
And so I said, you know what?
I'm not dumbing this down.
I'm gonna explain every word that she circled.
So sometimes I gave the phonetic definition.
Sometimes I gave the definition.
We did funny, hilarious footnotes, all sorts of things
where I said, I'm not going to walk away from the concept,
but I do understand I need to break it down another level.
And so she read multiple drafts until I felt that she truly understood the concepts,
which I was just literally using her as my, you know, one-person focus group child.
Then we took it to expert readers and did peer review with teachers and things like that.
And explaining everything from bartering.
One of my favorite lines is when young Melody in the book, Melody, says,
oh, I wanted to buy something, buy a book, and I couldn't because I was trying to...
They don't take cupcakes. They don't take cupcakes. And I thought, that is to buy something, buy a book, and I couldn't because I was trying to... They don't take cupcakes.
They don't take cupcakes.
And I thought, that is Gayle King, okay?
You're talking about Gayle King trying to barter for cupcakes.
What's the most surprising thing you learned while writing this book?
There are so many facts, and I was just so...
I mean, I spent a long time researching, and everything had to be vetted, and we had to
make sure everything was absolutely true. But one of my favorite ones is we think about the first official credit card having been born basically 75 years ago
when this businessman was traveling in New York and he forgot his wallet, he had dinner
and he didn't have any money and he ultimately invented what was called the diner's card for dining.
It was originally cardboard, not plastic, even though we call credit cards plastic.
But that wasn't really the first credit card.
The first credit card was a knight's ring
from a thousand years ago.
I know. Who would have ever?
And they used signet rings to pay for things
because the king or queen did not want the knights on the road
where they could be robbed.
And as a result of that, they gave the knight a signet ring.
The knight would stay at an inn or go to a pub
and then put their ring in the wax seal.
And then the innkeeper or the pubkeeper
would take the bill to the castle and get paid.
So, when I was reading this, I was like,
did you know that already or did you research and find out?
I didn't know that one, but there were a lot of things I did know like bull and bear.
That's one of my favorite facts.
Why do they call it bull and bear markets?
When I started to work in the investment business and very early on after doing lots of research
because I wanted to know the best answer I got was it had to do with how they kill their
prey that when a bull kills its prey, it takes its horns and it pulls up.
And when a bear kills its prey,
it runs and bears down on the prey.
So stock market going up is a bull market,
stock market going down is a bear market.
That is something I knew, for example.
And there were a lot of other facts in the book
that I knew that I said now I-
I didn't know that when I read that.
I knew Wall Street was because of where
Alexander Hamilton lived.
Now a lot of people know that fact today because of the show Hamilton.
The play, yeah.
Okay.
So what do you think, Melody, that most parents get wrong when it comes to money and their
children?
So the first thing is that their lack of willingness to talk about it basically means that they
pass on all of their money habits.
So whatever they do, the child is actually just acclimating themselves to the same behavior.
Then you can't break the cycle.
There is not that 10-year-old melody saying, I don't want to do this.
So you can't expect a child to do that.
That's number one.
That in not dealing with money, they are de facto teaching their children
everything that they do.
So if you pay the minimum payment, your child's going to do that.
If you overspend, your child will spend.
These are things that we know for sure.
The second thing is shielding their children from money.
This is where I give my mother a lot of credit.
She maybe made some money decisions that were questionable, but she put me in the real world
every single day.
And what I loved is she had me handle money.
We would go to a restaurant from McDonald's to a diner.
She would have me pay when I was little, four or five years old, go and give the money at
the counter.
Then she'd have me count the change.
So you knew that there was an exchange for this.
Then count the change.
Then calculate the tip.
Every step along the way that I became more sophisticated, I never saw my mom pay a bill
because I paid them.
And so it let me know what things cost.
I knew what a hamburger cost at McDonald's versus at a fancy restaurant. So tell me let me ask you this
Do you think parents should allow their children to know how much money they make? I
Think that I would be age appropriate
So I would not deny if you have a
Lot of resources. I think pretending that you don't is foolish.
I also would not deny if your resource is scarce.
And I think it's very important to level with kids.
So you don't have to give the number?
Yes, but you have to be very, very honest about it.
And it happened to us recently,
I will give you that example.
My daughter recently was in a situation
where some kids asked her about her family situation,
and she was very taken aback
because we don't talk about, you know,
what we have versus other people.
We don't, we value values, not things.
But I did say to her, I said that, you know,
yes, you have a lot of resources,
but they're not yours.
They're ours.
Just so she understood that it wasn't, you know, it's not her money.
Wow.
And she said, well, will I have resources one day?
And I said, you'll have a job? Yes.
And she said, where will I live?
And I said, you'll probably have a house.
And I said, but you won't be without.
You'll have enough.
I said, you will have, you know, you'll have enough.
And it was really interesting.
We had a very direct conversation about it.
And will you have another conversation as she's older?
Because she's 11.
It's a running conversation.
It's a running conversation.
Yeah, it's a conversation that never ends.
Now, the thing about her, at least at this stage,
she's not enamored by things.
When we go to a store, my daughter never asks for anything.
So I have to show her something and say, would you like this?
But she would not ask, even though I've never told her something and say, would you like this?
But she would not ask, even though I've never told her
that there's an issue with her asking, she just doesn't.
And she doesn't want a lot of stuff around her.
So, you know, I grew up with a mother like your mother,
and I was just always told, we don't have it,
we don't have it, we don't have it.
Which is hurtful, and also, you carry the shame of that.
We don't have it, we don't have it, we don't have it.
The shame is huge.
Yes, I remember the Christmas I was told,
there is no Santa Claus and you're not having Christmas
because we don't have it.
I was five.
Wow. Yeah, well, I was 12 and we were on welfare.
I should have known there was no Santa by that time anyway,
but it was time.
But I often think it would have been so much more meaningful if she'd said, we don't have
it and this is why.
Or this is all we have.
Instead of we don't have it, we don't have it.
Yeah.
So it's interesting because I think that they did the best that they could.
Yes, I really do.
And I think that these were hard subjects.
And you know, there was a lot of struggle.
There was a lot of struggle. And I think they were at least my. And there was a lot of struggle. There was a lot of struggle.
And I think they were, at least my mother was trying
to anchor me in reality.
She was constantly trying to help me understand
what I was going to confront in life.
And so her goal was not to sugarcoat anything.
So she gave it to you straight.
So I think that you're paying the bills,
like McDonald's versus this restaurant.
You're looking at the bills.
You're seeing-
How many had me look at the utility bills?
So I think that that is very valuable.
And I meet kids today who have no idea
what their cell phone costs.
I'm like, you know, Wi-Fi costs money.
All those streaming services cost, like, my mother, I would...
So children should know that.
Absolutely.
The example that I give that I love so much,
I love this example.
Everest has this game that she likes to buy on her iPad
It's called toka since she was like five years old
She can't buy anything without asking ever ever ever and she's a rules follower
So she'll come in and say mom can I buy it's called a place because you build a house or a store or what have you
So I said how much is it and she And when she was very young, she'd say,.99.
I said, 99 cents.
I said, let me think about it.
I take a minute, go back to her and say,
yes, you can get that.
Next time she comes to me, she says, I want to buy a place.
I said, how much is it?
She says, 2.99.
I was like, I have to ask Baba Baba is
dad yes so I'm helping her to see she's like oh I said that's that's more
expensive yes I said I have to ask Baba so she's she understands that I go back
because I don't want her to get anything instant even though I know 99 cents is
not a lot but instant gratification I'm trying to manage and patience.
So I said, I have to ask Vava.
This is a child who could have anything she wanted
in the world. Correct, and $2.99
for any of us is like a no-brainer,
but I was like, no.
And it's not manufactured, but it's just letting her to see,
be thoughtful and deliberate about what you spend.
So the last time she comes and she says,
I want to watch a movie.
And I said, okay, so we went to turn on the show.
It was an animated film, and it was $15.99.
This is Everest's reaction.
This is ridiculous.
She's like, she thinks this is the biggest number she's ever
seen.
Mom, this is so expensive.
And I said, well, Everest, you'll probably
watch it multiple times.
It's like a toy. And I said, well, Everest, you'll probably watch it multiple times. It's like a toy.
And I said, I think it'll be a good investment, but I'm still going to talk to Baa Baa about
it so that she sees we collaborate on money.
And I love this because now she knows 99 cents versus 2.99 versus 15.99.
And that was when she was like seven years old.
I love this.
This is ridiculous.
Yes.
Yeah.
I mean, she was really, she was, she was upset.
Thank you for listening to my podcast.
I'll have more of my conversation with Melody Hopson about her new book, Priceless Facts
About Money, right after this.
This episode of the Oprah podcast is sponsored in part by Alloy Women's Health.
Are you confused about menopause and perimenopause?
Alloy has all the answers and experts you need to feel like yourself again.
With Alloy, you get safe, effective, FDA-approved solutions to your menopause and perimenopause symptoms.
Prescribed by menopause-trained doctors with unlimited ongoing care with your own personal doctor.
You can message them anytime, from from anywhere for no extra cost.
Menopause is inevitable, but suffering doesn't have to be.
Alloy has everything you need to age happily and healthily.
Feel like yourself again.
Go to myalloy.com to start your consult
with a menopause-trained expert today.
Use code OPRAH to get $20 off your first order.
Hey again, I'm with financial trailblazer and bestselling author,
Melody Hobson, whose new book has great money advice for parents and their children.
We have parents zooming in with us today with questions for Melody.
Kelly is a mother of two. Hello, Kelly. And he's joining us from Milwaukee,
my old stumping ground.
So what's going on with you?
Well, I wanted to start by saying I'm so glad to share this space with both of you.
Nobody can break down financial systems and barriers and things like that on their own,
but financial education and access means everything.
I will say for us in our home, I have a four-year-old and a six-year-old, and they're young, and
you always are trying to figure out what is an age-appropriate way to explain anything to them because out of nowhere they're gonna ask you questions
You're not prepared for where do babies come from? Why does mommy have a mustache today?
And so, you know
We've been trying to figure out the most age-appropriate ways to explain money because they've had a lot of questions and it started
This summer where you know, I'm spending a lot of time in my office here on my computer and you know they'd say close
your work get out of your office what are you doing and my husband was
explaining to them should be quiet now mommy's working and you know the work
she's doing on the computer or when he's out in the field that pays for you know
our house and the food you need and the toys you enjoy and also there are some
kids that don't have any of those things and it's one thing to explain it to them but it's another
thing to put it in practice. So this summer we did an experiment and we gave
them each three dollars and took them to the dollar store and had them pick what
they wanted and they had to decide do I want these five things but I only have
three dollars? Do I want this candy versus this toy? Which one's gonna last
longer and bring me more joy? So those trade-offs they had to figure out and there was some disappointment
And there were some learnings there
We also went to the Lego store at one point and my son was like these things are a hundred and eighty nine bucks
So some of the reaction as Everest had yes, so what is your question for melody?
Yeah, so my question is you, at the ages of four and six, what is the age-appropriate
way to explain the power of money?
I think you do it as you have already started.
There's the practicality of it and then there is valuing things.
So the great example with your dollar store example is they had to put a value on things
and they had to give it relative value.
You're not directly explaining that to them, but that's actually what's happening.
And so I'm a big fan of giving kids choices.
That's why I love barter.
Barter is there's actually no money involved, but it's do you want Barbie or a cupcake?
One you're going to eat and it's going to disappear and one you may have and they actually
decide and start to put that value on it.
So that's a great way.
I think also, and this is really important because especially for young kids,
I talk about the fact that money is very mysterious
because they don't actually ever see it anymore because of our cashless society.
Money for children is on a credit card, a phone now, or it spits out of a machine.
So trying to explain that you work for it,
when you're four, that's super hard to understand.
And so as a result of that,
I really encourage parents use cash.
Use cash so they can see it's finite and it goes away,
that you don't have an endless amount of it.
And just in a wallet,
they can see that it's starting to go down and
that can be very, very helpful.
That's what you did with the three dollars, right? You had actually three dollars.
Yeah.
Three dollars. You know, we get to other parents. So to your point on cash, you know, I have
a friend who, you know, if her daughter wants extra dessert, she's got to pay a dollar for
it or extra screen time or something like that. Again, knowing and understanding the
trade-offs but physically holding that money doesn't
make a difference.
Now, the very important point is also to make sure it doesn't become something that builds
fear in them or feels like a hardship.
You know, you want to be light about it.
You know, it's a fact of life.
It's a conversation you can have, but not in such a way that you either feel punished
or you feel, you know, very, very put upon.
I'll give you one quick example with Everest.
So Everest, when we told her,
just like your children at about the same age,
she said to us, all kids have toys.
And we're like, all kids do not have toys, Everest.
And so George, to his credit, my husband,
he was like, go and show her. He's like, don't explain it to her, go and show her.
So I said, OK, we went to Father Flager's church in Chicago,
St. Sabina.
I sent her without me to sit with five-year-old children
and take toys for the holidays.
And that was the first time she saw.
That other kids don't have what you have.
And that was visual. first time she saw that other kids don't have what you have.
And that was that really important visual.
And it was a reaction, not only the enthusiasm they had for them.
She said a lot of the toys she said, I said, what did you see? She said, broken toys. I mean, it touches your heart. I said, what happened?
She said, they said, well, who do you live with? She said, my mom and dad.
They said, mom and dad. Wow.
She said, where's, they said, where's your mom?
She said, my mom's at work.
They said, work.
Wow.
So we were explaining to her at five years old, we're like, everyone doesn't have a mom
and dad.
Some people have neither.
Some people live with their grandpas or their grandmas or their aunts or uncles or a friend.
Everyone doesn't have a job.
It was this this this living example that we could explain to a five year old.
Yeah.
But George is one he said, go and show our don't explain it.
Yeah, I think that if you're four and six, you can't even comprehend that somebody
doesn't have what you have until you see it until you see it.
I think you're here.
You're here. But your kids are there.
Can we see your kids?
I'm looking at the picture.
Oh, hello. Wow. Cute. Gorgeous. Look at that family. Thank you for saying hi. They're the big $3 shoppers.
Look at him. Look, who is this and what is going on? Thank you, Kelly, and your family. Thank you so much.
Thank you all for joining us. Thank you for your questions. Nice to meet you. Christy from Dubuque, Iowa is joining us. She has a 12-year-old daughter, Piper, and son, Cole,
who's 15. Christy, I hear you're taking a few steps, you say, right now with Cole to teach him the
value of a dollar. How's that going?
For sure. So, Cole is 15. He has started driving. He has his permit, and so he is very active as well.
And so he swims a lot, he has school activities, and so he's able to drive.
And so we're working with him and have given him a debit card that he is able
to use and utilize to get gas or fuel, potentially if he goes out to get food
with friends or things of that nature.
He is working.
He works part-time.
Occasionally throughout the year, he teaches swimming lessons.
And so he does have an income that's coming in.
Can I just stop you right there?
How important is it for kids to have a job, Melody?
Very.
It's very important.
I think if you don't have a job, how do you ever learn the value of money if you don't
have a job? But you also get a great value of money if you don't have a job?
But you also get a great sense of value out of working
and getting a paycheck,
it's something that creates self-confidence.
Okay, so I think that's a great thing that he has a job.
Me too. That's what I wanted to say.
For sure.
And when he got his first paycheck,
kind of our rules with this,
since he's got his own debit card,
it's tied to my personal account so I can kind of see what he's spending and
purchasing and things of that nature.
But we got his first paycheck and he went to deposit it.
I had shared with him that 80% of it has to go into his savings account and 20%
can go into his spend account.
The spend is fair game.
He can buy whatever he would like.
I don't monitor.
He doesn't have to ask ahead of time. You decided on the 80-20? You did? I did. Yes.
He did it like that, as you can imagine, and he didn't understand for certain.
I still think that's a hard concept to wrap his head around. We're able to
supplement him a little bit each week with money as well. He gets a small
allowance for those additional purchases, but we've been
really trying to, again, push that you have money to spend and save.
Um, and again, have, you know, that balance between the two.
My question is, so he has this part-time job, but it's very intermittent
just based on activities and sports that he's in.
I feel kids are pulled in so many different directions right now that there are times
when he doesn't have the income coming in.
So, what would you suggest for parents in those situations when they don't have the
income but yet they do have the expenses that they need to pay for?
Okay.
I think you laid out a lot of very useful
and interesting facts about how you're setting this up.
I'm struck by one thing, however, I will tell you.
I also would great humility say,
I am not here to tell you what's right
for you and your family.
I'm just gonna react to one thing, which is the 80-20.
I think that he will feel that that is very aggressive.
And I think that that will make him resent saving. And if he's already pushed back on
it, he's so biased towards the saving versus the spend. You're doing a great thing, but
you might be hardening him against, and at some point he just wants to rebel about this,
rebel from this and not do it at all.
That doesn't feel balanced to me. Yeah, that's I was struck by that. That's why I asked who came
up with that. Was that your idea? Because it feels off balance. It's a little aggressive and then
therefore it puts you in the the pickle on the other things about supplementing and if he's
earning it he should be able to spend a larger portion to me.
And I don't know what the absolute dollars are.
That might be something you're trying to control.
And that doesn't mean going out being whole hog.
The other thing about it is if you went to a larger percentage,
those in-between times wouldn't be a drought.
You know, he actually might be able to keep himself going during those in-between times.
What I don't like is when the kid has to come back
to the parents constantly, I need this, I need this.
So then they think, you're never sort of putting them
on their own two feet because they have to ask permission
from you.
It felt off balance to me.
I first thought I misheard you
because I would think saving 20%.
That's what I would have thought too.
Saving 20%.
If you had said 30, if you had said 50,
I would have been doing the Hallelujah Chorus,
but I would, I think 20% is a bit austere.
Yes. Yeah.
So would you suggest then,
instead of balancing it in that respect,
you know, as you suggested, you know,
maybe give him 50%, 60% of it,
supplementing maybe his savings as a parent just to help him kind of build
up that savings or do you think that that's a totally separate topic?
You might do what I call a family match. It's like a 401k plan. So in a 401k plan, if you
put in a dollar, your company might put in 50 cents up to a certain amount.
I really like this.
You might do something like that. So I think that's better because it also teaches him
once he becomes someone who works and the company gives free money
He knows not to walk away from the free money
And if you've got money on the table, he might say I'll pony up to that
You also could change the match based upon the percentage. So you say, okay, if you say 30%
This is what I match if you say 50 it's even more Wow the one thing I would say which is super important
Some parents get themselves in their own financial trouble
by being too aggressive with their own money.
And so just making sure that whatever you do
is within the means that you also feel comfortable
that you can afford.
And from allowance to whatever it might be,
the family match, whatever it is,
so that you're not overextending yourself.
I also wanna point to the debit card,
which I think is great. Everson and I also want to point to the debit card, which I think is great.
Everson and I are going to get her a debit card actually very soon because I think you
need training wheels.
And most parents give their kid a credit card when they leave for college.
I call it a weapon of mass destruction at that point because now we know the credit
card of a child has to be tied to the parent.
You have no control over them once they leave the house.
And if you haven't taught them at that point,
your own credit could be affected by recklessness
if they haven't been taught how to spend and what to do.
And we all know, I mean, the first time I got a credit card,
I thought it was like free money and went immediately into debt.
I was a young reporter for a first time
because my father had not believed in credit cards, ever.
I had Amex calling me in my dorm room with Bill Collector.
Because I went on a ski trip.
Wow.
And I owed $2,000 to Amex.
And I had so much anxiety.
And I was kicking myself.
I was like, I can't believe I've repeated what I grew up.
Yeah.
I took out a consolidation loan because I owed Visa $1,800 and the interest was so high,
I thought I would never, ever, ever.
It felt like a million dollars.
Like a million dollars.
So I think, first of all, Cole is very fortunate
that he has Ms. Melody Hobson herself advocating for him.
And I think what she shared with you today
is going to absolutely bring a greater sense of balance
to your family.
Yeah.
And I think he'll feel better about it as well.
I love the family match, don't you?
I saw your eyes light up when you heard that.
Oh my goodness.
That's brilliant.
I love that so much.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Christy.
Thank you so much.
Stay with us.
We're going to have more questions from parents who are looking for money advice from best-selling
author and financial expert extraordinaire, Melody Hobson. We'll be right back.
Calling all sellers. Salesforce is hiring account executives to join us on the cutting edge of
technology. Here, innovation isn't a buzzword. It's a way of life. You'll be solving customer
challenges faster with agents, winning with purpose, and showing the world what AI was
meant to be. Let's create the agent-first future together. Head to salesforce.com slash
careers to learn more.
I'm glad you joined me. I am talking all things money, especially for parents, with bestselling
author Melody Hobson. So Lindsay from Chicago has a question about giving a credit card
to her seven-year-old daughter.
Hi, Oprah. Hi, Melody.
Yes.
Hi. Yeah. What do you want to say?
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, go ahead.
Yes, my daughter is seven years old.
She is an only child.
You know, Melody, you mentioned it.
We're moving towards a cashless society.
So not every place accepts actual cash anymore.
In some places only accept credit cards.
So, for example, when we drop our daughter off to summer camp,
we want to make sure she's able to buy the snacks that she wants and not every place takes the cash.
So we were starting to contemplate when it would be appropriate to get her maybe a credit
card or a debit card and is seven years old too young.
Yes.
Seven years old is too young.
I'm sorry.
Have you been listening to what you were saying earlier about cash being the best way?
Because at seven years old, if you're using a credit card already, you don't even know what it is.
I would take a hard line on that one.
Not everyone accepts cash.
I would tell the camp.
The camp cannot, I would push back on the camp saying they should not be going to places that don't accept cash.
Because seven-year-old children should not have credit cards. I want to know on the camp saying they should not be going to places that don't accept cash because seven year old children should not have credit cards.
I want to know what the other kids do.
I have a quote that I use in practically everything in my life and especially with my child.
Start as you intend.
Start as you intend.
You do not intend for her to be waving around a credit card in that way.
So it's seven years old.
That is not the way to start.
You want to start with her being very, very respectful
of money, even if you have resources
that she can take advantage of.
I think this is so powerful, what you're saying.
It's seven, maybe, because you're
able to do things for your daughter that
weren't done for you.
You're able to give her a life that you only dreamed of
and that she gets to actually
live and experience.
This is, I know, easier said than done.
And it's, again, it's our money habits
that they're picking up.
Say that again, what you just said to her melody about,
start with where you want to intend.
Yeah, start where you intend.
And so what do you intend for your child?
You know, certain things where you look precocious and cute
really wear off early.
You know, when you're 22, you just look like a jerk.
And so just, you know, sort of envision whatever it is today
and then project it into the future.
But I would say right now, just being very practical,
I would implore you not to give her a credit card
or a debit card for the reasons I've already mentioned.
She cannot comprehend this.
It's too hard.
And so, you know, she's got a few more years, you know, she doesn't even have, you know,
sort of advanced reasoning yet.
And she might be the smartest kid ever, but it's still very hard to work these things
through in your mind.
And that just will not help her.
Okay.
And were you feeling pressure because you think other parents were doing that or you felt like why why did you all come to that conclusion? My husband's in finance as well and
like we just thought okay maybe it's best to just kind of start teaching her the concept of the
credit card and how this works to make her responsible at an early age. Yeah. Yeah. But I
think what you're saying too, Melody, is so important that conceptually, seven years
old, you can't even, your brain won't even let you do it.
No.
Not at all.
Yeah.
No matter how smart she is.
Yeah.
All right, Lindsay.
Good advice today.
Thank you.
Twenty-one-year-old Jordan from Texas is also joining us.
Jordan, I hear congratulations are in order because you recently secured a full-time job.
I did. Thank you, first of all. Thank you so much for having me. I'm super excited to be here.
And second of all, thank you so much for the congratulations. It means a lot, especially
coming from you. So thank you. Okay. So how is the adulting going for you now?
the adulting going for you now? Ooh, um, adulting is definitely way more than it seems.
I have my first apartment by myself and paying rent and balancing a credit card and bills
and just like how Melody said earlier, utilities are a thing that I didn't consider. So just having to balance that stuff out
is a bit of a learning curve, but I'm doing it.
I'm grateful and it's happening.
It's a little rough, but I'm figuring it out.
A little rough.
What's your question for Melody?
So my question for Melody is, like you said, I am 21.
I'm starting a full-time job.
So at this point, what advice
would you have given to your 21-year-old self that would work for me?
Wow, there's a lot there.
First of all, congratulations, I have to say the same thing.
Your first job, that's a big deal, and just embarking upon life, it's a very exciting
time.
And I don't know if that's your apartment, but if it is, that's an awful nice kitchen
for her first apartment.
Just FYI, and your mom would be very happy
with how clean it is.
But I will say that the piece of advice
that I would give my younger self
is advice that I knew at the time
because I studied this issue,
but I'd only doubled down on it,
is compounding is a very powerful thing.
And what I mean by that,
you can start with very small amounts
of money.
And if you give that money time to grow,
it turns into very big amounts.
And so I think a lot of people think
it's not even worth it to save $20 a month.
It's not worth it to save $25, $10, whatever it might be.
But when you do the math on that, over 40 years,
you've got thousands and thousands of dollars.
And so every little bit adds up.
And I would just encourage you, even with living as tightly as you probably are,
find a way to forego something that doesn't make you feel totally deprived.
But if you could forego it occasionally, you could put away a little extra money.
So, you know, if you get your lunch at work,
one day you take a sandwich or two.
You know, I can go down the list of those sort of things.
Something that you say, I'm gonna miss or skip this time
so that I can put this money away.
And then again, the magic of compounding,
Warren Buffett calls it,
who's one of the greatest investors of all time,
the eighth wonder of the world.
It really, really can make a difference.
There's something I'll just give it to you quickly so you can think about it called the
Rule of Twelve.
You may have learned that in school.
So the Rule of Twelve says, if money compounds 12% a year, in five years it doubles.
So if you have $1,000 and it compounds at 12%, you have $2,000.
So then you do 6%. Let's even be at twelve percent you have two thousand. Yeah, so then you do six percent
Let's even be more conservative. So we double in ten years
So, you know if you had a thousand dollars in ten years at six percent it would double
it's a way of you thinking about money that you're putting away and
Saying to yourself and because you're so young over a long period of time
The stock market has returned between, you know, 10%
plus, that would actually be possible for you.
So it's not fantastical or magical thinking.
And the thing about the doubling, so let's just say it's it's the thousand dollars that
grows at 6%, that's $2,000 in in 10 years, It's $4,000 in 20 years
It's eight thousand dollars in 30 years
Right $16,000 in 40 years now think about that as you were putting away money in a 401k plan
Or something like that and you start off with ten thousand you can see how the map just gets to be so compelling
Yes. Yeah, so so, you know, I have you gotten your first paycheck yet?
compelling. I love that you did mention about savings because my parents definitely did teach me a lot about savings. What I did was I took half of that paycheck and just put it off to the savings because
I was still living with my parents.
They still support me a lot.
I took my check, put half of it away in savings and that's what I was just doing for each
check, just putting half away and using the rest to spend on the things I like and stuff
like that.
Can I give you one important point?
So I gave a graduation speech a few years ago,
actually during COVID, I did a Zoom graduation speech
and I did it on something I said,
no one does a commencement address about money.
Yeah.
That's what I did.
And I made one comment to the graduates
and I'm gonna say it to you, select a date certain,
you pick whatever date you certain. You pick whatever
date you want, you pick whatever year you want, that you will not accept another dime
from your parents. A date certain. Whatever you say, at 24, at 25, at 22, I will not accept
another dime from my parents ever. It will empower you and put you on a path that I cannot explain.
Now some of us had no parents to lean on so it wasn't a choice. It actually gave
us an advantage because we were all we had. When you have a safety net to lean
back on, I don't think you're as rigorous as you could be. And I'm not
saying that for everyone.
But it's true. I've experienced it over and over again.
Set a date, write it on a calendar, stick it on that refrigerator,
stare at it every day and know after that day,
you're not allowed to take another dollar. At all.
You know, it's like, I used to pay for us to go out to lunch,
you know, whatever it was, not, it's like, Mom, it's on I used to pay for us to go out to lunch, you know, whatever it was not it's like mom It's on me. It's the tables totally turned. I can tell that struck you
I could see your facial expression when she said that why did that strike? Yeah, it did
Um, so my parents definitely taught me a lot about independence
So even though they like you said they are my safety net when it comes to necessities everything Everything that's a want to have is on me.
And even with my rent right now, they're helping me pay a portion of it. And then the rest
of it is on me. But I really liked that you mentioned that because I do feel that I'm
a little bit more independent than some of my peers when it comes to finances. But just
that that point right there made me really feel like, yeah, they still do help me out a lot
and I'm so grateful for that.
But at some point I'm going to have to just let it go.
And I don't know what date that will be,
but I just loved that point that you made
because the empowerment that you feel
whenever no one else is supporting you
and it's just you is just.
That's great.
Can I give you one example?
Because I love this so much.
Yes, please do.
So I was living in my first apartment in Chicago,
my second apartment. I had no furniture, none.
And I just lived a very monastic life in this apartment.
You didn't have a kitchen like that.
No, not at all.
And I decided, I graduated from college in 1991,
and I had a goal of having a sofa in 1996.
Oh, God.
So it's like, it's 1993, 1994,
and this was the year that there was a presidential election.
So I had this saying that I would say to my friends,
couch in 96.
So I'm getting a sofa, but I wanted a grownup sofa,
not like a Jennifer's Convertibles.
I wanted to go to the merchandise mart and buy a
beautiful, real sofa where I picked fabric and the whole thing. Exactly. And I remember it was this
dangia sofa and it was expensive and I was like, I'm just gonna save for this sofa. There was
nothing in my apartment, it was 850 square feet. I got that sofa, I would go visit it at lunchtime.
I felt so accomplished in buying that sofa.
I can't tell you what I got from that.
I bought it myself.
So I worked a few miles away in Chicago.
At lunchtime, I would go sit on my sofa
because I was so-
In the merchandise mart? No, once it got to my. Because I was so... In the merchandise market.
No, no. Once it got to my house,
and I was able to buy it in 1996,
it got delivered. There was nothing else in the room.
And I would just visit the sofa during the day from work.
I understand that.
And I was like, no one can take that away from me.
I earned that sofa.
Yes.
I gave it away at one point,
and I was like, that sofa means so much to me.
I don't think I want to give it away.
But it took you from 1991 to 96.
Because it was several thousand dollars,
and it wasn't like that was something you went and did.
I mean, I had to save to buy a mattress.
I remember calling my mom.
We all remember saving to buy a mattress.
The mattress was $2,000.
And I said to
my mother I cannot afford this and she was like the per diem on that mattress is nothing. My mother
who not book smart, she's like you're gonna own the mattress for a long time, Melody. If you do
the daily rate it's nothing and that sleep is really important to you. Really important. So she was
talking, Jordan was talking about savings.
What do you think about the proportion of savings
versus what you're actually spending?
What should that be?
Ideally, I think it's especially at your age,
this is the way I did it.
You want to start with a number and every year increase it.
And so instead of being absolute,
just having the goal that I will do better next year
than I did this year.
Especially in the beginning, when you're starting a life, you got a lot of stuff to buy.
You need knives and pots and pans and towels.
You got the first month's rent and the security deposit.
You know, all sorts of things are just real life.
So I'm trying to be realistic about that.
So if you could do 5%, you know, great.
But in your company 401k plan, give enough to get the match. You
might not have a separate savings account outside of that.
I really want you to have, though, emergency money,
because you need three to six months living expenses if
something goes wrong. And I've been saying this for years and
years and years and years. And then when COVID happened, I
know, like like literally people with
no income. And this idea that those people had some emergency savings, it made a difference.
So first saved have the emergency money, then start putting money in your, your 401k plan
at work. And every year make a commitment that you increase it. Every time I got a raise,
I raised the amount I saved. Ooh, I see that hit too, Jordan.
It did.
Jordan's like the Amen choir.
Amen.
Jordan, thank you so much. You're such a lovely person. Thank you so much.
Yes, congratulations.
Congratulations. Thank you.
Thank you for being here with me. We'll be back with bestselling author and financial
powerhouse Melody Hobson,
right after this.
Hi, thank you so much for listening and for being with me here.
I'm back with Melody Hobson.
So Melody, what's your advice to everyone listening?
What is the number one thing you want us to take away from priceless facts about money,
from knowing about what to do with our money?
You don't have to live in fear.
You can take control of your life when it comes to money,
even if you feel strapped.
I have met people from every single walk of life,
from poverty and welfare to billionaire,
and at every level I found some level of waste
when it comes to money, some level.
And it could be bottled water.
It could be, you know, all where I'm like,
if you could just pull that back,
where on the margins can you get yourself
in better financial shape?
I remember when I was a kid, we would go to the newsstand.
We loved magazines.
Think of how much money you can spend on magazines.
You know, we would have been better off going to the library.
The magazines would have been there.
So those would be the examples of thinking through on the margins
how you're living your life and how can you take control
and take the fear out of this.
The only way you can truly take the fear out is to have knowledge.
The only way you can truly have knowledge
is to read and ask questions.
There's no way anyone should know this
because I said we didn't learn about it in school.
No, we didn't.
So unless you grew up in a family
where the stock market and money is discussed.
That's right.
And when people talk about personal finance,
I push back because that's not being financially literate.
I'm not talking about how to write a check or how to
pay a read a utility bill. I'm talking about how to think about
things like compounding, how to make sure you're not walking
away from free money in that 401k plan, how to make sure that
you're thinking about the long term. All of those things are
they can be learned and they can you can you can teach it to yourself, but you have
to make the commitment to do so.
And not live in the fear.
One of the most important things you've shared is that whatever your money habits are, you
are passing that on to your children whether you recognize it or not.
And so you need to clean that up with yourself first.
And that's why I think that Priceless Facts about Money is invaluable to adults first
and then pass it on to your children.
Thank you for writing this.
Thank you so much for having me and for being the most amazing person that you have always
been.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Melody Hobson, thank you to all of my guests zooming in with your great questions for Melody.
Every family needs this book.
You need this book in your house.
Priceless facts about money.
Then you put it in your house, then you give it to your auntie's house, your cousin's house.
And if you're listening to this podcast, you can head over to YouTube to watch the full
video.
Thank you so much, Melody.
Thank you.
That's great.
You can subscribe to the Oprah Podcast on YouTube and follow us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen.
I'll see you next week.
Thanks everybody.