The School of Greatness - 791 Be Financially Free and Pay Yourself First with David Bach
Episode Date: May 1, 2019BE FINANCIALLY SELFISH. Too many people are living paycheck to paycheck. Our debt has us in handcuffs. We don’t think that financial security is possible for us. But anyone can build wealth. Anyone.... You just have to pay yourself first. The key is to have your money make money. With some simple math, you can see that putting away a little bit of money every day can bring huge results. On today’s episode of The School of Greatness, I talk about financial freedom with an incredible personal finance expert: David Bach. David Bach is one of America’s most trusted financial experts who has written eleven national bestselling books. His runway #1 bestseller The Automatic Millionaire spent 31 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. He has appeared on NBC’s Today Show more than 100 times The Oprah Winfrey Show six times. David says that by paying yourself first, you can save enough to become a millionaire by the time you retire. So get ready to learn the power of becoming financially selfish on Episode 791. Some Questions I Ask: How much should someone put down on a home? (29:00) What is missing in my personal financial portfolio? (32:00) What are three steps that people can do right now? (53:00) What’s the best money advice you’ve ever heard? (1:04:00) In This Episode You Will Learn: Why you don’t need a budget (8:00) The three lessons about money David’s grandma taught him (11:00) The three secrets to financial freedom (19:00) The “rule of 72” (40:00) The dangers of subscription services (56:00) Follow me on: Instagram @lewishowes Twitter @LewisHowes Facebook @LewisHowes
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This is episode number 791 with nine-time New York Times best-selling author David Bach
Welcome to the school of greatness
My name is Lewis Howes a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur and each week
We bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Confucius said, when it is obvious that the goals cannot be reached, don't adjust the
goals, adjust the action steps.
goals adjust the action steps this one is all about how to become an automatic millionaire how to live rich and be rich and finish rich that's what this episode is about so many people talk
about their financial pain the struggle they have with their finances and really how to earn the
type of money they want how to invest their money how to save their money how to earn the type of money they want, how to invest their money, how to save their money, how to automate their money so they can live rich and finish rich. David Bach is the financial
author, nine-time New York Times bestseller consecutively, huge TV personality, motivational
speaker, entrepreneur, and founder of finishrich.com. Over the past two decades, he has
impacted over 100 million people through his books, seminars, speeches,
newsletters, and thousands of media appearances. He's been a contributor on the Today Show more
than 100 times and a regular on the Oprah Winfrey Show, where he appeared six times to share his
strategies for living and finishing rich. Again, nine-time consecutive New York Times bestseller.
and Finishing Rich.
Again, nine-time consecutive New York Times bestseller.
He's one of America's most trusted financial experts,
and he is here to reveal some powerful strategies for you on why people who try to get rich quick,
they end up staying broke long.
How to create system versus budgets for your money to grow.
The first lesson of David's book,
which is to pay yourself first always.
Always pay yourself first and the importance of doing that.
The three things people can do to get started
with being wealthy right now,
the action steps that you can do,
doesn't matter if you feel broke,
if you're making money, if you feel organized,
how you can optimize all of it.
It's in this interview.
I'm super pumped.
And make sure to share this with your friends. lewishouse.com slash 791. Tag me on Instagram at lewishouse. And be a hero to someone
today by helping them find financial peace right now by listening to this episode. All right, my
friends, get ready to pay yourself first, automate your money, and become financially free with
David Bach.
Welcome, everyone, to the School of Greatness podcast.
We've got the inspirational David Bach in the house.
My man.
Buddy, good to be with you.
Good clap, good clap.
I'm excited.
Thank you.
We just met in person, what was it, two weeks ago, three weeks ago?
Three weeks ago in Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico.
That was a very cool place, by the way, to meet. Amazing place to meet. I've heard your name for many years. You've
written how many, nine, 10 New York Times bestselling books back to back to back. You've
been on the New York Times bestseller list for 40, 50, 60 weeks. I don't know, something crazy.
You've been on Oprah six times, Today Show 100 times. You've been on every other media outlet
there is. So I've heard about you. I've seen your work. The Automatic Millionaire is something that a lot of people talk about in
the money finance space. So you're here now. I'm here now in, by the way, because I'm a fan of
yours. So it's a mutual love fest. I've watched all of this, by the way. It's as cool as you
would imagine it is. It's fun. So it's really neat to be here with you live in LA because
West Hollywood, where this all happens, is pretty special. And you live in
Florence now in Italy. Going to. I'm going to leave after July 22nd and go live in Florence
Italy for a year. Which, you got to come over to Italy. I'm going to come and visit. I'm going to
come and visit. And you got this new book out. I mean, you've written a number of books. You've
got a new book out called The Latte Factor and why you don't have to be rich to live rich.
Now, we were just talking before this started, and you were saying that you've got some controversial things that you do with money that other influencers or thought leaders do differently.
Totally.
For example, you said that there's two things that everyone needs to be doing at a young age if you want to generate more wealth.
Two things are investing in stocks and real estate.
Is that right?
Yeah.
It's the two primary escalators to wealth.
Escalators.
Where you can grow your money, your investment, your money can work for you as opposed to just sitting in the bank.
Completely.
It's like the game of Monopoly.
I was just literally explaining this to my kids yesterday.
I said, you know, on the game of Monopoly, you go past go and you get a
paycheck. And if you just go around the properties and you land on them, you pay rent. Right. And
you can't win the game of Monopoly unless you buy one green home, then two green homes, and three
green homes, and four, then a hotel, right? Like you have to be an owner in the game of Monopoly.
The ironic thing is that the game of Monopoly is a great lesson for all of us for life yeah you have to own assets
that make you money while you sleep that grow while you sleep and the challenge for most of
america is that this stuff is not taught in school like this little book the latte factor i wrote it
as a parable to reach the 98 of people who will not normally read a financial book. You've got my other stack over here.
But most people won't ever read a financial book.
So I thought if I write it as a story that you can read in less than 90 minutes and I
can teach you these life lessons, the importance of paying yourself first, why you don't need
a budget.
We'll talk about that a little bit.
But for instance, budgeting, everybody says you need to budget and budgets totally don't
work.
People hate them.
They hate them. They hate them. It's like dieting, right? You try to go on a budget, and you're married. You will fight about those budgets. People go on them.
It's totally frustrating. So do you believe in budgets or no? I don't. No. What I believe is
you need to have a system that doesn't require discipline, does not take time. See, this is the
part that's different. The secret to everything
I've taught, like you've got my other book here, The Automatic Millionaire, is that the real secret
to building wealth, how ordinary people in this country have built real wealth, is automation.
They're saving money automatically. They're not even thinking about it. They're not thinking
about it. They're not stressing about it. They're not stressing about it. They're not writing checks.
They're not putting cash in little buckets and envelopes and carrying these envelopes in their thing and being like, okay, I've only got a little bit left.
Look, my grandmother, when she started at 30, she had nothing.
And she used to literally save 50 cents a week and put it in a coffee can.
And at the end of the year, she took that coffee can down to a brokerage firm and started investing in stocks.
That's what changed the entire destiny of my family.
Wow.
and start investing in stocks.
That's what changed the entire destiny of my family.
Wow.
Was that my grandmother at 30 with no college education,
working at Gimbel's department store in Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
got tired of being poor.
There's some people watching today that are there, right?
They're watching this or they're listening to this,
and they're tired of being poor. My grandmother was frustrated.
And she came home and said to my grandfather on her 30th birthday, Jack, this is not working. And when you're the guy and you hear that,
you're like, what do you mean this isn't working? And my grandfather said, what's not working? And
she said, we're broke. We don't have any money. And to my grandmother's credit, she decided to
do something about it. And so she literally brown bagged her lunch every day she brown bagged her lunch so she could save that money and go invest and the way the
story turns out lewis is my grandma that my first book smart women finish rich was dedicated to her
she didn't become rich overnight she built wealth over her lifetime yeah I always say it's decades, not days. People who try to get rich quick stay broke long.
It's true.
Show me those banner ads on how to get rich quick, and I'll show you a way to stay poor forever.
Right.
So my grandmother realized, like, you invest in great American companies, and you just keep investing, and you leave it, and you leave it, and you leave it.
And she helped me buy my first stock at age seven at McDonald's.
Wow.
And that was seven years old. It was like she taught me. She taught me three
lessons about money at seven that to this day I still teach, which I can share with you. What's
that? So at seven, we're sitting at McDonald's and she says, you know, David, you can get rich
at McDonald's. And I looked around my grandma. I'm eating my cheeseburger and my French fries
and I have my apple pie. I said, what are you talking about? And she's like,
I'm not getting a job here. She's like, see those people over there? They're working for
what's called minimum wage. And I think back then minimum wage was like a dollar.
Nothing.
And she said, it's very hard to make a living on minimum wage. She said, then there's people
like you right now. Like all these people are coming here
and they're eating and they're spending money.
That's called a spender.
And she said, then there's some people who own this place
and owners get rich.
And she said, and I love to play Monopoly at seven.
That was my thing.
I'd go to my grandmother and she'd play Monopoly with me.
And she said, I'm gonna teach you
how to play Monopoly for real.
And she took me home that day.
She opened up the Wall Street Journal.
She circled
MCD. That's the symbol still to this day for McDonald's. And she said, here's how much
McDonald's is. She put me in front of a television screen and said, watch the ticker tape. She taught
me how to read that ticker tape. And she said, just call out the price on MCD. That's the price
of McDonald's. And she said, tomorrow I'll take you down to a broker's firm and we'll open up an
account and you'll buy one share of that stock. And then every, tomorrow I'll take you down to a broker's firm and we'll open up an account. And you'll buy one share of that stock.
And then every time you go there, you'll know you're making money from yourself.
Wow.
That is a wow, right?
And it's funny because I'm here in L.A. with you.
But I just went to Disneyland two days ago with my son.
My son who's nine.
And Disneyland.
Did you buy Disney?
I bought Disney.
That was my second stock.
That's amazing.
So, like, literally at nine, I'm at Disney with grandma and I'm like, hey Mickey, are you guys public?
Like, you know, because she taught me to think as a child like an investor.
Now I'm doing the same thing with my kids.
Now my kids don't want to own McDonald's.
They want to own Shake Shack.
Right.
So my son owns Shake Shack.
Right down the street.
A brand new one, right?
My younger son after Disneyland is like, I want to own Disney.
His older brother owns Disney.
It's doubled.
He's like, well, I want to own Disney.
My kids own Amazon.
So, you know, they're learning like I learned.
Now, this stuff should be taught in school.
Today, this is the school, right?
Like today what we do is another way to teach people.
So, but those are simple lessons I just gave you
that were passed to me.
And we just did that in a matter of minutes.
And like this book, The Latte Factor,
everybody thinks I'm trying to take away their coffee
and I'm not.
But we'll talk about the story inside this book.
It's about a 20-something young woman
who learns that she's richer than she thinks.
And she actually learns it from somebody
who works at a coffee shop.
Wow.
And one of the lessons that the person teaches her
is ironically it happens in Starbucks.
He says to her, you know,
the $5 that you're spending on Starbucks,
you could also be buying Starbucks stock.
And we have the numbers in the book
over how like $1,000 invest in Starbucks
would be worth over a quarter million dollars today
when it went public.
Wow.
So I always say like, look,
if you don't want to give something up
like that $5 at Starbucks for your coffee,
then buy the company stock.
Right.
Invest in where you spend money.
That's interesting.
If you go there every day,
you put $5 a day into buying the coffee, you put $5 a day into buying the coffee.
You put $5 a day into owning the company as well.
And now there's so many companies that make this easy.
Like I'm an investor in a company called Acorns.
Fastest growing financial service company really in America today.
It's got over 5 million accounts for millennials.
You can open up an app on your phone and in less than 10 minutes have an account.
Go click, click, click, and be saving change into a diversified portfolio.
And it costs like a dollar a month.
Wow.
So technology is making it all much easier for everybody.
With a few clicks, you can be investing in stocks.
I just heard, what's the Robinhood is a new one?
It doesn't even cost anything to trade now on Robinhood app.
Again, one of the fastest growing financial service companies.
They now have a market valuation of like $5 billion.
That's the last I read.
And they made everything free.
Again, lots of millennials are using Robinhood.
There's so many great resources.
Like 20 years ago, this was complicated.
You would have come into my office at Morgan Stanley.
It's all paperwork.
You have to, yeah.
11 pages of paperwork to save $50 a month automatically. Today, again, you open up
an app, you go click, click, click, and it's done. And it's all automated. That's going back to this
idea of you don't have to do it manually. You've got your pad of paper. And I always tell people,
in the back of this book, we've got a little sheet and track where your money goes for a day
manually. But there's also a lot of great websites and apps can help you do that too. Yeah. I love these lessons about
your grandmother early on of investing in the places you're spending money at already. And
I think of two influencers. So you say there's two things to really generate wealth and that's
real estate and stocks, the fastest way. And we haven't gone to the real estate part yet. Right.
And it's funny because my friend Ramit Sethi always says like, don't give up your lattes. And I know you're not
saying that. You're not saying that, but he's like, don't give up your lattes, but invest in
things automatically as well. Well, it's funny, Ramit and I are buddies. Yeah, he's great.
So I'm like, buddy, I know you're always making fun of my latte thing, but it's not about the
lattes. It could be bottled water.
It could be cigarettes.
Right.
It could just be eating out lunch every day.
Right.
Right?
Like, we put out a little meme yesterday saying, like, you know, you say you don't have enough money to go on a trip, but if you just made your lunch at home for the next 90 days, you'd have enough money.
Right.
To go on a trip.
Right? Like, the way you get your freedom and your dreams is you buy them.
Right?
Right.
Exactly.
You buy them.
You don't borrow for them.
You buy them.
What too many people do is they actually borrow for them.
They want to go on a trip and then they just put it on their credit card.
Yeah.
And then instead of that trip being a $15 trip, by the time they pay interest, it's a $3,000 trip.
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah.
This is the Dave Ramsey model of of never putting anything on your credit card.
It's like, so we've got the latte, and we've got for stocks, and we've got real estate as well.
And I've heard, I've seen so many studies online of the pros and cons of buying real estate.
For people that own real estate, and they're getting checks every month from renters, great.
But what if those renters leave, and you have to fix it up and all these costs and taxes and fees and these things that you have to pay on real estate that you're not really aware of until after the fact or some type of disaster.
Then you're like, this is stressful.
So you've got the Grant Cardone model, which he says you never live where you own.
What does he say?
He says rent where you live and own what you rent
and rent what you own or something, right?
So it's never live where you actually own something
is his model.
But he's like, you need to be in real estate
and own lots of other things that you're renting out.
But don't own your own home that you live in
because you're not paying yourself.
You're not getting paid from that investment.
So what's your thoughts on this?
So we'll leave Grant out of this for a second
let's just go to the core concept of
I'll go back to the Latte Factor book
what happens is I wrote this book as a parable
again because like my 15 year old
just read this book cover to cover in two hours
and was like wow dad you know what
I actually need to do this
I need to open up an IRA account
we've got this chart that shows a young person
how they save $2,000 a year at the age they save $2,000 a year at the age of
19. $2,000 a year at the age of 19, they only do it until 26. They do it from 19 to 26. By 65,
they have over a million dollars in savings. It's crazy right here. It's crazy. I don't know
if you can even show that later on a camera shop. And if you started at 27, $2,000 a year.
Does it all the way until 65. That person person so they've saved way more money, right?
They've saved their basically their entire lifetime. They end up with eight hundred and five thousand
It's crazy still a lot of money rights, but my 15 year old son looked at this chart and goes dad
I'm 15 if I do this at 15, I'll have more than a million dollars, right by the way pretty smart, right?
Like yeah, actually you'll have more like two million dollars
He's like, well,
and then he takes his calculator on his phone and goes, that's $5.41 a day. I go, exactly.
That's why I didn't want you to buy the bottle of water when we were all to skiing yesterday.
That's why your dad had the free water and you went and bought the stupid water because that's enough money to do every day to have an IRA account. And he's like, well, then we need to do
that. So, you know, these lessons are so critical.
So what I did with this book, and I'll get to the real estate here,
is that I wanted to teach these core lessons.
There's three secrets to financial freedom in this book,
which are pay yourself first.
First person who gets paid is you.
So don't pay the bills first?
Don't pay the bills first.
Don't pay taxes first.
Most people, they pay taxes first.
They go to work at 9.
They work until 12 o'clock to pay taxes.
I mean, here in California, for sure.
Yeah.
Right?
Then from 12.30 to 1, it's lunchtime.
And then from 1 to 3.30, it's housing costs, car costs.
And then from 3.30 to 5, it's everything else.
And what most people hope through budgeting is that somehow they're going to have a little money left over at the end of the day to save.
Completely wrong philosophy.
You carve out the first hour a day for yourself.
You become financially selfish.
So in this book, Zoe Daniels, who's the main character, a 20-something millennial, she's living paycheck to paycheck.
She lives in Brooklyn.
She's traveling to New York City on the subway.
She's working in the Freedom Tower.
She's an editor of a travel magazine,
but she never travels.
She makes no money.
She's working 70 hours a week.
Exactly.
And what happens to her is what happens
to so many young people in big cities.
She's making a little more money each year,
but she's not saving more.
Her expenses just keep going up.
So six years in, she's totally depressed. And she goes through this building called the Oculus,
and she sees this LCD screen. This is all real place. And she sees this LCD screen that's a
football field long. And it says on the LCD screen, if you don't know where you're going,
you might not like where you end up. And this is all underground.
And she takes this escalator up to her office, which is the Freedom Tower, and she's thinking about this.
And as she comes up, she's by the 9-11 memorial because that's what's next to her office.
I know this place very well, yeah.
I live across the street from this. Yeah.
And so I walk through this every day.
And so she comes up, and for the first time in six years,
she actually sits down and looks at the memorial.
Because she's always normally just turned right
and gone into her office.
You know, she's busy.
She's a New Yorker, rushing to work.
Today she stops, sits on a mobile bench,
looks at the 9-11 memorial, sees people crying,
thinks about the people who died here,
and says, says to herself, where am I going with my life?
And goes into the office depressed
and then proceeds to tell her boss that she's, she's like, she can't afford anything. And then
through the book, she gets these mentors and she learns about paying herself first and the magic
and the miracle of compound interest, how five to $10 a day could start to free her.
And then later in the book, she learns about the importance of owning real estate because
she's renting.
And she thinks she could never own.
And one of the mentors, Henry, teaches her, you know, the amount of money that you're
spending on rent, you can make a mortgage payment.
And you could own an asset.
And she has critics in her life who are like, oh, none of this stuff would ever work for
you, right? You can't make 10% rates of return. You don't want to own real estate. But then she's
surrounded by some people who are older and wealthier and wiser, and they show her how to
get there. So when I go to home ownership, which I took away to get your question, the bulk of wealth
is built in America, is built in real estate.
So Grant's not wrong.
You should buy real estate.
But guess what the easiest real estate to buy at first is?
Your own home.
Your own home.
Yeah, or apartment or whatever.
First of all, it's the easiest thing to qualify for a loan for.
Because you're living in it.
Yeah.
Right.
So the bank will loan you money to buy a home.
Second thing is, it's tax deductible, right?
You get tax deductions on your interest.
Third thing is, you have to live somewhere as long as you're alive.
So you can own it eventually free and clear and have very low overhead next to nothing
besides taxes and maintenance fees.
Or you can rent for the rest of your life and never have your expenses go lower.
rent for the rest of your life and never have your expenses go lower. The myth is that you want to rent because you don't want to have to pay maintenance and insurance and taxes. Guess what?
They're all passed on to you. The landlord passes those fees on. The landlord doesn't say,
oh, you're a renter. I don't want you to pay those things. No, the landlord charges you by
escalating the rents. I used to live in L.A. in 1985 to 1990.
Much cheaper then.
I went to USD.
All the real estate here was like probably one-fifth what it is today.
Oh, yeah.
Right?
And so I'm in a friend's house in the Hollywood Hills.
She bought it in 1994.
Right?
Out of college.
She did all the things you have to do to save.
She bought the home.
It was a total fixer-upper.
I'm sitting in this home overlooking all of Hollywood last night
with this beautiful pool that she's put in.
One of those edge pools.
I don't know what her homes were today, but I bet it's worth $5 million.
Wow.
And I bet it's gone up $3 to $4 million since she bought it.
Wow.
And you only have to do that once in a lifetime to build wealth forever right so if you don't own real estate you don't get in the
game building wealth there was somebody who was on cnbc the other day comparing how well they
actually used brooklyn as an example which is ironic because zoe lives in brooklyn they said
you know if you rent in brooklyn it's 25 a month it's not by the way it's more than that but if
you did if you rent for 25 a, he said it would cost you,
it could cost you $4,500 to own.
And he said, you know, so if you didn't do that, you could save the extra $2,000
and you could put it in a diversified portfolio and you could make a better rate of return.
And I'm watching this and I'm thinking, no, that's wrong.
And here's why it's wrong.
I believe in the stock market. I give examples of earning 7'm thinking, no, that's wrong. And here's why it's wrong. I believe in the stock market.
I give examples of earning 7%, 8%, 9%, 10%.
And I know stat-wise, meaning like statistically,
the rates of return in the stock market have been higher than real estate.
But it's misleading.
The reason it's misleading is if you give me $100,000
and you put it in mutual funds and I earn 10%,
my $100,000 grew to $110,000. Follow me so far? Yeah. And the next year?
And the next year, right? But if I put $100,000 into real estate, I didn't put $100,000 in real
estate. I put in probably $20,000. The bank loaned me $80,000. So when that $100,000 grows to 110, I just made $10,000 profit on $20,000 investment.
That's a 50% rate of return.
And if I bought it as a personal residence, which is what most people do first, I can
sell it.
And if I'm single, I can make up to a quarter of a million dollars tax-free. Wow. After two years. It is
wow. It's the only thing I can buy and sell and get tax-free money. If I'm married- You don't have
to pay taxes on the money from selling a home? On the first quarter of a million dollars. If I'm
single- Why the first quarter of a million? That's every home. That's just government law right now.
Wow. The first quarter of a million- The first quarter of a million- In profit. In profit. You
don't have to pay taxes. Wow taxes. Wow, that's interesting.
I didn't know that.
If I'm married,
if I'm married,
then what?
Half a million.
Wow.
Seriously.
Wow.
You don't pay taxes on any of that.
See the hair on my skin?
You don't pay taxes on any of that.
On the first half a million dollars.
This is all across the US.
All across the US.
Wow, I didn't know that.
So like my home in Manhattan
that we just sold
because now we're moving to Florence
and I'm not going back to New York by
New York so the first the first half a million you don't pay any taxes
You can keep a half a million tax free legally and I can do it over and over again
So I've now done this three times. I've watched of attacks on the other
Profit then you pay long-term capital gains. Yeah
So I had a home in San Francisco same moved to New York, sold it, got all that money tax-free,
bought my first home in New York, sold it, bought a bigger home in New York, got that money tax-free.
Third home I've just sold, got that money tax-free. I can never do that in mutual funds,
unless it's in an IRA account. But that's a different game. And again, I want people to use
retirement accounts, and then I want them to own real estate. If you have those two vehicles, you pay yourself first,
you save money automatically, and you own real estate.
And by the way, I'm not against it.
I want people to own rental properties too.
I own rental properties with my wife.
She's got a rental property in our building.
Wow.
But the way you get usually your first rental property,
you buy your first home, then you rent that home out.
Then you buy a second home.
Living that for a while. It's like Monopoly. It's like Monopoly. Then you rent that home out. Then you buy a second home. Living that for a while.
It's like Monopoly.
It's like Monopoly.
Then you rent that home out.
In the automatic millionaire, I say three homes over a lifetime and you're done financially.
You don't need to worry.
Yeah.
Two of them you've rented out.
You've got rental income.
The third one you've paid down.
You have no debt.
And now you're in your 50s or your 60s and you're not dependent on Social Security.
Yeah.
And those two homes should be paid off by then.
And then they're just paying you every month.
And we get people,
you know,
posting on our website
all the time.
We had one the other day
ago, you know,
10 years ago I had nothing
and now I've got
five rental homes
because I did exactly
what you talked about.
Wow.
So it's,
these are not
pie in the sky ideas.
I'm not telling people
to go buy homes
and flip them.
Like I was listening
to some radio out
on the way over here
and I thought,
those are the things
that don't usually work.
You go to one of those seminars and they're free,
and the next thing you know,
they're putting you into a $30,000 coaching program
to flip homes.
I'm just talking about basic, simple stuff.
Pay yourself first, one hour a day of your income,
don't budget, save money automatically,
and get yourself a new piece of property
and then pay the debt down.
So buy a home as early as you can.
As early as you can, and the thing is,
when you're young,
what happens is you think you're,
a lot of times you'll come to a place like L.A.
or San Francisco.
You're like, I can't afford this.
And you go, I can't afford it.
So you know what you do is you buy something
and then you get two or three of your friends
to be the ones that rent from you.
And they help you make mortgage payments.
My first home I bought with my best friend from growing up
was a complete dump.
It needed, we needed sweat equity.
We put every dollar that we had into it.
I had less than six months of expenses set aside.
And I was in real estate.
I was in commercial real estate, commission only.
I remember calling my dad and going, you know what?
I don't have enough money after six months to pay mortgage payments.
What am I going to do if I don't make money in my job?
He's like, well, son, nothing will motivate you like that.
Yeah, it's true.
As I'm cold calling, he was right.
Yeah.
And we rented bedrooms to friends to help us make mortgage payments.
Crazy.
So.
Do what you got to do.
Got to do what you got to do.
That's how you get started.
That's it, man.
So how much should someone put down on a home? Should they put as
much as they can down first or should they put the minimum amount down? The most important thing
when you buy a home is to make sure you can afford to buy the home. And so whatever the bank, I'll
start with whatever the bank will loan you, borrow less. Borrow less. Yeah. So the bank says I'll loan
you $200,000. Borrow less than $200,000 because they don't really care as much as you
need to care. So borrow less than you think you can afford. People always try to get the next
level house. Get the house you can afford or lower. Your first home is rarely your dream home.
My mom actually cried when she came to see my first house because she's like, oh God,
you don't know what you've done. I'm like, we didn't actually know what what we had done there's a lot to be said for being young and stupid right but we
thought it would be fun to fix all this stuff up it was a lot of work um but i think you want to
you want to buy less than the bank will loan you i i kind of ascribed to warren buffett right like
a good old-fashioned down payment 10 to 20 percent more is better because your payments are lower
but one thing is you need to have six
months to a year worth of mortgage payments set aside i would not recommend somebody do what i did
which was only have like a little window of right right right um i think if you can have a year's
worth of expenses set aside you're better off to put here you're more prepared to buy your home
but i will say one thing is that people think buying a home is risky.
So is renting.
If I buy a home, I've got to pay the bank.
If I rent, I've got to pay my lease.
If I don't pay my lease, my landlord can evict me.
If I buy a home and I don't pay my mortgage payment,
it's a lot harder for the bank to get me out of that home.
Really?
Yeah.
So I'm not suggesting people buy homes do not make bank payments. What I'm
suggesting is the same discipline it takes to pay rent is the discipline it takes to make a mortgage
payment. But owning real estate long term frees you, especially if you're lucky enough to be in
markets that are going up. Wow. Now, I feel like I've been doing everything I can. Maybe not yet because I don't own real estate.
But I've invested at a young age in maxing out my whole life insurance policies for the tax deferred and all those things.
I've got 401Ks, Roth IRAs, defined benefit plans all maxed out every year for many years. I invest in my own
business. I invest in my personal brand. I invest in learning new skills. I invest in people, my
team. I invest in new projects that we own, assets within my business. I'm investing in real estate
funds. I'm investing in all these things. And what would you say is missing for me
that I could be doing?
I mean, I put a lot away every month.
Well, I mean, first of all, listening to you,
I'm like, you're doing everything right, right?
And a lot of things you just said so quickly
that people don't know what you're talking about.
But like a defined benefit plan.
It's the single greatest vehicle ever
for a self-employed person
who doesn't have a bunch of employees.
Right.
Because you can put up to over $200,000
tax deductible into that retirement vehicle.
Now, most people don't set those up
until they're in their 50s.
And a lot of people say,
oh, you can't do this.
You really don't want to do it until you're 50s
because of all these different requirements.
Totally wrong.
You can go and max out a defined benefit plan
for two or three or four or five years,
then just shut the plan down. If your income doesn't stay the same,
then roll that into an IRA account and you can get a fortune put away tax deferred. It's all about taxes. I don't want to pay taxes if I don't have to. Right. Legally. That'd be smart. That'd
be smart. But that's what people who become wealthy do. They focus on not paying taxes legally.
So when you put $100,000 or $200,000 into a defined benefit plan.
For the last four years, yeah.
You didn't pay taxes on that money.
Now critics will go, oh yeah, but you also pay taxes later.
Fine.
I'll have my money grow for the next two, three decades and I'll pay taxes later.
I like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because eventually you've got to pay taxes on something.
Whether gross tax deferred or taken out.
Eventually when you go to take the money out of these retirement accounts, you'll pay taxes on it.
So what?
I'd rather pay taxes later than now.
Now, you mentioned Roth IRA.
I love Roth IRAs for people who can fund them because the money, you pay taxes going in, but it grows tax-free forever coming out.
So they're both great vehicles.
I like insurance for the right person.
You don't have any, but you're not married.
You don't have any kids.
So the ironic thing about insurance, usually insurance is designed to be a death benefit.
Absolutely.
It can also be an investment vehicle, which is how you're using it as a sophisticated
investor.
Yes.
So with everything that you just said to me, and you're probably invested in privately
in companies too, right?
Like startup companies.
Of course. Which that doesn't make me companies too, right? Like startup companies. Yeah, of course.
Which that doesn't make me any money, but those are just risky.
We call that the hopeful someday pile.
I've never made any money on the last eight years of all, like, eight startups that I've invested in.
It's a hard way to get wealthy.
Nobody really talks about that.
It looks super sexy, but usually you're putting your money in and you're lucky if you see it back in 10 years.
Yeah.
What I would say, not knowing how you organize everything, because it seems to me like you're doing everything right.
It's all about having this on a dashboard.
Because as you start to have all this stuff, what happens is we're all busy.
And if you're not tracking everything, that's the big thing.
I just started doing that like seven, eight months ago because I was like, I don't even know where all these accounts are.
They're all in different portfolios and plans and companies.
And it's like, where's all my money?
So whether you use, you know, there's all kinds of tools you can use, but even just a simple spreadsheet, which lays it all out.
So also, if God forbid something happened to you, your family would know where everything is.
Because, you know, if you die and your family doesn't know where the stuff is, they may never get it.
Really?
Yeah, because let's use an example of investing in a startup.
Okay, you know, a coffee business happens to you tomorrow.
Your family doesn't know that you have private equity in a startup.
Yeah.
They're not coming looking for you.
You know, if you have money in an old 401k plan,
there are billions of dollars in old 401k plans
that people have died that the family doesn't know it's there
and it's just sitting there in an unclaimed asset.
All the time this happens.
So having it like it's all sitting there, it's all organized,
you know, you have a sister, right?
Yeah, I've got two sisters and a brother.
Two sisters and a brother.
Like somebody in your family that you trust is like,
here's where all this stuff is if something happens to you. Yeah, yeah. Okay two sisters and a brother. Two sisters and a brother. Like somebody in your family that you trust is like, you're like, here's where all this stuff is
if something happens to me.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so how about organized?
And would you recommend me investing in real estate?
See, I invest in real estate funds
because I'm like, I don't want to manage a property.
I don't want to deal with it.
But I know I'm investing in real estate.
Like, first of all, you're renting this apartment?
Yes.
I mean, so you've got to buy a place here in LA.
Are you going to stay in LA? Yeah. So I'd buy a place and then, by of all, you're renting this apartment? Yes. I mean, so you've got to buy a place here in LA. Are you going to stay in LA?
Yeah.
So I'd buy a place.
And then, by the way, I'd rent part of this.
Like, this is an office here.
Yeah, yeah.
I'd have your company, your LLC.
Rent it, yeah.
Or, you know, the other thing I'd do, I'd buy a condo in a separate LLC.
And then I'd have your business rent the condo.
And pay the business.
Yeah.
That's legal.
Totally.
Interesting.
You still have to pay taxes somewhere on it.
But the point is your business is paying the rent to another piece of property that you own.
Ultimately, how business owners get rich who don't do what you're doing.
Because you're doing things that are the exception.
Most business owners don't have defined benefit plans, don't save money automatically, aren't
actually investing like you are.
I give you all the credit in the world.
A lot of influencers are broke.
Yeah, they are.
I mean, you know this, right?
You see all the bling bling.
They make a lot of cash and they spend it all.
They have nothing to show for it.
It's like pro athletes too.
It's really sad.
I spent nine years at Morgan Stanley.
My clients who became wealthiest, I always said they became wealthiestiest by accident they owned a business and they bought real estate that the
business was in and 20 30 years later that building was worth millions sometimes tens of
millions of dollars the business wasn't worth anything the building the asset building was so
so and and then if the business is worth something and you can sell the business you can make the
buyer turn around and have to do a 10-year lease with a building that you own and you can sell the business, you can make the buyer turn around and have to do a 10 year lease with a building that you own and you're collecting rent.
You don't even sell the building,
you just still have the asset.
Right.
So you should totally buy something.
Okay.
And then rent back from it.
It's always been like the peace of mind and the freedom
of like, I don't wanna deal with the logistics.
So I'd rather pay a premium to have freedom.
Yeah. Peace of mind.
And like, someone can fix this and take care of this.
I just want to do what I do best, focus on that.
But I love your portfolio.
I'm buying a condo in this area.
There's no logistics.
I've had a condo for most of my time in New York, right?
Like I don't do anything.
I don't know how to do anything.
My wife says, you know, you're totally useless, right?
Like I'm like, that's why we have the guy downstairs.
You just call him and he does it.
Right, exactly. Okay. So there's Like, that's why we have the guy downstairs. You just call him and he does it. Right, exactly.
Okay.
So there's two things that you need to be doing.
Real estate stocks.
And I have been doing index funds for everything that I've been doing.
Because I tried doing like individual stocks and betting and guessing.
And I'm like clueless of this stuff.
So I'm just like Warren Buffett model.
Just put my money in.
If it grows 7% to 10% a year on average or whatever,
just like it's not sexy.
That's what I've been doing.
Is that what you recommend as well?
It's a great way to go.
By the way, I invest in Warren Buffett too.
Yeah.
You should own Berkshire Hathaway.
Okay.
So I invest in Warren Buffett.
I own Berkshire Hathaway.
I also own index funds.
I run a registered investment advisory firm.
I think I was telling you that earlier.
I'm a co-founder of a firm that literally today,
we just went over $7 billion on the platform.
Amazing.
So I sit on our investment committee.
So I've got a lot of different things, right?
I've got mutual funds and ETFs, index funds, and individual stocks.
But if you're not somebody that's excited by individual stocks,
like you heard me talking about how excited I was when I bought McDonald's or Disney.
If that doesn't excite you, then put in an index fund.
Warren Buffett told his wife, when I die, take the money and put it in this Vanguard
index fund.
That was his advice to her.
I'm like, you know what?
Because you can't really go wrong owning an index fund if you don't want to spend a lot
of time on it.
I think the real key to managing money is diversification.
You shouldn't have all your money in the S&P 500.
It shouldn't be all stocks.
Even though I say you need to own stocks and real estate, I own bonds.
I've got a diversified portfolio.
Our clients have diversified portfolios.
Because I actually am shooting to get the return that you just said earlier.
My goal for my money is somewhere between 7%, 8%, 9% annually.
And the reason that is is that I'm not looking for home runs.
I'm looking to double my money every 10 years.
There's a rule called the Rule 72.
It's a great formula to learn.
The Rule 72, you take the number 72,
you divide it by the rate of return that you're earning,
and it will tell you how long it takes to double your money.
So if you're getting 7% or 10% rate of return,
you divide that by 72 and it'll give you the number.
So 72 divided by seven,
gonna come out right at like 10 years.
72 divided by 10, gonna come out right at seven years.
So that's doubling your money, is that what that is?
Doubling.
If you're in a bank account earning 1%,
you're gonna double your money in 72 years. Oh my gosh. So get your money out of a bank account, savings
account. Only your emergency money should be in a bank account. And even then it needs to be at
least earning today 2%, right? There's all kinds of online savings vehicles today that are earning
2%. And so don't be earning zero at the typical bank account. How much should you have in, what's an emergency fund?
You know, it's like, if you've got a lot of cash,
how much should you have in savings, checking,
and then the rest in stocks or real estate?
Okay, so if you and I were having this conversation
and nobody was watching right now, right?
Like I'd say, well, I would say to you, Lewis,
how much money do you need to have
in terms of expenses set aside to feel safe?
To sleep well.
For how long?
Expenses?
Just in general?
For like six months or something?
So I would ask you personally, what's the amount of money?
Probably like $100,000.
Oh, I wasn't even going to ask the dollar amount.
No.
I was going to just ask you like in terms of how much months?
How many months?
Yeah, six months or something. Yeah, maybe. I don't know okay so so so that's your answer so for you
and then i'd probably go are you sure in six months i would probably go like if i was your
advisor i probably like but your buddy like no i don't maybe have more than that like if i lost
everything and this is all i had left type of thing see everybody's different in terms of how
they sleep at night like for me i want two years of expenses set aside in cash. I sleep better. Peace of mind. Peace of mind. Most Americans don't even have
three months of expenses set aside. In fact, what led me to write The Latte Factor was about three
years ago, the Federal Reserve came out and said that four out of 10 Americans can't get their hands on $400 in case of an emergency.
Six out of 10 Americans can't get their hands on $1,000 in case of emergency.
Seven out of 10 are living paycheck to paycheck.
They're men.
And eight out of 10 women are living paycheck to paycheck.
Wow.
So when I say, oh, I need two years, that's really extreme, right?
I would love to get the average American to get $1,000 in savings set aside. Wow. So when I say, oh, I need two years, that's really extreme, right? Like I would love to get the average American to get $1,000 in savings set aside.
Wow.
Which, by the way, if you just save $10 a day, in 100 days, you've got more than 6 out of 10 Americans.
So when I go back to the latte factor metaphor, I'm like, you know what?
Yes, $5, $10, $15, $20 a day can change your life.
Because in 100 days, you could have more money than the average person walking down the street.
Yeah, in 40 years, you're a million.
You got a million bucks.
And again, people go, oh, in 40 years, a million dollars won't be worth a lot.
Guess what?
It'll be worth a million dollars more than zero.
Exactly.
Which is what the average American is working towards.
And, you know, I was thinking about one other thing on the way over here because things get me fired up.
The dumbest thing Americans
spend money on are new cars.
So when you borrow money, you borrow
money to buy assets that can go up in value
like a home. You don't
borrow money to buy assets that go down in value
like a car.
So the average American buys a new car
constantly.
The car industry is just starting. It was on CNBC right? Like the car industry is just starting.
It was on CNBC yesterday saying that the car industry is getting nervous that people are going to buy less cars.
Good.
People should buy less cars.
Millennials are starting to use Uber everywhere.
My kid doesn't even want a driver's license.
The average American's car payment right now for a new car is $533.
Crazy.
A month.
When you factor in insurance, and God forbid you have to pay for33. Crazy. A month. When you factor in insurance,
and God forbid you have to pay for car kick, gas.
It's a thousand bucks a month almost.
It's almost a thousand bucks a month,
and the average American is spending three months a year
to make their car payments.
Wow.
And when you think about it that way,
and you're buying an asset that goes down in value
the moment you drive it off the lot by 20, 30, 40%, it's just the wrong place to put your money but we're marketed to to get the new lifestyle
lifestyle the new hot car the new special thing and we're basically trapped by marketing we're
trapped by you know when you succeeded you should have this and so what we've done for a lot of
young people is we've gotten them and we haven't talked about student loans yet,
but like, you know,
Zoe Daniels has got
student loans in this book.
100 grand, 300 grand,
whatever it is.
We're trapping
an entire generation,
two generations now,
with student debt
that they'll never be able
to pay off.
And it's sad
because if you go to college
and you're, first of all,
you don't even know better, right,
and you take out $100,000 in student loans,
it could take you 20 years to pay those loans off,
if you're lucky,
and you can't walk away from those student loans.
Literally, the laws are set up
that you can't get away from student loans.
It's the only thing in life that you can't get away from
through a bankruptcy is student loans.
That's because the government got in the student loan business. They should have
never been in the student loan business. I went to school right down the street here in USC.
That was a super expensive school to go to when I was going there back in 1985. Today, it's a
fortune. It's like 50 grand a year, 60 grand a year, right? It's crazy. Yeah. And I just go,
you know. How do you afford to pay that off? It's just so hard. And I think, you know, I would tell anybody who's young today, don't get trapped by these debts. Yeah, and I just go, you know. How do you afford to pay that off? It's just so hard.
And I think, you know, I would tell anybody who's young today,
don't get trapped by these debts.
Like, go to junior college for two years.
Yeah.
Actually, like, find an inexpensive way.
Go to junior college.
Go to state school.
Go to state school.
Transfer into the school you want to ultimately be at when you're a junior or senior.
Take on as little debt as possible.
We're just not preparing people properly to realize how.
We're not explaining
correctly that these are handcuffs. And so people are getting out of school with these handcuffs
that aren't a year too long. That's what it used to be. It's now decades long. And so,
I don't know. I mean, I guess... Unless you can learn how to build wealth fast,
you're not going to pay that off. You're not going to pay it off. I mean,
imagine if you and I had an online course and we said, it's $100,000 to join.
We have absolutely no way to guarantee that you'll ever make money from it. We're not even
sure we'll improve your life. But by the way, we know you don't have 100 grand, so borrow it.
And then pay us massive interest. We would go to jail, right? Like literally,
but that's what the university systems are like so i'm not
against college i want my kids to go to college i just don't want people to get these these debts
it's crazy it's interesting my dad never bought new cars he would have like 10 year old cars we
had a 1989 uh oldsmobile i don't think oldsmobile is out of business now but we would drive he would
drive that thing he would he would run his business and drive that thing, and he would just save his money and invest it.
And the challenging thing is, you know, I look at my mom now.
She's going to be 68 this year.
She went through divorce, I don't know, 20 years ago with my dad,
and she bought some real estate properties and made some money renting them out.
But she had a lot of expenses of her own, and she really didn't have a lot of savings, right?
She had the money to live off of from the divorce.
She was working to pay for stuff.
And I look at it now.
She's going to have her, what is it, Social Security that she can take out now,
or if she waits a couple years, it's a little more money that comes out.
And then she's got a retirement from working at the company
she worked at.
She's got a pension plan.
Yeah, a pension plan.
But they're both like, what?
One's like a thousand bucks a month,
one's maybe 800 or 1200 a month.
It's $2,000 a month and she just moved to LA.
She's got a little apartment down the street.
That doesn't even pay rent for the rest of your life, right?
If you've got 2,000, 3,000 bucks a month,
doesn't even pay that much.
The challenge is, it's like, what do you do then?
You know, it's like, you can't save anything.
You don't want to go keep working.
You know, you're working part-time at that age, maybe.
This is why, like, 80% of the poverty-stricken elderly are women.
Wow.
What you just described is the single biggest financial challenge.
This is what women face.
When I wrote Smart Women Finish Rich,
it was because I saw all these women
being hurt financially.
Yeah.
They had gone through divorce.
They had gone through widowhood.
80% of women die widowed.
80% of men die married.
So what happens in the real world in marriages
is that a lot of times,
the wife has delegated the financial well-being
to the husband.
She's not educated then when he's gone.
She hasn't learned.
I tell in this book, Zoe Daniels is basically the mentor says to her, Prince Charming is not coming.
You need to be your own Prince Charming.
And in this book, the mentor who's also, I don't want to give it all away, but like one of her mentors at work turns out to be extremely wealthy.
And she had no idea.
And she says to Zoe, you need to be in charge of your finances.
I don't care who you marry,
local bank president.
As a woman,
you have to take charge of your financial life.
Because what you don't want to do is turn,
I mean, I hate to say this,
but you don't want to turn around at 68
and figure this out.
Because at 68, like you just said,
she doesn't want to work anymore.
A lot of people are having to work in their 60s
because they don't have enough money. Yeah, and unless they have family that can support them and pay for them, but you
can't rely on that for everyone. You know, she's got me. You need to put your mom in the payroll.
She's got, oh, she is. Oh, she is. Trust me. So she's, I mean, she's fine. Yeah. But it's like,
if she didn't have me or someone in the family that could help out, it's like, then what?
No. And, and, and. I'm No. I'm not blaming her or anything.
She did what she could.
She saved her money in the best way she had retirement.
She's still working, but it's like, it's still not that much money.
It's not that much money.
I would go back to when you know better, you can do better.
Right?
Like this little book, which I hope will go worldwide, I was inspired to write it by Paulo Coelho.
Yeah, he's great.
He's my hero as far as a writer goes.
He's great.
And I went to Geneva to meet him and have dinner with him.
I want to meet him someday.
You know, I've had him.
I want to interview him.
Brennan and I went over to have dinner with him.
And my wife goes, you're going to go to Geneva to have dinner with who?
Paulo Coelho.
Paulo Coelho.
He wrote The Alchemist.
It's the greatest book of all time. it's the greatest book of all time.
It's the greatest book of all time.
She goes, you're going to go to dinner?
I mean, go to Geneva for dinner?
I go, yes, I would.
Yes, I am.
I would.
And this is also the importance of like, you know, when you get a chance to be in front
of somebody that you respect, admire, and want to learn from, yeah, you get on a plane
and you go.
So we go out.
We close this restaurant down.
Paulo Coelho is amazing.
We go to, we have drinks.
And we basically stay out. Paulo likes to stay out. So we're, I'm like, I'm We go to, we have drinks and we basically stay out.
Paula likes to stay out.
So we're, I'm like, I'm staying out with Paula as late as Paula wants to stay out.
And around two or three in the morning, his handler's like, okay, we got to get going.
And he says, let me ask you a question, David, before I leave.
Like, what's the book that you haven't written yet that your soul desires to write?
Right?
All right, Paula, Paula. written yet that your soul desires to write right all right follow paul and i go paul i want to write
this book like you've written like a parable i want to write a little story that will inspire
people to realize that they're richer than they think that they have more strength than they know
and that the dreams can still come true and i want to package up these financial lessons in a little story that anyone can read
that will translate
all the world.
And he goes,
then David,
you must write this book.
And then he walks away
into the mist.
And then he leaves.
And like literally,
Brendan's like,
what did he say?
So like,
we're leaving this restaurant,
you know,
pitch black out.
We're totally buzzed.
And I'm like,
he said I should write the book.
Right?
So I'm like literally on cloud nine and I get home and I go, you know,
I get home, I'm all jet lagged.
And first thing my wife relationship says is, so what did Paulo say?
And I go, he said I should write the book.
And she goes, well, I've been telling you to do this for 10 years.
And I go, I remember this Paulo.
This Paulo.
So, you know, that was the end of 2012.
I've been wanting this book for 14 years,
and finally I partnered with John Mann,
who wrote this great book, The Go-Giver,
and said, let's try to write this parable,
but let's write it until it's perfect,
and then we'll sell it.
It's the first time I ever wrote a book without a deadline.
Wow, that takes, yeah.
And, you know, I just, I spent two years working on it,
and now we spent a year getting ready to market it.
So, look, I thank you for having me out because you have such a big community.
I hope that this will reach some people.
And, you know, I got on a plane to come see you because you've got one of my favorite podcasts in the whole world.
I appreciate it, man.
And it was super cool to be with you.
I appreciate it.
In Puerto Rico, when you turned to me and said, hey, man, let's have you on the podcast, I'm like, okay, I'm going on a plane and come see you.
Yeah, yeah.
I appreciate you coming out.
Make sure you guys get The Latte Factory.
I've got a few questions left for David. Make
sure you get this. It's super short. You can get this and read it in a couple hours. Even I can
read this quickly and it's super inspiring. Plus, it gives you a lot of practical things you can do
at the end to really manage your money. What are three steps people should do right now,
whether they get this book or not, that they can start doing today that it's like, if you did these
three things right now,
it could help you set you up for financial freedom later.
So number one thing,
make a decision today to become financially selfish.
Okay.
And here's what I mean by that.
Make a decision today to become financially selfish.
Decide today to pay yourself first.
So like, if you were gonna have like little chyrons,
it would be like, your first thing is become financially selfish, pay yourself first. So like if you were gonna have like little chyrons, it would be like your first thing is
become financially selfish, pay yourself first.
The formula to paying yourself first
is one hour a day of your income.
If we could get everyone watching to make it a goal
to save one hour a day of their income,
whatever they're earning an hour,
you'd be earning minimum wage.
Literally, like you could have a $15 an hour job.
If you could save $15 a day.
$15 a day, yeah.
$15 a day, your first hour day of your income,
especially in your 20s,
you'd have financial security by the time you reach retirement.
So you save $15 a day for seven years.
Well, seven years, I mean, I'll go back to charts, right? Because it's always the compound interest over decades, right?
So if you look at like, I've got these great charts back here.
Like, let's just use $15 a day.
In 30 years at 10%, happens to be it's $1,017,000.
So $15 for 30 years.
Yeah.
In 40 years, it's, I got without my glasses on, $2.8 million.
Wow.
In 10 years, it's $92,000.
Still a lot, by the way.
It doesn't seem like a lot.
You're like, oh, 10 years of savings.
But here's the thing. These decades go by like this.
And if it's automatic, you don't have to think about it.
You don't have to think about it. So I would say if you've got a 401k plan
just from this podcast, go sign up for it and save one hour a day of your income.
Happens to be the math on that is 12.5% of your gross income. With your company's match, which you probably will have, you'll be saving 16% of your income,
which is like four times what the average American saves.
It's huge.
It's huge.
If you don't have a 401k plan, go open up an IRA account.
Fund that.
Or if you're self-employed, do a SEP IRA.
Second thing I would say is-
Okay, so pay yourself first one hour a day.
Pay yourself first one hour a day of your income.
Yeah.
Second thing I would say is track where your money's going but don't budget so i would download an app and like what
are a couple of you so i would use like an app that i was an investor and we sold the company to
goldman sachs it's called clarity money clarity money is my favorite app you can it's it's like
mint.com on steroids but mint's good too yeah. Is it the same as Better Mint? Similar stuff?
Well, no, because Better Mint's for investing.
Gotcha.
So this is a management dashboard.
You hook up a thing like Clarity Money, and in minutes, you'll see where all your money's being spent.
Interesting.
You can put your credit cards in there, right?
Wow.
So one of the great features of an app like Clarity Money is that it'll show you not just where you're spending money,
but it'll show you where you're spending money automatically monthly.
On all your things?
All your subscription fees.
So you can start canceling a lot of stuff that you don't want.
Yes, and there's a cancellation button in the app.
So what happens is, I call this the piss you off factor.
Oh my God.
You're like, I've been spending this much for years.
You don't realize it, right?
Oh my gosh.
Because we didn't used to have all these subscription services.
And so when they're summarized in your phone.
You got 30 of them.
And you're like, wow, I'm spending $300, $400, $500 in these.
And I'm not using a lot of this stuff.
And then there's a little but.
These companies hate this, right?
Because we were talking about how people sign up for things and then they unsign up.
But you go click and then you unsign up.
Well, you take a typical $50 a month box that's being sent to you right like everybody's trying to send you these boxes
and stuff and you turn that off well that's 600 a year it's not 50 a month it's 600 a year
fastest way to change your life financially is get rid of some of these fixed expenses so the
way to do it use an app like clarity money wow.com. Then I would go back to this idea of saving money automatically, right?
Because besides your 401k plan, there's other ways, other things to save for, like your dreams.
Like I want to go take a trip.
I want to go start my business.
I want, you know, a lot of people.
I want to get married.
I want to do whatever it is.
Whatever it is.
So I would use another app like an Acorns.
Acorn?
Acorns. It's A-C-O use another app like an Acorns. Acorn? Acorns.
It's A-C-O-R-N, acorns.com.
And I'll give you multiple ones because Acorns I'm also an investor.
Okay, yeah.
But I got invested in Acorns three years ago.
Robinhood.
Acorns, Robinhood, Stash.
You talked about Betterment.
These are some of the bigger players in automated investing.
Go sign up for one of them.
Go sign up for one of them.
Companies like Acorns or Robinhood or Stash make it so you can put very small amounts of money away.
Put $15 a day.
Pick a number.
Whoever you want because everybody's different, right?
Yeah.
But come up with something that you're going to save automatically.
$100 a month, $200 a month automatically comes out of your money.
with something that you're going to save automatically.
$200 a month, $200 a month automatically comes out of your money.
In the book, Zoe Daniels, Henry, one of her mentors, says,
Zoe, you know how you get your dreams?
You buy them.
So having a dream without a payment plan is a wish.
Having a dream where you're saving for it automatically,
that's how it becomes real.
In her case, she wants to take a sabbatical and she wants to travel.
She's a travel editor who's never traveled.
And he teaches her how to like save for this break.
And then later in the story, I don't want to give it all away, but she like starts to take these trips.
Well, she got there because she saved for them.
Then it just happened magically.
Then it just happened magically. Yeah, it just like unfold.
The thing is you have such
a great audience and people come here because they want because they're great and they want
to get greater right it's the school of greatness and someone said to me yesterday is there ever a
point at which you feel like you don't need to grow anymore right i'm like no right because
what got us to where we are is we're curious and we're growers like Like, you know, we were this mastermind together in Puerto Rico, right?
And everybody's hugely successful with that mastermind.
And we were all there to grow.
We were all there with our journals taking notes on every single word that everybody was saying because we're still learning.
So there's no finish line in life.
I think that's a big thing that I try to convey in this book is that it's about living rich.
Yeah.
But there's no finish line.
So whatever age you're at right now, your mom is 68. Forget the money for a second. I'd be
talking to your mom about what is she excited about? Because the problem at 68 is that people
get depressed. And like your mom at 68, the next 10 years is the most important of her life.
They're going to be the healthiest of her life between 68 and 78. She's not getting healthier
from 78 to 88.
So I'd be sitting there with your mom and being like,
well, mom, what do you want to do in the next three years
that you haven't done yet?
Let's work on a dream plan for you.
I had this guy, David Bach, on the show,
and I came home and thought,
you know, is there anything that you're not doing
that you want to do?
Like, is there anywhere you want to go
that you haven't gone?
That we can start planning for and saving for?
Go take a trip with your mom.
My mom told me
she wanted to go on a safari.
And my mom's health
is also getting worse
because she's 70.
My dad's 70.
She's 76.
Her dream trip was a safari,
which we went on last summer.
And I'm like,
well, then mom, let's go.
Because if we don't go now,
I don't know when we're going.
So yeah. Yeah. That's good advice. What's missing in your life right now? almost go right because like if we don't go now i don't know when we're going so yeah yeah it's
good advice what's missing in your life right now wow i don't probably at the very moment because
i'm on tour is my is sleep in my routine and exercise but you know i actually have a lot of
routines i'm one of those people gets up very early, meditates, does my positive focus, normally exercises.
But I'm living a pretty unbelievably blessed life right now.
And also, I know, like, when you put out a book, like, I'll do 100 podcasts.
And I'll be on the road for two months almost.
We're doing a nationwide tour with this book.
But then I'll be done.
Right?
I mean, you do all this work.
You want to get the message out.
You've got to go do the work.
There's a finish line. There's a finish line. Then I'm going to go to Florence early and spend a year
and eat pasta and drink wine and hang out with friends
when you come visit me. That would be amazing. You got a
guest room for me? You know what? I will
find a guest room. I'll tell them next to me.
Don't tell me we have a guest room.
Seriously, come out to Florence. I would love to. Yeah, bring your girlfriend
and go to Florence. I would love to.
The reason I'm taking a year to go to Florence right now,
even though I'm co-founder of a big business and got a lot of other businesses, I've got a 15-year-old son who's going to be a sophomore.
And what's about to be missing in my life is this kid's going to go to college in three years.
So because I want to live my own, the principles I teach, I want to live them.
I said to my wife, you know what?
The last year I can take this kid abroad as a family is his sophomore year.
So let's go live abroad for a year.
And let's take the kids to go see the world.
And let's have them learn another language.
A lot of work to go pull this all off.
But we're almost there.
Like we're leaving in 92 days.
Crazy.
It's crazy.
And it's like, you know, it's exciting.
So I feel blessed that we've been able to do it.
But we didn't just snap our fingers and do this.
It was like a two-year plan.
And I just say that to anybody, too.
Like, when you see the greatness, right?
Like, this incredible wall over here with all these people who have done so many amazing things.
They worked on it for years.
Most people, by the time they end up on a school of greatness
podcast they've been doing it for decades or longer right like i used to always joke like
yeah yeah it was easy i was a 15 year overnight success story right like this stuff takes a long
time you were kind of an over but you really weren't right like how many years did you work
before you were like oh my god people now know who i am that's probably about 10 years yeah
by close to 10 years. Yeah.
It's probably close to 10 years of working hard.
I mean, depends on the industry I was in.
I was playing a sport for my whole life, mastering myself in a craft to be great as an athlete.
Then transitioned in 2007, got injured playing professional football.
So now it's 2019.
It's 12 years. 12 years, yeah.
And it wasn't really until a couple years ago,
no, two years ago I got an LN,
and that was like, kind of helped expand it more and more.
Yeah, exactly.
So, you know, I wrote a New York Times bestseller
about 10 years after the fact I started in the business.
It took a long time.
And it was easy, right?
And this is, you know, we're six years now,
but it's like three times a week every week
for six years almost you know almost 800 episodes it's every day showing up and not every day is
fun you know you go through weeks and months and years where like you know it started as one
episode and one listener and you're like oh is anyone gonna listen to this and the one listener
was your mom right exactly and then it's like and then it gets to listen and she tells a friend your sister got on
and listen to it right exactly so and i never i didn't know what i was doing i didn't have any
skills as an interviewer or doing a show or i had no clue i just wanted to have conversations with
smart people and share the the wisdom yeah and so i'm curious for you what's what's the best
money advice you've ever heard?
If you can give one piece of advice you've ever heard.
Because you've heard from all of them.
It's a funny phrase, but it's called benign neglect.
And it was given to me by somebody who used to run,
Dean Witter.
And he said to me,
because I used to ask this question a lot to young to i'm the
young person i would i would be around all these incredibly successful people in their 60s and 70s
and i asked that question and he said benign neglect and i said what do you mean he's like
buy quality investments and leave them alone he's like i can't tell you how many things I've sold over my lifetime that went higher.
If you buy quality investments,
buy quality and leave it alone.
I was like, huh, okay.
That was super powerful.
The second, I'll give you two.
The second thing was,
I came to the financial services industry
and I had all these successful financial advisors
who would, I asked for mentorships you know
tell me what tell me what you learned after being in the business for 30 years and these financial
buyers would say to me if you invest for yourself the way you invest for your clients you'll be
extraordinarily wealthy he said the problem and they were all joking they're like the problem is
when we got we went when you're in the business of managing money, you think you're so smart that you take a risk with your own money that you wouldn't take for a client.
We didn't talk about the issue of being a fiduciary.
But when you're a fiduciary, you have this massive responsibility.
You can't not put the client's interest first.
But a lot of people, when they become wealthier and more sophisticated and the income starts to roll in you start to take these you
take additional risk with your money and so keeping this keeping it simple buying quality
leaving it alone not going off and doing a bunch of crazy things to try to get rich
startups that you're thinking like blow up a thousand times your cryptocurrencies that are
gonna go i've tried all this stuff and I lost all my money.
I'm like, luckily I never spent a lot in this.
I just like play with it with a little bit.
I'm like, okay, I'm willing to lose 50 grand or 20 grand.
But then you're like, what was I thinking?
I could have used that money and put it in here.
So I'll give you one more nugget, which is people call it play money.
Yeah.
I put my play money into Bitcoin, my play money into this cryptocurrency.
And I go, you know, did you play to make that money?
And they go, what do you mean?
Like, did you play?
Like, did you go outside and kick a ball
and somebody gave you money
so that you could then go invest it?
Because if you didn't, then it's called work money.
Never refer to your money as play money.
Oh, interesting.
It's work money.
You just talked about it.
You did three podcasts a week.
You worked for your money.
And then we turn it over to somebody else to go and play with it,
and it goes away.
One of the things you said earlier in the show is that you invested in you,
which is, by the way, why you've been so successful.
You have one of the greatest websites, one of the greatest quality podcasts.
You put money into your brand, your business.
You invested in you.
Smart, right?
Because nobody cares about your brand more than you do.
The next thing you know, you see a great idea
and you're like, oh, here's 50 grand.
Well, it doesn't matter until it doesn't come back.
And then you do 10 of those and you're like,
believe me, we've all been there.
I have so many friends.
We talk about this now because we're like,
we've all put money into 10 or 15 or 20 of these deals.
And then you go, 50 grand a pop, it's a million dollars. And now it just didn't come back.
Right? And then we all hope one of them's going to come back.
Right, right. And make all our money back.
Right, right.
Equal it out.
So meanwhile, I would have just rather have been in an index fund. It's liquid. I could
sell it tomorrow or bought one more condo.
So this is called the three truths. I ask it at the end. Imagine it's your last day
on earth as long as you want to live, but at some point you have to die. It could be 200 years from
now, right? And you've written, you know, multiple more books. You've done everything you want to do.
You've lived your dreams. You've seen your kids do what they want to do. Grandkids, whatever you
want, you've created, But it's time to go.
And everything you've created, you've got to take with you.
So your work, your messages, your videos, audios, virtual reality,
whatever you created by then, it's got to go with you.
Okay.
But you get to leave behind a piece of paper,
and you can write down three things you know to be true about all the lessons you've learned in your life.
Wow.
And this would be kind of your commandments to the world.
And this is all they would have to remember you by.
It could be on anything, but your greatest lessons,
what would be your three truths to the world?
Okay.
Now, that's deep.
You did that, man.
And I'm thinking about my kids, right?
Because ironically, I've been working on a book
of life lessons for them which needs to be just for them um my first truth would be to love fully
don't hold back on the love you know like we've all been there when we're against like you know
you wrote a book about being I'm gonna blank on your masculine masculinity yeah but like you know like we've all been there when we're like you know you wrote a book about being i'm
gonna blank on your masculine masculinity yeah but like you know a lot of times when especially
guys like being vulnerable like we're sometimes like when you're young you're afraid you might
be in love with somebody but you're afraid to tell them right and oh man i want to make don't
be afraid to tell somebody you love yeah love fully love fully in the relationships that you're in. You know, I was unfortunate last week in a hospital with my wife.
Mm.
Thinking that she's having a stroke.
Wow.
And had eight doctors around her in the emergency room.
Wow.
And I'm like, wait a minute, we're going to Italy like in 94 days.
She can't be having a stroke.
Like, this is how life works.
And then she had to go have an MRI. and I'm waiting in the waiting room for hours this is Wednesday and I'm
like oh my god like my whole life has just changed her life has potentially changed my whole life has
changed that's how life is and I started thinking about our last 11 years together and it's amazing
because I told my wife I loved her and wanted to marry her.
I told her I loved her, wanted to marry her, and have children with her before I kissed her.
Wow.
Which is insane, but it was true.
And, you know, we've had an amazing 11 years together.
And I had not fully done that in the past.
And I was like, this is the girl i gotta love fully i like
i gotta not hold back but sitting in the emergency room i was like okay what have we been focused on
that doesn't really matter like i gotta keep going back to like it's the love love fully
um wow so that would be number one and is she doing okay she is doing okay you know what she
came back with a complete clean bill of health and I think it was stress related.
Oh my gosh, yeah.
Probably changing her whole life around.
You know, we had just gotten back from Florence.
We just got our lease signed and this is a lot of stress.
Oh, wow.
Because, by the way, sometimes going through your dreams is stressful.
It can be.
The second thing I would say, it's actually the core of this book, ironically.
The very back of this book is a lesson from my grandmother
that my grandmother shared on her deathbed.
At 86, my grandmother had a stroke,
and I didn't know she was going to die,
and I was finishing Smart Women Finish Rich,
and I asked my grandmother,
because she knew I was dedicating the book to her,
I said, Grandma, do you have any regrets in life?
And she proceeded to go through her regrets going back to being a teenager,
and she went through five of them.
Oh, my gosh.
And in those regrets, she said, it's not about the individual things.
She goes, my regrets were I came to a fork in the road,
and there was one road that had more risk,
which is where all the gold was at the end of the road.
It was what I really wanted to do.
And then there was a safe route.
And she said, to every regret, I took the safe route.
Wow.
And she's like, I know.
And she's like, I'm sitting here now at 86.
And she said to me, I'm going to die, and I'm not going to leave this bed.
And I was like, no, Grandma, I'm getting married in 90 days.
You're totally getting out of here.
You're coming to the wedding.
She's like, no, I'm not.
And she said to me, I'm here to tell you that you're young i was in my 20s she said if i can give you one last lesson and gift and she's like you should share with other people and i do a lot
from stage i said she said tell people when they get to a fork in the road there's going to be
the little boy or little girl inside of them wanting to take the risk like you're going to get to these forks in the road and there's going to be a little boy inside of you that wants to go take this risk.
And then there's going to be a big boy inside of you who doesn't.
And she's like listen to the little boy.
Let him come out and play.
So that you don't turn around in 86 and wonder what you should have done with your life.
So that would be lesson number two, which is like, listen to your little
boy or little girl. And it's hard to take the extra risk in life. But I go back again to my wife.
I'm sitting in the emergency room last Wednesday at Presbyterian Hospital. And I'm thinking to
myself, God willing, she's okay. This is why we're going to Florence. This is why we're taking a year moving abroad
because I'm 52 and maybe I'll live 50 more years, but who knows what can happen.
So we got to take the risk and go live the life now, which is all about living rich.
And yeah. And then the third thing I would say, this is probably the hardest one, which is
forgive the people you're mad at gosh it's so
true and if you need to say you're sorry just say you're sorry and i and i and there's so many
things below that but like right now someone watches this, for the most part,
there's somebody in your life that you're not talking to.
You had a falling out.
And it hurts you.
Still, like, it could have been 10 years ago.
And a lot of times it's family, which is the saddest thing.
And people typically wait until the person's dying,
if there's a deathbed part of it, where they show up at the hospital and try to say, I'm sorry or I love you.
And they've lost out on the 10, 20, 30 years of lifetime together.
I saw this as a financial advisor.
The thing that was insane to me being a financial advisor, because you get to know clients better than a therapist knows them, is how many clients we had that weren't talking to their kids.
They got all this money and they've had falling out with their children
or the children don't speak to each other way more often than not.
And we would try to help these clients make up.
You know, I'd say in meetings,
are you sure you can't have a conversation?
Like, you haven't seen your grandkids in five years.
Are you sure? How about have a conversation with, like you haven't seen your grandkids in five years. Are you sure?
How about you just reach out to them?
Like a lot of times we'd have both generations
of the accounts.
I'm like, I could call them right now.
Like I just saw them last week.
Your grandkids are gorgeous.
And people get stubborn
or they're afraid to say they're sorry
or they're just,
and then what happens is the person gets sick.
Then it's like in the hospital room and dad's dying.
So I would just say, forgive and say you're sorry.
And if you're not going to actually bring this person back into your life,
then figure out a way to forgive them on your own
so that the pain that it's causing you can go away because if we hold on to
that resentment that pain eats at us that's where disease comes from like we could do a whole segment
on health but like that's where the pain of life comes from and that's why a lot of people get sick
and die is because there's this spot that they're holding on to where they're so angry with somebody that did them wrong
and you know we've had Tony you said you had Tony Robbins on the show three times he does an
amazing thing in one of the seminars where he gets you to take that thing that you're so angry about
and turn into like how did that help you yeah Yeah. And it reframes you, right?
I mean, it happened to me.
It varies before, yeah.
Yeah, Dean and I were together.
You had Dean here too.
Yeah, yeah.
Dean and I were together at a Tony Robbins event,
and we both had our journals,
and we were writing out whatever it was.
Because everybody's got this, right?
And then we wrote our whole big thing.
I was like, well, this is what I gained from it.
Like, there's always something positive
that can come from the pain.
But if you keep holding
that person or that business or that thing inside of you and you don't let it go then the person who
said who you you're making yourself continue to suffer you don't have to yeah it's like drinking
poison and trying to it's like trying to poison someone else but you're drinking the poison yeah
you're mad at someone but you're feeling the pain i like these last three questions powerful huh yeah this is gonna be the theme of your next book so i'm
setting you up getting you ready david make sure you guys get this book this is really going to be
powerful get it for your friends get it for your kids get it for your parents super quick read the
latte factor why you don't have to be rich to live rich. We've also got on our website, we've got a website for the book, like, obviously, but
it's called thelattefactor.com.
And we've got, I don't know when you're going to air this, but we have a bunch of bonuses
on there.
So when you buy the book off our website, our class that we did with Create Alive, because
you've done a class with Chase, we've got a 19 video class called Start Late, Finish
Rich.
That's free.
When you buy the book from us and you send us your receipt, you get that course.
So we've got like $200 of bonuses on that website,
alatefactor.com. People are loving the book. And so I just thank you for having me on.
Excited, man. Before I ask the final question, I want to acknowledge you, David, for showing up with a lot of energy in your life at 52. Thank you.
52, right? Yeah.
You've got a lot. You've got a childlike joy inside of you
that radiates. And the fact that you keep showing up and create meaningful, you don't have to be
writing these books. You don't have to keep serving people to help them heal the pain and
the stress and anxiety of finances. But you're doing it in such a powerful way and you're being
innovative to reach different people in different ways that will resonate for them.
Thank you.
So I really acknowledge you for taking the time to go on a two-month book tour, even
when your wife is going through some health challenges and just show up to serve people.
I think that's the greatest thing you can do.
So I appreciate you, man.
Thank you.
Appreciate you, man.
Final question is, what's your definition of greatness?
Ooh, why is your definition of greatness oh why is my definition
so i believe i believe in god i believe in a higher power and i believe that everybody is
given god-given gifts that we're all given whoever your god is right like we're given these gifts
and they're inside of us and the the most important
thing we have to do while we're on this planet is listen to what those gifts are and then go
use them like bring the gift out so i think greatness is listening to your soul well truly
listen your soul not your head and okay, I was given this gift.
I know I want to go do this, but it's so scary. And getting that gift out into the world,
whatever it is, could be the gift of being a mom, could be the gift of being a good dad.
We're all given these gifts. But when I think about why I've done what I've done for 26 years,
I think what my gift was, I was given this talent to try to free people financially to actually use their God-given gifts. It's actually not about the latte. It's not about
the million dollars. It's not about the real estate. It's about the financial freedom to use
your God-given gifts. And I think what happens is we become trapped financially. When I tell you
that six or seven or eight people out of them in America are living paycheck to paycheck out of every 10.
It's very hard to hear your soul and hear a higher power if you're worried about money every day and how you're going to pay the bills.
And so I think the way you get to your greatness is you free yourself, but you've got to listen.
You've got to listen to your soul.
And we do a lot to not listen, right?
Some of us are working, working, working, working to not listen. Some of us are drinking to not listen right some of us are working working working working to not listen some of us are drinking to not listen some of us are taking drugs to not listen
some of us are cheating on our spouses to not listen like you gotta listen to your soul
and if you don't listen to your soul the thing about the soul conversation is that it doesn't
go away it's just like it's this weird thing.
And I go, that's because it's a higher power that said,
I gave you this and you're not listening to it.
And so that's, a lot of times you're like,
finally there was six years,
so I'm like, oh, okay, fine, right?
So I think greatness is listening to your soul consciously
as much as you can throughout your life and making space for that.
That's great.
David Bach, my man.
Thank you.
Appreciate it, man.
Thank you.
Appreciate it, man.
Really appreciate you.
Thank you.
It was awesome.
There you have it, my friends.
I hope you enjoyed this episode.
I'm always looking for the best and brightest in the world to help you unlock
your potential and reach greatness in your life. Financial freedom is one of those things that you
want to master in your life. It's a thing that we all need to handle and deal with living in the
modern world with the economy and expenses. But once you have a handle on this, you can have
peace of mind and peace in your heart and allow yourself to take on life's greatest challenges and optimize every area of your
life.
So I'm super excited about this one.
Be a hero for someone today.
Just take the link for this.
Text it to a friend right now.
Put it on your Instagram story.
Put it on Facebook or Twitter.
You get to be the hero for someone in your life, a friend, a family member.
Text them this link on your podcast app
or lewishouse.com slash 791.
Do it right now, guys,
because I want to see everyone find peace in their heart
around finances.
Again, tag me, at Lewis House.
You can tag David Bach as well.
That's B-A-C-H over on Instagram, Twitter,
and everywhere online.
As Confucius said in the beginning, when it is obvious that the goals cannot be reached,
don't adjust the goals.
Adjust the action steps.
Your goals are not too big.
It's the actions you're taking every single day.
It's the way you think about your actions, the way you think about everything.
And when you can start to automate things with your finances,
you can start really seeing the goals come true.
That's what I love about this episode with David.
He really unlocks a lot of that for you by automating and creating systems.
So make sure to become financially free, automate your money, pay yourself first, always.
I love you guys so very much.
I hope this was a helpful one.
Make sure to share it with your friends.
And you know what time it is.
It's time to go out there and do something great. Outro Music