The School of Greatness - Mastering Money to Thrive in a Recession
Episode Date: September 15, 2023From prudent financial management to strategic investments, this episode covers a wide range of topics aimed at helping individuals and businesses navigate the challenges posed by a recession. Whether... it's building a robust financial cushion, diversifying income streams, or adapting to market shifts, this episode offers a roadmap to not only endure recessionary periods but to seize opportunities for growth and prosperity.In this episode,Jaspreet Singh, also known as ‘The Minority Mindset’, tells us what he wishes we were all taught about money.Billionaire Ray Dalio shares his opinion on the most common investing mistakes people make during times of hardship.Rachel Rodgers, the founder of Hello Seven, explains why we need to be having different conversations around money in order to welcome financial abundance into our lives.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1500For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960Full Episodes:Jaspreet Singh - https://link.chtbl.com/1257-podRay Dalio - https://link.chtbl.com/1266-podRachel Rodgers - https://link.chtbl.com/1183-pod
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The majority of us are taught to work to get a job and climb that corporate ladder,
but wealthy people are doing something completely different. They're working to...
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.
Welcome to this special masterclass.
We've brought some of the top experts in the world
to help you unlock the power of your life
through this specific theme today.
It's gonna be powerful,
so let's go ahead and dive in. What do you wish we taught everyone from the ages of 10 to 20?
Sure. Five different things around money. First thing would be what is money? Because money as we know it is fake. Our dollars are just pieces of paper. I grew up
thinking that our paper dollars are like the holy grail. You want to save this money because it is
the most valuable thing there is. As I became older, I started to realize that that's not the
case. Our paper dollars are just pieces of paper. It's fiat currency, which means it's issued by
the government and the value is backed through
the strength of the government. Now, we're lucky here that the United States is the world's
superpower. We have the world's strongest military. We have the world's strongest economy.
But we can't stay on top forever. And inflation is when the value of a dollar goes down.
So these dollars, which many of us think that if we hoard this, we'll become wealthy,
saving money to wealth
is actually keeping you poor and it's making you poor each and every day. So the first thing you
have to understand is what is money? Secondly, you have to understand is what do wealthy people
work for? And most of us, the majority of us are taught to work to get a job and climb that
corporate ladder. But wealthy people are doing something completely different. They're working to own the corporate ladder. They're
working for something called equity. And this thing really blew my mind because wealthy people
are not working for that paycheck. They're working to own a piece of the company. That way they can
get a piece of the profits. So the best way to understand this is, you know, a lot of the company. That way they can get a piece of the profits. So the best way to understand
this is, you know, a lot of times people complain about how much money I'm making. I wish my boss
paid me more. And this is where if you start to understand the system, you'll start to ask the
right questions. See, a big company, you have to ask the question, who are they working for?
Are they working to take care of their employees? Are they working to take care of their employees? Are
they working to take care of their customers? Neither. They're working to take care of one
person, their shareholders. It's this concept called fiduciary duty. I learned this in law
school. The executives of a company have a fiduciary duty, not towards the employees,
not towards the customers, but towards the shareholders,
the owners of the company. Now, what that means, an easy example of this is you're going out to
dinner with your girlfriend or your wife, and you're on a date, and you get a text from one
of your good friends, say, hey, let's go play Fortnite right now. Your fiduciary duty at the
moment is to be with your girlfriend, to be with your wife, to be with your partner, to spend time
with him or her. If you go out and leave, you're going to get in trouble, right? So it's who is your alliance to?
And the shareholders, the executives, the CEO and the executives company, their fiduciary duty
is to the shareholders, the owners of the company. So what are they trying to do?
They're working to drive up the valuation of the company. So once you start to understand that, you'll realize why there's this big discrepancy between what people are paid and what people want to be paid.
And when you start to understand that, you're going to change what you do with the money.
That's why I said a minute ago or a little bit ago, wealthy people are working to climb, not climb the corporate ladder, but own the corporate ladder.
So how do you get that equity, that ownership?
You have to own a piece of the corporate ladder. So how do you get that equity, that ownership? You have to own a piece of the corporate ladder. Now, if you work for a public company, that means now you can
take some of your income and you can buy stock in the company. Maybe they pay you with equity. Maybe
they give you some sort of revenue share. That's what we do in my companies. Or if your company
doesn't do that, then you have to start taking this money that you're earning and you have to
start investing it into a place where you're getting equity. Maybe that means stocks. Maybe that means real estate. It could be a number
of different investments, but you have to work towards that equity. The third thing is that
you have to think bigger. I know I grew up thinking that somebody who looks like me,
somebody who's brown, somebody who wears a turban, somebody who didn't have entrepreneur investor parents could go out and do this.
Because you think that somebody like me can't do this.
My parents also told me that I couldn't do it.
I didn't know anybody doing it.
I didn't know any investors.
But you have to be the one to take that first step.
And once you start to take that first step, you're going to learn and see the second step.
Then you take the second step and you're like, oh, I can start a $100 investment here.
You don't have to start with hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars.
Start with $100.
Apps on the internet make it so much more accessible.
Anything is possible.
If you live in America, you speak English, you have more opportunities than really
anybody else in the world. People will literally risk their lives, risk their lives to come to this
country because there's opportunity here. And so if you're here, you have the ability to understand
what you and I are saying, and you have that technology to do it, you're blessed. Now, what
do you do with this, right? You have to go out and start learning. you have to go out and start learning you have to go out and
start doing and then the next thing that you have to do number four number four is you have to
understand the concept of debt because we live in this consumer culture and it's interesting where
you know we want to live this flex lifestyle right i want to show off an instagram i want to live this flex lifestyle, right? I want to show off an Instagram.
I want to show off my new car, my new Chanel Gucci purse.
And we kind of get caught up where I need to live a certain lifestyle
that where people can think that I'm rich.
But what you're doing now is you're living broke.
Right.
Making everybody else rich so people think you're rich.
You're product rich.
You have a lot of nice stuff, but you're broke.
And so when you live that type of lifestyle, you are the reason why Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Chanel are making so much money, but it's keeping you broke.
The richest person in the world, sometimes he's the second, sometimes he's the third, is the CEO of Louis Vuitton.
No way, really?
Yeah, Bernard Arnault. And why? How did he get there? Because everybody wants to look rich.
Everybody wants the Louis Vuitton. I saw this in the pandemic especially. We were in a recession
in 2021, but luxury sale products were breaking new records. Come on, really? They're breaking records in 2021. But luxury sale products were breaking new records.
Come on, really?
They're breaking records in 2021.
Why is that?
Stimulus checks went out. People had cash. And some people used that money to save. Some people
used that money to pay down debt. Some people invested that money. But a big chunk of people
took that money to places like Gucci, Louis Vuitton, and now you go and spend it.
You would think when the economy is, well, I guess when people are losing their jobs
and there's financial uncertainty of the future, you'd think people would be saving or investing,
not spending on luxury goods, especially if you can't even go outside to flex it.
You can only do it on social media in the comfort of your home.
You don't need to go outside anymore.
You can just do it on social media.
I know.
And so if you don't have the cash to do it. People are going into debt to buy and it's becoming easier and easier because of now things
like buy now, pay later. It is one of the fastest growing industries in FinTech. I love financial
technology, but it breaks my heart. I mean, it just, it rips my heartstrings when I see
the growth of this buy now, pay later, because what does that mean?
I can go out and buy anything I want, not pay for it today, pay it off over three months, and then if I don't, I get slapped with 25% interest.
And if you are 18, or let's just say 21, I give you $6,500.
You never invested another penny, but you invested those $6,500 and you could get an
18% return on that money. And you retire at 65 and you look at this investment portfolio,
you would have over $11 million. Now, everyone watching this thing, where the heck am I going
to get 18% on my money? But your credit card company is doing it every single day. $6,500
is what the average American household has in
credit card debt right now. And you're turning around paying these companies 18, 20, 25% a year,
and they're the ones that are getting rich, not you. So what's happening? You're going into debt
to buy liabilities, which are things that lose you money, and then you're paying interest on
top of that, which is making everybody else rich, which leaves no money in your pocket to make yourself rich. And you have to break out
of that mindset. So what do we need to know about debt then? How do people get comfortable
understanding about debt, either using it in the right ways and eliminating the debts that don't
support our financial growth? Yeah. So the first thing is never finance anything that isn't
going to pay you. Okay. So give me an example. Gucci, your vacations, your car, stop financing
these things that aren't paying you. And people are going to get upset when I say your car,
because they're going to say, wait, how am I supposed to buy a car without a car payment?
Don't buy a hundred thousand dollar car unless you you got the money in the bank to buy it, and plus more.
Buy a used car for six grand.
Exactly, go buy a used car, good working condition car
with cash.
Ride it for 10 years.
Exactly, the first time I made a million dollars in a year,
my car was 500 bucks.
My employees had better cars than I did.
I had a $4,000 car for the first five years living in Los Angeles.
$4,000 car.
Used car, 1997.
I love it.
Was the car when it was made.
And that thing was great.
It was comfortable.
Got me from A to B.
It didn't break down.
Exactly.
I didn't need to be flashy.
Exactly.
I still have my $500 car.
That's great.
I still drive.
And it's one of those things where, you know, because I fell into this trap where the first time I started making money, you know, in my culture, cars are a big thing.
The Punjabi culture, people really want to put money in their cars.
They want to look cool, right?
So when I was 17, 16, 17, I started making a little bit of money because I was doing my side hustles.
The first thing I did was I put new rims on my car.
Then I put tints on my car.
Then I put HIDs on.
Oh, I had two 12-inch subwoofers in my trunk, right?
I put the tints on.
I put a new sound system in there.
Lights around, glow in the dark.
Yeah.
I had a Toyota, right?
And then the next thing I was going to do is I called up my cousin.
I said, guess what?
I got three grand in the bank.
I'm about to put Lamborghini doors on my Toyota.
You're crazy, man.
And he's like, just wait.
You're stupid.
Don't do that.
And so he sat on the phone with me for like 20 minutes convincing me not to do it.
Luckily, I didn't.
I'm really glad I didn't.
But that's where all my money was going.
I looked cool.
My car was cool.
And that's where all my money was going.
I had $1,000 in my bank.
And I went out and I bought a $1, thousand dollar watch i was like 18 years old right because it was like
i was in that industry the entertainment industry i wanted to look cool and then you know i start
to read these money books and my mindset starts to shift and now all of a sudden it's the complete
like i went from one polar extreme to the other polar extreme i don't want to spend a penny on
anything on anything unless it's making me money exactly i don't want to spend a penny. On anything. On anything. Unless it's making me money. Exactly. I don't want to spend anything unless it's making me money. So
now I'm saving as much money as I can. I'm investing my money as much as I can. I'm trying
to build my business. And I mean, I'm talking like I'm running my shoes into the ground. They
have holes in them. I put a piece of tape, wrap it up. I'm going to school. I got rental properties,
but I got my shoes that are taped up. Right. And it's like, I realized. I'm going to school. I got rental properties, but I got my shoes that are taped up. And it's like, I realized that I'm not going to make the same mistakes again.
And you have to break out of that mindset. The first time I made a hundred grand a year,
I was in school and I was living in an apartment paying $400 a month, including my water,
my electricity, my cable, my gas, my internet, everything.
And the reason was because I didn't have a room.
I slept on the living room floor.
I had a little mattress.
I used to pull that into the living room, put that down, go to sleep at night, wake up, fold up the sheets, put them away, drag the mattress back into the hallway.
I realized the power of compounding your money.
I realized the power of putting your money into the right assets.
And I'm like, this is my time to build.
I've been blowing this money that I'm earning on things
that are making everybody else rich.
I'll spend money on that stuff a little bit later.
Right now, I want to make myself rich.
And so you have to just first understand
what it is that's worth spending money on and what's not.
And then if you do have that debt,
you've got to come up with a strategy to pay it down as fast as possible.
First thing you can do, if you have a lot of credit card debt,
call up the companies.
See if they're going to be willing to just give you a lower amount.
See if they're willing to work with you.
Say, look, I got $10,000 worth of debt.
I'm never going to pay this off.
It's not going to happen.
How about you work with me and give me $5,000 and I will work to pay that off. You start to work with them,
see if you can do something. Then you can consider moving some of that money to a 0% APR card if you
have 12 to 18 months to do that. That way now you can aggressively, you got to do the smart because
if you're just going to keep doing the same things you were before, don't do it. But you have to start
aggressively paying it down. You stop spending money. That way now you can pay down this debt as fast as possible. And then you work to earn
more money. And the money has to go somewhere as you're earning more money. You live the same
lifestyle, if not smaller, and you take all this extra money and you use it to pay down your debt.
That way now you can start building, right? You got to lay that foundation. You got to start
working to grow upwards, but you have to get aggressive. Is there a number of time where people should go into debt, the right type of debt?
The credit card debt, student loan debt, buying a car and going in debt on that, those things
I'm understanding is not helping your financial future.
When is the right time or is there a right time in your mind to take money out and spend interest on that money?
Depends, right?
If it's something that's going to make you income and you can manage the debt, then yes.
But it's not for everybody.
Some people don't have it in them to manage the debt.
Some people don't have it in them to manage investments.
Some people don't have it in them to run a business.
If you're not the entrepreneurial investor type and you don't like looking at numbers, you don't like managing money, you don't like trying to grow this,
stay away from it. Now you go up, maybe you can get debt to buy a home, but that's it.
But if you are more the entrepreneurial type, you have it in you that you want to grow.
Now, if you're using debt, you should only be using debt to buy something that's paying you
with income, something that's going to make you more money. Do you have any debt out right now?
Right now, I do not. I have people paying me loans, but I personally don't have any debt right
now. And I kind of went through this phase where I have all this real estate, but I have no debt
on it. And the reason is, is because I'm waiting for the right opportunity. I will, I will have
more debt. Really?
Yeah. I'm just waiting for the right opportunity
because right now all my real estate is paid off.
You've paid off all the real estate.
How many properties do you have?
Units in the dozens, a number of units.
But now I'm just waiting for the right opportunity.
And it's all paid off.
All paid off.
So now there's just cash coming in.
There's cash coming in.
And you know-
Do you still have that $6,000?
That's rented for $850 a month.
That $8,000 place?
$8,000 place.
That's just bringing in 800 bucks a month now. $850 a month. That $8,000 place? $8,000 place. That's just bringing in $800 a month now.
$850 a month.
Clear and free.
Yeah, you got to pay your expenses, your property taxes, insurance, your maintenance, your management fees.
But right now, I have no debt on it.
And so now what I'm waiting for is-
And how much could you sell that for now?
Probably $100,000, $120,000.
I mean, I don't know the exact-
Yeah, yeah.
Somewhere around that.
It's not bad.
Yeah.
thousand, 120. I mean, I don't know the exact, but something in that range.
It's not bad.
Yeah. I mean, it's crazy because when I buy real estate, I never look at what can I sell this property for? I'm looking for one thing, cashflow.
Cashflow, yeah.
And so this is a big mistake that leads people into a lot of problems in real estate
because when you start buying real estate, hoping that you'll be able to sell it for a
higher price in the future and things don't go as planned, then what?
Yeah, you're screwed.
Now you're screwed.
So, you know, for me, I look at one thing, cash flow,
and will I be able to see more growth in this area?
So I look where businesses are moving.
Where is money moving to?
And then that's where I want to invest because I know if property prices go up,
hey, it's icing.
Property prices go down, it's okay.
I still got my rent, which is covering my
costs. So what's your goal, right? With the dozens of units for the opportunity for something bigger
or what's the plan? Yeah, it can be anything. Something bigger in real estate and I'm looking
for the right opportunity. But again, my focus now isn't in real estate like it was before.
A few years ago, I was heavy in real estate and I was doing everything that I can there
and a lot more opportunities were there. I bought a property in 2021. I haven't bought anything in 2022 yet. But my focus now is
building my business because I see a bigger opportunity there for me than real estate.
That's why I've been kind of, I'm still involved in real estate, but not the way that I was a few
years ago. Because you can earn more with your business if you put the attention and the energy
and the money into building the team and the resources and the technology and those things.
And it's more fun because it's a lot more active for me.
Yeah.
And then, you know, once this gets bigger, then I'll go back to real estate.
But right now, like for the last few years, I've been kind of phasing slowly away from real estate as I can transition more into the business because, you know, it's just more fun for me.
Yeah.
Okay.
So understanding debt was the fourth thing.
It's just more fun for me.
Yeah.
Okay.
So understanding debt was the fourth thing.
What was the fifth thing you wish people learned from 10 to 20 years old about money?
You have to be willing to make mistakes, take risks, and start.
And this one is hard.
And it sounds simple.
But a lot of people that I know, a lot of people, they are so hesitant to making their first investment because what if I do something wrong?
What if I make a mistake? What if I make a mistake?
What if my investment goes down?
And so the simple thing-
That's happened to me multiple times.
Yeah, but you learn every time, right?
It's your tuition.
It's your real tuition.
And you have to be willing to try things because if you don't, you're going to get stuck in the game of what if.
What if I lose money?
What if it doesn't work out?
Well, what if it goes up?
What if you learn?
I have made a lot of mistakes.
I made a video on my YouTube channel
where I went through my worst real estate deal ever.
It was my third property that I ever bought.
It was a home in the city of Detroit.
And I made every mistake possible.
Now, I'm still in college, right?
I don't know what's going on exactly
with real estate investing.
And I mean, I bought the property
and I bought it because my contractor
at the time told me that we can make a lot of money on this deal. We'll be able to rent it out.
We could flip it if I wanted to. And he was like, don't even worry about getting a home inspection.
Now, when I buy a property now, the first thing I do is I get a property inspection where somebody
walks through the deal, make sure a third party, an independent person, and they tell me anything wrong with the property in the foundation, in the plumbing, in really
anything with the property so I know what I'm getting myself into. And so he told me don't do
that. He said, don't worry. I already walked through. He's a contractor. So I figured he knows
what he's talking about. All you have to do is spend $5,500 and I will make sure this property
is ready to go. So I said, okay, let's do it.
So I bought the home. I gave him a check for half, maybe $2,500 or something around there,
$3,000. And a week goes by, nothing starts. Two weeks go by, nothing starts. And I call him. I
said, hey man, what's going on? I thought we were going to have this done in two weeks. Here we are
two weeks later and you haven't even brought your materials here.
So I got caught up with something.
Something's going wrong.
And so now two more weeks go by.
He brought some materials there.
He started painting one wall and that was it.
And so I'm getting upset because now it's like every day that this property is now leased out, it's costing money.
And still nothing's getting done.
Another two weeks go by.
And now I'm like, okay, look,
what's going on? We got to get this taken care of because now we're six weeks into this deal.
You haven't done a single thing. You keep putting me off. You took my money, and nothing's happened.
And so long story short on that, he ran away. He was having financial difficulties. That's why he wanted me to close on this deal because he needed some cash. And now he's gone. So now I have another property that somebody was working on, a manager,
and he was having some issues at my property. He was causing some problems. So I figured,
he's causing problems there. How about you come work at this property and you need a home,
you can live in this home for free. Fix it up. Just up yeah and so he he said okay so now i thought all right you know i i found a good deal here i've got somebody who'll fix it
up he'll live there take care of it and it's going to cost me less money and so now he's living in
this property and he's like how about this how about you just open up a charge account at home
depot and i'll just go buy stuff and take care of it at the home. I said, okay. So I go open up the charge account.
He starts buying materials, not to work on my home, but to work on other people's properties.
Oh my gosh.
So now I'm like, dude, like you're spending my money to go work on other people's properties.
So you can make double profits over there.
You haven't started any work on my home.
You're not paying me rent.
You have a dog that you're not taking care of who's hoing everywhere in the property and it's not being taken care of. And so now how do I get somebody out of this home?
I got to evict him out of my own property. There's no lease in place. So now as we go into all these
legal issues of how do we get this person out of the home? We get him out of the home. It took me
months to get him out. The property now is destroyed. Trash. Oh, man.
There's crap, little crap all over the home.
He damaged the place, did not take care of it.
And now it's like, we have to start all over from negative to start fixing this property up.
So now we start fixing it.
I get a licensed and insured contract.
We're months into the deal.
And he wants, I don't know, like a lot more money, at least 10 grand, if not more, to start doing the renovations. And we started digging deep and we start to see problem after
problem after problem. So now, you know, every cost keeps adding up. Now the home is ready to go.
And I'm like, all right, fine. And everybody told me, just please don't license this home
with the city of Detroit as a rental because nobody does it.
And this is, again, after the 2008 crash, Detroit went through its bankruptcy. They were having
their own issues, but I don't like to play games. I want to play by the rules. So I said, I'm going
to get a license for rental. When you get a license for rental, they're going to send their
own property inspectors out to the property and they're going to inspect it and make sure that
it's okay. So now the property inspectors come out and they say, I need to lift up the home.
So what do you mean lift up the home? They're like, oh yeah, we need to raise the home.
I don't even know that you could do that. Apparently you can, and it's very expensive.
So I lift up the home and then we start running the water in the property and it turns out that
the water is not draining to the main city line.
Apparently, somebody previously living in this property had poured cement down the main drain.
Now, in order to get this property working, we have to bust out the cement in the basement,
take out this pipe, put in a new pipe, repour the cement.
And then these property inspectors start disagreeing with one another.
One person says that you need a 10-foot electrical riser.
So we make it 10 feet.
The next one comes, says, why is it 10 feet?
It needs to be 13 feet.
I'm like, your first person said 10.
And now they start fighting with each other.
And we have to keep paying for these inspectors to come back.
They keep charging me permit fees for everything.
If I want to paint the windowsills, it's $100 permit fee.
Change the smoke detectors, $75 permit fee.
So this goes on and on and on and on for months. Finally now, we're approved for rental. I was
like, oh my God, this is the biggest headache of my life. We get a tenant in the property,
we get licensed, a tenant's in the property, and now we have the license and the property
inspector just decides to go back to the property. They don't tell us. They just go back there. Even though we're fully licensed,
they had no reason to go there. They knock on the door and apparently, we didn't know this,
the tenant was having a babysitting operation in a property. So now the inspector sees this,
that this tenant is running an illegal babysitting operation. He tells us, he finds us,
tells us we need to evict the tenant. And now we have to start
this process all over again. So after that point, I was like, you know what? Just sell this property.
Wow. Because this is the biggest headache. And that was the only deal I ever lost money on. But
I learned a lot. It was my tuition. So you have to be willing to learn, be willing to make mistakes,
and then be willing to grow from those mistakes. Go on and keep willing to go.
What have you found are the top places that people should be investing?
First, calculate how many days, weeks, months, or years you can live on your saving.
Because when you do that, you'll start to, you'll gain security.
You'll gain that. Okay. So look at how
much you're spending. Okay. And then say, how much do I need? And whatever that number is,
you're going to need more than that because it may go down rather than go up. So, okay, now do I have a year spending? Okay, so I think you start there.
Then you start to think,
what are the things that are most important for me?
Like, and then you start with your business
or your residents that have a symbiotic relationship
and that you know well.
Let's say if you'd start with your business, okay, you're closer to that investing in yourself
with whatever that may end up being, that may be your best investment.
Not real estate, not stocks, not the market.
Well, it depends if you're doing something where're not, you know, if you're doing
something where you can do it yourself and that's the thing, but if you're in a job and that that's
not the thing, right. Cause you, cause you're in a different position. Okay. But anyway, if you,
and then I really think there's something good about your home, a basic thing about your home, because it's nice forced savings.
And it also means that you fix it up.
You know, you're saving.
You find out there's, oh, well, if I add this thing or that thing, and you're enjoying it.
So when you're enjoying it and you're controlling it and it's
yours and so on, that's pretty good. And if they keep mortgage tax deductions and so on,
there might be some benefits to it also. But that's not a black and white answer.
So you could take a short pencil and say, is it better to rent or buy?
Okay. That's a different question. Maybe yes. But by and large, am I going to move,
you know, all of those other questions. But so when you start with, okay, what is it that's
close to home and how much you need a certain amount that's liquid. In other words, you got
it in your house, you got to make a mortgage payment or
something. And all of a sudden you're, you know, it's not liquid and you lose your job. Well,
that can cause you trouble. So how much do I have that's liquid? How much do I have that's not
liquid? Okay. And you start to get those things right. Okay. Ah, I've got enough liquid.
I got enough.
Okay.
Not liquid in those other things.
Okay.
Pretty soon you're getting yourself in good shape.
Yeah.
You do those things.
You know, you're pretty much in good shape.
And then you're also having some experiences.
And then you go beyond that, you know?
And then so you start to, okay, what, you know, OK, what's a stock?
What's a bond? And then, you know, you learn through experiences.
I learned through my my experiences. I started when I was a kid, 12.
I used to caddy and I took my caddying money and I put it in the stock market. And I was lucky. What
happened to me, by the way, is I took my caddying money and I bought the only company that I ever
heard of that was selling for less than $5 a share. And I thought that that, you know, well,
I was really dumb. I thought I'll buy more shares. So if it goes up, I'll make more money. And it was the only company. It was a company that was about to go broke, but somebody, some other company acquired it and it tripled. And I thought, ah, this is an easy game. And I like it. Easy money. So, but, you know, you experiment and you learn.
So, but you know, you experiment and you learn.
You're a very philanthropic individual.
You and your wife, your foundation, your company, you give back in a lot of ways.
Some might be through donations like computers.
Some might be through financial.
Some might be through just your work and your content on LinkedIn, which is amazing.
I recommend everyone subscribe to on LinkedIn.
The content there is amazing.
You're giving back in lots of ways.
I'm curious, what's the greatest gift a rich person or someone with money can give someone who doesn't have money?
To give the knowledge, teach a man how to fish is better than to give him a fish. I mean, I think you can give them both. You can give education and you can, but ability, the capacity to be productive, because, you know, if I can give you the capacity to go
out in the world, it's like go into a jungle, I give you a knife, and can you live in the jungle?
Okay, if I give you that capacity, that's the best thing I can give you. That's why I wrote the book,
and, you know, pass it on. I wrote those principles over years and I wrote them down
and that's what I want to pass along that's the most important thing yeah but but if you but if
you've got money you can help people a lot in a lot of different ways which is thrilling what
would you say then are the three greatest skills that people that aren't financially abundant or that are struggling financially should learn to master in order to be in a better position financially? Three skills,
what would you say they should learn? Well, as I said before, I remember watching the movie,
I was young, David Copperfield with W.C. Fields, and he speaks to David Copperfield.
with W.C. Fields, and he speaks to David Copperfield. And he says, he said something like, and I'll put it in dollar terms, you're at $100 and you spend $105. That's misery.
Mm hmm. If you earn $100 and you spend $95, you'll have a good life.
I mean, it wasn't exactly like that, but it was.
But basically, I know so many people who don't earn much, but are there.
Because if you start to think about what it is that it costs you to live in terms of,
let's say, the basics, you know. Give me a bed to sleep in,
give me the food, let me be educated, and so on and so forth. I think most people can get
themselves in a position where they're net positive. So if you can be net positive,
net positive. So if you can be net positive and you could do that, that's number one,
as I carry that. So that's number one. Then I guess it was the list that we went to.
The second is, what do you do next in terms of what do you need? What do you invest in, and then going beyond it.
And then avoid the following mistake, the most common mistake of investing, thinking
that the investment that did good is a good investment.
People rather more expensive.
rather more expensive. The things that quite often, those markets that did really, really well became more expensive. And everybody, smart money is all the time comparing them and competing.
So what happens is the naive money buys the thing that was hot or is hot.
The thing that has been terrible,
which might be the thing that's beaten down.
So I would say also an important element.
Okay, so here's another one that's really important.
Diversify.
So don't put all your eggs in one basket.
Right, because what I learned about this
is that, first of all, all investments compete. And it's not easy to tell whether one investment
is better than the other, because if people could do that, life would be easy and everybody
would make a ton of money. And this is a competitive game that's very difficult to compete in. So it's very
difficult to say which one's better or worse. You can take experts and you can do all sorts of tests
and you'll find out that they can pick that and you can't tell whether the worst ones are going
to be better. So because of that, you understand that even picking the best ones is difficult. And particularly if you're naive,
like we spend hundreds of millions of dollars each year on research to try to give us an edge.
OK, now you've got to compete with us. So competing in the markets is more difficult
than competing in the Olympics. You wouldn't think I'm going to compete in the Olympics,
but there are more people who try harder in order to do that.
So it's a zero sum game. So,
but diversification that they're different will reduce your risk without
reducing your return. Yeah.
So if you know how to diversify well, so that's critical.
So I would say, again, get your savings right.
And the reasons I say, I would say,
have great humility about what you don't know.
Don't buy the thing that was hot. was hot just because you think it's hot.
Why is it such a taboo topic in general?
Yes.
I think for all classes, all individuals.
I totally agree.
It's like you have, it's so funny because,
and I wrote about this in my book,
like for women, we have shame
if we don't have enough money,
but we also have shame
if we have quote unquote too much. Really? Yes. Why? Because it's like, you know, oh, I have more
than them and let me hide it because people are going to think I'm showing off or they, they have
imposter syndrome, right? Am I worthy of having this much money? I've, I've experienced that
myself at different times, right? Like you've worked hard for it, but you think that you don't deserve it for some reason.
And I think that we just have, I think society was sort of designed so that we wouldn't talk about money.
Why?
Because I think it's designed so that we have a few people at the top and a lot of people at the bottom.
And so now, you know, then of course the middle class emerged and we've gone through different things as a middle class, as a collective.
Right.
But I think it's, I think that's part of the reason why it's like, don't tell, you know,
employers saying, don't tell your coworkers how much you're making because I'm paying
you more than I'm paying this one.
And I don't want y'all to know.
Right.
So it's like, it comes from those those places but it's reinforced everywhere you know
right um everyone's reinforcing it exactly and i think not just corporations or yes and because
there's so much mystery it's like i don't i don't know how much you make right you you don't know
maybe you know how much i make because i talk about all the time but but i don't you know what
i mean so like we we don't know and we're scared to make assumptions and we're sort of guessing and
we're like well if i put mine out there i might be embarrassed because i discovered that like i'm actually either
making too much related to my peers or too little and i think it goes back to belonging we just want
to belong to a community to a group you know what i mean and so because of that it's like we don't
want to do anything that's going to make us not belong. It's such an inherent human need to belong.
And so I think that we don't talk about money because we think it's going to affect our ability to belong,
whether it means we're too broke or we have too much, you know, or somewhere in the middle.
So what conversations should we be having around money?
How consistently should we be having them and with who?
Yes.
Okay.
So in terms of the conversations I'm having,
I'm telling people, like, if I get a speaking gig,
here's how much they paid me.
And I asked them more and they gave it to me.
So make sure you do that too.
Or I negotiated for higher pay.
Or I negotiated for profit sharing.
Or I asked for more vacation days.
We need to share our money earning strategies
with each other, especially with, you know, women and people of color.
Right. Like putting more money like that's what allyship is, in my opinion, is putting money in the in the pockets of the groups who need them.
Right. And who, you know, we have this huge wealth chasm in this country.
So, like, how can we start to change that? And so that's why I share how much I got paid for a book deal.
Like all these things you're not supposed to share. I'm like, I'm gonna's why I share how much I got paid for a book deal. Like all
these things you're not supposed to share. I'm like, I'm gonna tell y'all this, how much I got,
this, how I got it, you know? Um, and I think it's important. So I think sharing money-making
strategies is very important. I also think one of the things that has been so valuable to me
with some of my, my peers, especially, I will say my white guy peers in particular have showed me like they
have taught me things about like, you know, investing strategies or, you know, like, oh,
here's a strategy that I'm doing with my money or I'm investing in real estate or I'm doing these
different things. Like what are people doing with money once you have some, right? Like once you
have a little bit more than you need to live off of, what do you do with the excess and sharing those things, right? Sharing that information,
because it's usually hidden. And it's like, there's a small group of people that know,
and you don't know until you have peers who have done it. And then you find out, right?
In those quiet conversations that aren't on, you know, on Facebook, right?
Sure, sure, sure. Should people be talking with their friends, their
family members, their spouses about money? Yes. Or what if someone's really uncomfortable and says,
you know what? I don't want to talk about the money I make and what we should be doing.
What conversation can you have to try to break the wall down? Well, I think you could say,
here's why I want to talk about money. And here's why, like we have to be, I think if we're willing
to be transparent, people will be transparent with us. That's what I found in the conversations
that I've had. And that's how I've learned a lot about money is by having conversations,
you know, like, um, the friend that I was spending time with last night,
she's an investor and a financial advisor. And so I was asking her like, okay, well,
what are you investing in? And how are you thinking about it? And what is an
investment thesis? Like, I don't even know what that means, right? Like, you know, we were having
conversations and she was teaching me all of this stuff because I was willing to tell her like,
okay, here's how much money I want to invest, but I don't know where to, where best to put it,
you know, that kind of thing. So I think you just got to be willing to put yourself out there
first. And I find that people want to talk about it. So when I bring it up and I start sharing, they immediately start sharing because it's like they
were like waiting for an opportunity to talk about this is what I find. So I think we just
got to start doing it and create more transparency around it. And then, yeah, it creates it creates
opportunity for all. And that's the other piece of it is like I recognize that, you know, even someone who would be considered a direct competitor, maybe they sell the same thing I sell.
I don't believe in competition in that way.
I think there's more than enough money to go around.
I think there's more than enough opportunity to go around.
And I choose to like be friendly with and support support my my competitors quote unquote and vice versa
and that just means that we all get better at what we're doing we all can serve our clients
better right we all can make more money there are times where i'm too trusting and someone
you know i don't know i guess you could for lack of a better phrase steals from me right or
takes an opportunity or says one thing but does another behind my back, whatever.
And that's going to happen too.
But I'm like, but I don't want to be a person who's closed.
So I just got to be me and it is what it is, right?
Like there's going to be some occupational hazards when you're being transparent.
Absolutely.
And you just got to navigate that as best you can.
But I just choose to be who I want to be in the world
instead of who I feel like I need to protect myself.
What was harder for you,
making your first $100,000 in a year
or making your first million dollars in a year?
$100,000 for sure.
Why is making a hundred thousand
harder than making a million in a year?
Because it's like, I think we're just figuring it out.
I also think we're charging too little for our work at that point.
Is this when you're working as a career or when you had your own business?
I never made a hundred grand prior to starting my business. You know, I went from college to like,
I had a job in between college and law school and then I went to law school and then I started my own practice. So you didn't work at a law firm after law school. So you started pretty much right away
being an entrepreneur, which is really hard to do. Yes. My last salary before I became an
entrepreneur was $41,000 a year and like really good health insurance. And I was thrilled.
That was in between law school or in between school and law school.
Yes. No, in between um this was after law school because
this was my clerkship okay gotcha yeah so you know you kind of sign on for a year you your
paycheck is not that big but like and you're a lawyer right you're wearing the ropes you're
getting reps you're exactly and then and that's kind of why i decided to start my business at
that time because i'm like i already don't have, right? Like I already know how to live off of this amount of money. Yeah. So I'm like,
if I can live off of this now, let me keep my expenses this way or lower them even more. Like
I sold my car and we owned a house and we rented it out, moved into a smaller place.
How many kids do you have at this time? I had none yet. Oh, well actually that's not true. I
had my, my stepdaughter, but she didn't live with us full time. And so that's what I did at that stage is like I cut down my expenses as much as I could so that I could build this business.
How old were you then?
I was 27, let me say, 2009.
Yeah, 2009 to 2010.
Okay, cool.
This was that year.
And then I clerked for the judge and I started my practice.
And I was like, you know, I made like, there were months where I made 500 bucks and months
that I made $2,000.
And that's why like the linking together, you know, I was doing, my friend bought a
salon.
She was a hairstylist.
She wanted to buy her first salon.
I did the transaction.
She was purchasing an existing business and I charged her 500 bucks for that.
I don't think I've actually ever told anybody.
That's cheap.
Because I was ashamed.
I was ashamed that I didn't know what to charge for that.
And that I undervalued my services so much
that I like literally have never told anybody
that I charged 500 bucks for that.
And she's still a good friend of mine.
Wow.
That's not her fault.
No, it's not her fault.
She made bank with that salon. And she's still a good friend of mine um and she that's not her fault no it's not her fault she made bank with that salon and she's since now um sold it but you also got experience doing that
you know doing that transaction that deal which you've probably never done at that level yeah
seems like so you gain confidence from that yes so there was a win there for you as well it was a win
and but when i saw how many hours of labor were involved. You put like weeks probably, right?
Yes.
I'm negotiating with the other side, dealing with like a difficult lawyer.
And $500 is a steal.
I mean, for the whole thing.
Can I hire you for that?
I should have charged $5,000 minimum, you know.
But it was like, but I learned from that.
Of course.
I value.
Of course.
I can figure it out.
And I have a skill in that.
I'm trained in knowing how to figure it out. I have a skill in that I'm trained in knowing
how to figure it out yeah you know what I mean that was kind of like working on the job experience
like you weren't totally probably experienced for that yet it sounds like but you learned
okay I didn't need to do these 10 hours of calls that I did here I could have done this in an email
whatever I don't know how this works but whatever it was you you learned your process to simplify it
to maximize it itself exactly and back
to that hundred grand question i think that's why it's like we're figuring it out usually we don't
know exactly what we sell in those early stages of the business so we're selling everything everything
whatever people come to us with we're like yeah we could do that we just create a custom offer for
that whatever money we can bring in we'll do it we will take it and so you're very busy uh i call
this stage busy because you're very busy at this stage. But you're nothing's refined. Nothing's efficient. Everything is just sort of like your massive labor towards whatever you can make happen. And so that first hundred grand, I think you are hustling for that. But in order to get to a million or at least to do it in a way that feels sustainable,
you need systems, you need process, you need team, right?
And so now you're starting to build a sustainable business.
You're not just by brute force making money.
And you need to clarify your offering and your audience and your niche and what your
specialty is.
Exactly.
I'm not just a lawyer that can do anything you want me to do, but here's what I really
specialize in.
Exactly. Here are my three packages at these different levels and yes and you go all
in on marketing that yes and there's money that you're saying no to absolutely you learn that
lesson that not all money is good money isn't that crazy yes it's so i say this a lot to people i go
it's weird that i'll turn down massive checks all the time yep but i'm just like that's not what i
want to do and it doesn't serve my mission yes it's not serving the mission and I don't need
the money mm-hmm then I shouldn't do something just to bring in more money
exactly for me it's a distraction at different stages of my life a different
season now to said yes to everything you know when I'm broke you say yes to all
these things yes but then we really okay I'm here for a mission and to serve the
highest level of my skills and abilities that brings me the most joy and brings others the most joy and benefits the most number of people, then you start saying no to money, which is crazy.
Yes.
It sounds crazy, doesn't it?
It's delightful.
It is.
I love it.
I feel like, to me, it lets me know that I'm not, it's like I've not made money my master.
Yes.
Right?
Like it's very important, but it is a tool. That's good. You know what I mean? And I'm not beholden to it, I've not made money my master. Yes. Right? Like it's very important, but it is a tool.
That's good.
You know what I mean?
And I'm not beholden to it and I won't trade anything for it.
There is plenty of things that I will not do and I don't care how much you pay me, you
know?
So I think that it's good to remember that.
And so when you're turning down opportunities, it's, it's just an example of like, okay,
I'm, I'm, I'm doing things right.
Well, I think you got to understand that just because you turn down money over here doesn't mean it's not gonna keep coming
to you mm-hmm like just because you turn down something that's not right for you
doesn't mean abundance of something that is right yeah they'll keep coming to you
there's so much opportunity there's always more where that came from
absolutely yeah absolutely that's powerful okay so the first hundred
thousand how long did it take you? How many years until you made 100,000 in one year?
Can you remember?
Yes.
Roughly.
So my first year in business, and it was like, I started September 1st, 2010.
And so from that year till like September 2011, I made like 60 grand that first year.
That's great.
But I think the first full 12 month calendar year was like year two.
So it wasn't, it didn't take too long.
And then how long until you made seven figures in one year?
Yeah, that took me seven years.
After that, yeah.
From starting business, yeah.
From September 2010, I think it was, maybe it was six.
It was like 2016, 2017.
Yeah.
I think 2017 was my first seven figure year.
And I had gotten close, but not, you know,
like almost there, but not quite. And twice, gotten close, but not, you know, like almost there,
but not quite. And twice. And you know what? It was interesting. What happened is like I had my
business, my revenue was doubling in the beginning. It was like, I made a hundred grand,
then I made two or two 50. And then, you know, then I made 500. Then I was like, I plateaued.
It's like, okay, five60, 620. I know.
It started making me mad.
Like from 500 to 700,000, I think I was there for like three years.
And there was all kinds of stuff going on in my life.
One, there was a lawsuit that one of my business partners.
So like, this is one of the things where too trusting too quickly caused some issues. So that was a huge distraction for me at that time.
I had two babies back to back.
Wow. So, you know, I was busy with them. some issues so that was a huge distraction for me at that time i had two babies back to back wow
so you know i was busy with them and then there were just a lot of lessons i needed to learn like
i had all these people working for me but i didn't have good boundaries and i didn't i just kind of
let them do whatever they wanted and didn't have you know like i was learning how to become a boss
i was learning how to become a leader and a manager. So much more challenging than just doing your skill.
Let me just be good at the law thing, which is what people wanted me for.
Yes. Now they want my business for that and me.
But I've got to train the team and to deliver.
Yeah, right. Exactly.
It's a different skill. It's totally different.
And it's it can be challenging.
I think that's why a lot of times we're like, well,
I'm just going to go back to doing it myself.
And it's like you can, but it's going can be challenging I think that's why a lot of times we're like well I'm just gonna go back to doing it myself and it's like you can
but it's gonna keep you small yeah you have to say yes to those challenges and
learn that new skill right and I think leadership skills are so valuable and
for everybody so yeah I had to learn that and it took me a couple of years to
like figure out how to have stronger boundaries to figure out how to stop
letting people waste my time figure out how to have stronger boundaries, figure out how to stop letting people waste my time, figure out how to charge for what, what my services are worth. Right. All of those
things. Those were lessons that I was learning in that time. Who was wasting your time? Like
clients or employees or clients were wasting my time. Team were wasting my time. Um, even family
members, right? Like I, my desk was like right in the front door.
So like, it's like the door is here.
My desk is right here.
My husband would like be coming in and out.
He's a stay at home dad at the time, taking care of the kids.
And he just ran a tight ship with our household.
It was amazing.
Like I had so much support in that way,
but he would like, every time he came through the door,
wouldn't talk to me, interrupt me.
I gotta focus.
Yes, exactly.
Was like, I didn't know how to create
boundaries around my work time. I hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards
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