back to indexThe 6 Wealth Levels (And How to Move Up)

Chapters
0:0 Introduction
0:44 Big Misconception: Wealth vs. Income
3:26 Why You Should Think About Wealth as a Ladder
7:51 Level 1: Living Paycheck to Paycheck
10:22 How to Grow Your Income in Level 2
15:41 What Is the 0.01% Rule?
17:49 Leveling Up from Level 3: Investing & Side Hustles
22:4 Nick's Research Data Sources
23:43 The Difference Between Level 3 and Level 4
26:35 Risks People Face at Level 3 and 4
30:43 Transitioning from Level 4 to 5
33:7 How to Manage Lifestyle Creep
38:53 Level 5 and 6 of the Wealth Ladder
40:35 The 5 Different Types of Wealth
42:4 The Average Timeline to Climb Up the Wealth Ladder
49:50 Using the 1% Rule to Evaluate Business Opportunities
52:27 Accessing Travel Freedom Through Points & Miles
55:15 Biggest Lessons Nick Learned on His Wealth Journey
56:46 The Impact of Understanding the Wealth Ladder
57:58 Where to Find Nick's Book and Other Work
00:00:00.140 |
Understanding how to build wealth isn't just about investing early or spending wisely, 00:00:04.300 |
it's also about knowing where you are and what actually moves the needle. 00:00:07.760 |
So today, I'm joined by Nick Majuli, a data-driven financial writer and author of a great upcoming book, 00:00:13.340 |
The Wealth Ladder, to break down the six levels of wealth in a way that's tactical, clear, and rooted in reality. 00:00:20.520 |
If you can understand the wealth ladder, then you can really start to control your time and your life. 00:00:25.480 |
In this episode, we'll break down every step of the wealth ladder, 00:00:28.340 |
what separates those of us who move up from those who stall out, 00:00:31.600 |
and how to make smarter decisions at each stage of your journey. 00:00:35.560 |
If you enjoy this episode, please share it with a friend or leave a comment or review. 00:00:39.340 |
And if you want to keep upgrading your life, money, and travel, click follow or subscribe. 00:00:43.380 |
Nick, what do you think most people get wrong when they think about growing their wealth? 00:00:48.300 |
I think the main thing that people get wrong is they don't focus enough on income. 00:00:53.140 |
I think income, it's the strongest relationship in all of personal finance. 00:01:01.320 |
But the thing that's most correlated with building wealth is income. 00:01:05.040 |
Like everything I've seen in the data, and it's now overwhelming to me. 00:01:10.100 |
It's very rare to see someone with low wealth and high income, 00:01:14.360 |
Like they're just so correlated that if you have high income, you're going to get wealth, right? 00:01:18.600 |
Unless you're a crazy spender, which is very rare, and vice versa. 00:01:21.880 |
So it's one of those things where like wealth builds income, income builds wealth, 00:01:25.040 |
and it's just this flywheel that keeps working on itself. 00:01:27.520 |
But it is possible to kind of confuse the two, right? 00:01:31.100 |
Like to think, oh, because I have a lot of income, I have a lot of wealth. 00:01:34.300 |
So while income might be really important, how is it also important to understand the distinction? 00:01:40.600 |
Well, the distinction is like income is like it's the flow that's coming in. 00:01:45.300 |
You now need to save that and make it into the stock, which is your wealth, right? 00:01:48.960 |
And so a lot of people say, oh, I have all this stuff coming in. 00:01:52.660 |
Like they've done these studies, and roughly 10% of U.S. households are going to see a 50% drop in income in the next two years, right? 00:02:02.300 |
It shot up a little during like the 12% during the great financial crisis, but then it drops back down. 00:02:08.560 |
Roughly, you know, one in 20 people are going to lose their job in the next two years is not that crazy of a stat. 00:02:12.280 |
But that, you know, you do that over a long time, and this does affect people. 00:02:16.460 |
Like I like looking at like professional athletes. 00:02:19.620 |
Well, they end up broke because they had five years of really high income, and they spent money based on their income, not on their wealth. 00:02:24.980 |
They didn't accumulate wealth to keep sustaining that spending. 00:02:28.120 |
And as a result, you know, you end up one day end up bankrupt because you don't have the flow. 00:02:31.780 |
After five to seven years, that dries up, and then you have to live your rest of the life off that. 00:02:35.600 |
So I think that's the difficulty with this stuff. 00:02:39.720 |
Everyone mathematically, lottery winners should always take the lump sum. 00:02:44.000 |
But I imagine that if you win the lottery and you take the payments over however many years, you are probably statistically likely to end up better off. 00:02:52.600 |
People that win the lottery, not most, but some large percentage of them end up without money. 00:02:58.000 |
Has anyone actually ever not taken the lump sum? 00:02:59.880 |
I bet it's happened, but I bet it's almost, it's very rare if it's ever happened. 00:03:04.460 |
Yeah, I think it would be hard to convince someone to do this inopportune thing. 00:03:08.920 |
People don't typically take advice when you're saying, do this thing, because I don't trust that you'll be able to make good decisions. 00:03:14.220 |
And plus, it's like, the thrill of the lump sum must be crazy. 00:03:19.080 |
Yeah, I've never, I think the biggest lottery lump sum I ever had was like $10, you know? 00:03:25.460 |
But in the most recent book, you've chosen to look at wealth as a ladder, and that wealth is not necessarily income. 00:03:34.960 |
I think the main thing to think about is like, as you build wealth, your financial decisions can change. 00:03:43.140 |
What strategy makes sense for you can change as well. 00:03:46.120 |
And so the analogy I give at the beginning of the book is like, a fitness coach would give very different advice to someone who's like morbidly obese versus like a well-trained athlete. 00:03:55.140 |
I think we can apply that same analogy to financial advice. 00:03:58.640 |
Like if you're just starting out and you have, you know, you have negative net worth or zero net worth, the advice I would give you is going to be very different than if you have like a million dollars. 00:04:07.280 |
You're like, hey, how can I get to 10 million? 00:04:08.800 |
How do I get to 20 million, et cetera, right? 00:04:10.480 |
And so based on that, I've kind of classified wealth into these six levels, and we can talk about those. 00:04:16.160 |
And based on which level you're in, based on your net worth, right, which is all your assets minus all your liabilities, we can get into that as well. 00:04:22.180 |
It determines, okay, what income things do I think about? 00:04:25.260 |
What investment decisions would I make differently? 00:04:27.460 |
And all those things impact your financial well-being. 00:04:30.360 |
We're going to run through the levels, but do you think of it more as kind of conceptual levels or is there like an actual step function change where it's like where I get one more dollar here, things happen versus this kind of linear progression? 00:04:41.500 |
No, it's of course, it's more of a linear progression than a step function change. 00:04:47.740 |
I mean, there's all sorts of factors that impact this. 00:04:49.720 |
I like thinking them as steps because I think there's just a mindset change that happens as you move throughout the levels. 00:04:57.060 |
And the big thing is like each level is 10x from the other levels, right? 00:05:01.280 |
So, you know, if you have, you know, less than $10,000 in net worth, that's level one. 00:05:07.700 |
The next level, level three is $100,000 to a million and et cetera, right? 00:05:10.820 |
And the reason for that is because like you need a large step change to fundamentally change how you live your life, right? 00:05:16.640 |
Someone with a million dollars, as nice as their life is, if I give them another million dollars, it's not going to change their life as much as if I took someone from zero and gave them a million dollars. 00:05:26.700 |
Even though they're both a million dollars, like the person from zero to a million, their life's going to change in a ton of ways. 00:05:31.660 |
The person with a million to two million, yeah, their life's going to change. 00:05:34.320 |
They're going to have a pretty nice improvement, but it won't change as much as the other person. 00:05:37.520 |
I think everyone knows that intrinsically, but like seeing it happen in the real world and actually experiencing it is something in itself. 00:05:44.860 |
By the way, all these levels, I think, map onto economic classes, at least within the United States. 00:05:49.260 |
So for your U.S. listeners, I think this is going to map quite well. 00:05:51.860 |
So once again, level one, less than $10,000 in total net worth. 00:05:55.640 |
That includes your bank accounts, that includes your car, everything you own. 00:05:58.960 |
You put it all together in a pile, less than $10,000, right? 00:06:13.720 |
That's, I would consider the upper middle class. 00:06:15.280 |
I know $10 million is going to sound like that's really upper middle, like in maybe the very high cost of living areas, that's upper middle class. 00:06:22.860 |
And then, you know, $10 million to $100 million, that's level five. 00:06:27.540 |
And then $100 million plus is like the super rich. 00:06:29.580 |
And so each one of these levels, if I had to give you like a percentage of the United States, I'm going to approximate. 00:06:36.300 |
It's like 20% of households, U.S. households, so not just individuals, households are in level one. 00:06:47.800 |
So now that's 80% of America is in levels one, two, and three. 00:06:51.480 |
And then in the final 20% is level four and above. 00:06:54.700 |
And in level four in particular, it's roughly like, you know, let's say 18%. 00:07:01.680 |
Actually, that level four figure, $1 million to $10 million, that's changed a lot in just the last few years. 00:07:06.140 |
Before COVID to now, there's been a huge change. 00:07:09.780 |
A lot of it's like real estate prices have gone up. 00:07:13.200 |
Doesn't mean that someone has a million dollars in their bank account, but total net worth, that has increased considerably. 00:07:18.860 |
And so should people consider that when they're thinking about levels? 00:07:23.040 |
Is it liquid net worth or their total net worth? 00:07:26.580 |
That's how we do the Wealth Flatter, and that's how I've done it. 00:07:29.020 |
However, when you're talking about maybe spending decisions, I think you should look at liquid net worth. 00:07:33.120 |
And we can get into that a little bit as well. 00:07:34.900 |
I think that's the difference because you can't eat your home equity, right? 00:07:37.700 |
I can't be like, oh, I have a million dollar house and $5,000 in my bank account, so I can go spend whatever. 00:07:43.940 |
In terms of just the Wealth Flatter in general, I think wealth matters. 00:07:48.300 |
But in terms of your spending decisions, it's definitely going to matter how it's comprised. 00:07:51.940 |
I imagine we have listeners at every single one of those levels. 00:07:54.860 |
So I'd love to give everyone a little bit of an overview of, like, what should you be thinking about this level? 00:07:59.860 |
What are some of the challenges and tactics and risks when you're there? 00:08:04.820 |
So I like to say some piece of your life is being amplified in every wealth level. 00:08:09.240 |
In level one, which is less than $10,000 in wealth, that amplification is bad luck. 00:08:13.960 |
And what I mean by that is literally some unfortunate thing happens to you, and that can send your life down a very different path than if that thing hadn't happened. 00:08:24.100 |
Like, anyone can get unlucky, can get sick or something. 00:08:29.900 |
I can't get to work now because of that, and then I lose my job, and then I'm in debt. 00:08:33.200 |
If someone in level three or level four, their tire blew out, they would just get it repaired. 00:08:38.380 |
But it's something that money can easily fix. 00:08:40.160 |
For someone in level one, that's something where, like, a simple piece of bad luck you run into can really set you back a lot. 00:08:47.340 |
And so the goal in level one is do everything you can to get out of level one. 00:08:52.380 |
And so I'm usually not a fan of, like, cut your spending and all that. 00:08:56.760 |
But in this case, like, if you want atypical results, you have to have atypical actions. 00:09:01.260 |
So it's not a great place to be in because you have this constant fear of, oh, what if something happens, all this type of stuff. 00:09:07.400 |
And so the goal of level one is to get out of level one. 00:09:10.680 |
Once you're out of there, then you can kind of breathe easy a little bit. 00:09:12.920 |
You heard about this during COVID when stimulus checks came in. 00:09:15.360 |
People were like, oh, my gosh, I've never had this much money in my bank account, and I don't have to worry about how am I going to afford food this week. 00:09:21.580 |
Something as simple as that, just even a few thousand dollars, you'll start to feel that stress falling away. 00:09:26.820 |
But once you get into level two, you have $10,000. 00:09:29.340 |
That's when it's much clearer that, like, okay, I have much more redundancy in my financial accounts. 00:09:36.340 |
And so would you say cut spending and pick up extra work? 00:09:40.960 |
If you're in level one, like, I look at it as like an emergency in many cases. 00:09:45.280 |
Of course, that shouldn't be your long-term goal. 00:09:47.260 |
It's like, oh, cut your spending and take your spending to zero. 00:09:54.560 |
I think if you're in a drastic situation and you need to get out of that, there are ways you can try to do that. 00:10:00.840 |
But the long-term goal is to increase your income. 00:10:03.080 |
That is really the way at how you get out of any level to go forward. 00:10:07.960 |
And there's different types of ways of increasing your income that we can discuss, and that would apply to different levels. 00:10:12.580 |
But in terms of level one, like, the goal is just to get out. 00:10:17.080 |
Like, just going from level one to level two is going to have a bigger impact than basically anything else in your life. 00:10:25.260 |
At this point, okay, you have some financial resources saved. 00:10:27.940 |
And people in level two are going to be all over the place. 00:10:29.840 |
There's going to be people graduating from college who are like, well, I have no money. 00:10:32.500 |
It's like, yeah, but you have a degree from a nice university and skills, and you're making a good income. 00:10:36.780 |
You're basically not in level one, even though you don't have $10,000 in wealth. 00:10:40.400 |
But you have, like, intangibles that are worth at least that much. 00:10:44.880 |
You have skills that are going to allow you to generate the income to get out of level one easily. 00:10:49.220 |
So level two, the thing I say to focus on is, like, once you're there, it's like, what else can you do to grow your income? 00:10:57.740 |
So the main thing to focus on there is your education. 00:11:00.940 |
It's like the trajectory of your life, of your career, at least in this case. 00:11:04.380 |
Like, what can you do so that that trajectory really takes off so you can really start amplifying your earnings? 00:11:10.060 |
I think most people on level two, I would guess, you know, they make a good wage, but their entire earnings are just tied to how much they work. 00:11:17.140 |
And I'm guessing they don't have that high of a wage. 00:11:21.440 |
And so as a result, it's like, you can feel like you're working 50, 60 hours a week. 00:11:24.880 |
Like, Nick, I'm working really hard at this stuff. 00:11:26.660 |
And at the same time, like, I'm not seeing enough progress. 00:11:31.020 |
It's like you're working hard, but the issue is your wage just isn't paying you enough, right? 00:11:34.880 |
And so we have to be like, okay, how can I find a different income source, another income source that can actually get me to that next level? 00:11:41.000 |
And how much is your age dependent on some of these levels? 00:11:44.920 |
You know, when you started talking about college, I was thinking, you know, if someone's, you know, 50 years old and has a net worth of $10,000, you know, they're probably in a very different situation than someone who's 22 and saved their first $10,000. 00:11:59.780 |
And so obviously, like, time is correlated with wealth in the sense, like, you've had more time to work and save money and all this stuff. 00:12:06.520 |
So in general, you'll see, like, the median age within each level goes up and, like, the median age in level four is 62, by the way. 00:12:13.160 |
So, like, if you took all the people who have one to 10 million, all the households in the United States that have one to $10 million and you put them in a room and you took the middle person, that person's 62 years old. 00:12:22.000 |
So as much as you see people, oh, they're young and rich and all, that's not the case. 00:12:28.460 |
That age is a big, it's correlated a lot here. 00:12:30.480 |
Either way, if you're in level two, you're in level two and you have to kind of deal with that. 00:12:35.800 |
And it's like, okay, what can I do to increase my income? 00:12:41.700 |
And you have to figure out what's the thing that's going to help me get there and start working on that thing. 00:12:48.740 |
Like, I wish I could say there was a shortcut or something. 00:12:54.720 |
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So I'm going to, to help people kind of come up with a name here, you gave this level two grocery freedom, right? 00:15:17.560 |
So once we're talking about spending, level two is what I call grocery freedom. 00:15:20.780 |
Not right when you get into level two, but as you kind of progress through level two, you can just care less and less about what you spend at the grocery store. 00:15:26.820 |
By the time you have $100,000 in wealth, you know, let's just say liquid net worth, just to be very conservative here. 00:15:32.760 |
You know, paying an extra dollar here for the cage-free eggs versus the non-cage-free, like it's not going to impact your wealth at all. 00:15:38.840 |
And the reason where I came up with this is like, I use something called the 0.01% rule. 00:15:44.040 |
And all that is, is just 0.01% of your net worth. 00:15:51.240 |
So if you have a net worth of $10,000, that difference is 10,000 divided by 10,001. 00:15:57.360 |
If your net worth's 100,000, you divide by 10,000, that, that value is 10. 00:16:02.040 |
And that's how much extra you can spend per day without your having to worry about like losing your wealth or anything like that. 00:16:07.960 |
The assumption is that your wealth is going to grow by 0.01% per day, which is 3.7% a year. 00:16:12.360 |
And I don't think anyone's going to be like, oh, that's a crazy return. 00:16:16.040 |
And so, you know, given that, I think anyone's wealth will be able to grow at roughly that rate over time. 00:16:21.460 |
And that's not how much you can spend in a day because it kind of assumes you're working and you have income. 00:16:28.480 |
If things cost that much extra one day over the other, don't stress it. 00:16:33.580 |
So like the idea is like, and I'm not assuming this is going to be true of most people. 00:16:36.520 |
Like, okay, you're spending all of your income. 00:16:38.240 |
Even after you've done that, you can still spend whatever your wealth throws off and your wealth would, in theory, stay the same over time. 00:16:44.580 |
Now, of course, I'm hoping you're not spending all your income, you're saving money, but it's just a good mental heuristic when you're looking at something. 00:16:51.120 |
So like if you know your net worth is somewhere between $10,000 and $100,000, don't sweat it at the grocery store. 00:16:56.600 |
But when you go to a restaurant, okay, maybe you need to be careful about what you buy, right? 00:17:00.120 |
And so, for example, if you're in level four, $1 million to $10 million, and I know we jumped over level three, we can come back. 00:17:05.960 |
But $1 million to $10 million, that's called travel freedom. 00:17:10.540 |
So, for example, if I'm in level four, when I go to a restaurant, I don't look at the prices. 00:17:16.800 |
Besides, like, the wine list, which is a little crazy sometimes, outside of that, I just get whatever I want. 00:17:20.980 |
Now, when it comes to travel stuff, I'm very particular on, like, what I buy. 00:17:25.880 |
I'm always buying coach, even though, even if someone had $1 to $10 million, I would say, yeah, you got to try and get the cheapest stuff. 00:17:31.620 |
You got to save money where you can because that marginal difference is pretty expensive. 00:17:34.920 |
Going from, like, a coach seat to business class is not necessarily cheap. 00:17:38.240 |
And so, it's about I spend according to my level. 00:17:42.420 |
It's what I recommend if you spend according to your level. 00:17:44.420 |
It doesn't mean you're going to build wealth, but it's going to prevent you from falling down the wealth ladder, which I think is the more important thing. 00:17:51.260 |
So, level three, you're, you know, assuming in level two, you've gotten the education or you've gotten the skills you need. 00:17:56.940 |
So, you're kind of, you're able to save more. 00:17:59.360 |
What else can you do to kind of keep that ball moving in the right direction? 00:18:08.660 |
I'm not saying you shouldn't be investing when you're in level one or level two. 00:18:11.500 |
I'm just saying it doesn't matter as much in terms of the total dollars that's being generated, right? 00:18:18.060 |
If you have $10,000 and you generate a 10% return, that's $1,000. 00:18:22.280 |
But as someone who's working, you can more easily generate income just through your labor than you can through your capital. 00:18:28.620 |
The 10 grand is not that much in the grand scheme of things. 00:18:30.600 |
But by the time you get to level three, now you have 100 grand. 00:18:35.260 |
That's now starting to compete with you a little bit. 00:18:39.380 |
If your investment portfolio earns you more than your job, is your job a side hustle? 00:18:44.180 |
But it gets at the point, which I'm getting at, is over time, if you're investing your money, 00:18:48.340 |
like, your investment portfolio is going to get large enough for that. 00:18:51.120 |
It's actually generating more income than you are. 00:18:52.840 |
And especially if you're in level four, that's going to be true. 00:18:56.680 |
But the main thing to think about there is investment side hustles. 00:19:01.080 |
And by investing, that's the way that I've seen most people that go from level three to level four. 00:19:07.800 |
And those assets generate more income and more income. 00:19:11.340 |
And the last time you were on the show, we talked a lot about your previous book, Just Keep Buying. 00:19:15.280 |
We've had a handful of shows about investing. 00:19:17.580 |
So we won't go deep today on investing and index funds and ways to do that. 00:19:27.300 |
And I can't remember if this was from our conversation before. 00:19:29.680 |
But, you know, sometimes I meet people really early in their financial journey, right? 00:19:38.440 |
And in a way, it's like, I want you to pick up good habits early. 00:19:42.280 |
But whether you get a 10% return, a 5% return, or a 20% return on your first $1,000, 00:19:48.340 |
like, we're talking tens of dollars difference. 00:19:52.460 |
And if you picked up a side hustle for one hour a week, you know, you'd probably outperform that. 00:20:01.280 |
But I think the habits you pick up earlier can translate and pay dividends in the future. 00:20:15.900 |
As your portfolio gets bigger and bigger, once you're in level 4, level 5, etc. 00:20:19.620 |
And at any of those levels, then everything, like, investments are everything. 00:20:24.180 |
You're not going to be able to compete with yourself, right? 00:20:25.620 |
It's like your portfolio is generating more income than you are. 00:20:28.540 |
And so you're at a point where you're like, oh, my gosh. 00:20:29.860 |
Like, my investment decisions really matter now. 00:20:31.580 |
And that transition slowly happens over time. 00:20:35.900 |
But for most people, at some point, their portfolio is going to generate more income 00:20:39.820 |
So it seems like at level 2, the risk was, you know, go get a lot more education and skills 00:20:46.980 |
Because the risk is that you kind of don't move up. 00:20:49.300 |
In level 3, what are some of the risks people should be thinking about that might kind of prevent 00:20:55.680 |
I think that's where overspending can really get you into it. 00:20:59.040 |
Because once you're like, oh, look, I'm making more money. 00:21:00.520 |
And then you start investing, you're bringing more income, which is great. 00:21:03.860 |
But if you start spending all of that income, then especially in level 3, which is like, 00:21:09.020 |
Now there's like social status and all these things that I think the middle class and the 00:21:13.720 |
upper middle class get much more wrapped up in than I think than other economic classes 00:21:18.520 |
People in level 3 and level 4, their lives aren't that different in terms of a consumption 00:21:23.080 |
They might live in a slightly nicer neighborhood or they drive a slightly nicer car, but they 00:21:28.280 |
So if you're thinking, oh my gosh, people in level 4 are flying private and people in level 00:21:31.760 |
3 are flying coach, like nope, they're in the same plane. 00:21:34.460 |
They might be in a slightly better seat, but the lifestyles are very similar. 00:21:37.180 |
I think people in level 1 and like people in level 3, very different lifestyles, right? 00:21:40.720 |
Like they're in the stress levels, everything's very different. 00:21:43.140 |
But in terms of, you know, level 3 and level 4, the difference is not really that high, 00:21:47.140 |
but people will spend a lot of money for status and all sorts of things that like changes their 00:21:52.040 |
perception of themselves, but it doesn't necessarily really change their lifestyle that much. 00:21:55.920 |
If I had to pick like what's the one thing that prevents people from just getting into level 00:21:59.060 |
4, assuming they have a decent income, it's probably from overspending of some sort and 00:22:04.200 |
And I know what you do day to day for work, but I'm curious for people who think, oh, are 00:22:11.440 |
How much kind of research and data have you dug through when you kind of put all this together? 00:22:20.340 |
The main one, which is the snapshot data is from the Federal Reserve. 00:22:25.440 |
It just looks at just wealth in different US households over time. 00:22:30.180 |
It samples them and then you can wait it and figure out all these statistics and all that. 00:22:33.480 |
That was very useful for just understanding wealth in general in the United States. 00:22:37.500 |
But if I wanted to understand how household wealth actually changes over time, you have to 00:22:43.620 |
So the SCF Data Survey of Consumer Finances doesn't do that. 00:22:47.580 |
But there's another data set called the Panel Study of Income Dynamics from the University 00:22:54.080 |
So that's how I was able to talk about all this stuff with building wealth. 00:22:58.600 |
I say, look, the difference between the people that were started in level 3 and got to level 00:23:02.820 |
4 versus those that started in level 3 and stayed in level 3, the main difference is 00:23:07.260 |
their starting income and how much money they spent, right? 00:23:09.560 |
It's true in basically every wealth level, the people, if you compare the households in 00:23:12.700 |
level 2 that got to level 3 versus those that were in level 2 that stayed in level 2, 00:23:16.440 |
the ones that got to level 3, A, had a higher income, but also didn't spend as much relative 00:23:23.060 |
to their income as people that stayed in level 2. 00:23:25.260 |
So there's like a lot of cases where everyone in level 2 is spending the same amount of money, 00:23:28.880 |
but the people that have more income, they end up making it to level 3. 00:23:31.640 |
So I think spending does matter and you can kind of see it in the data, but you have to really 00:23:35.720 |
parse it out in different ways and what prevents people from climbing the wealth ladder. 00:23:39.180 |
And at some point, spending can do that, but for the most part, I say it's income. 00:23:42.740 |
Okay, so you said level 3 and level 4 are similar. 00:23:47.180 |
They're different in the sense of once you're in level 4, which is $1 million to $10 million, 00:23:53.060 |
I think you can really take your foot off the gas in a way that most people in level 3 00:24:01.320 |
Like you can start doing something called coast fire. 00:24:03.300 |
Basically, coast fire is this idea of like, hey, I don't have to work this job anymore. 00:24:07.240 |
I've saved enough money for my retirement, all these things. 00:24:10.160 |
I can work something where I don't get paid as much and I just enjoy more and I just need 00:24:14.320 |
to get through like the next 15 years and then I'll be good. 00:24:17.840 |
I think there are people in level 3, $100,000 to $1 million that can coast, but I think you 00:24:23.380 |
have to be in like kind of living a low cost of living area. 00:24:26.040 |
I think for most of the US, which is like let's say mid to high cost of living, you kind 00:24:30.300 |
of need to be in level 4 before you can do that. 00:24:31.980 |
So it gives you a little bit more freedom over what you do for your job. 00:24:35.300 |
If you love your job and you're level 3, you've already made it. 00:24:38.380 |
Like I say level 3, level 4, they're very similar to me. 00:24:40.860 |
The only difference is kind of that time freedom you might be able to have in a higher cost of 00:24:45.140 |
So that's kind of the main difference I would say. 00:24:47.540 |
And so I call level 4 travel freedom, level 3 restaurant freedom, but they're similar 00:24:52.120 |
in a lot of ways because you just start the travel freedom in level 4. 00:24:54.780 |
You're not truly like, oh, I can go do whatever and travel however I want until you're much 00:24:58.820 |
deeper in there, which is like $8, $9, $10 million, which is obviously a lot of money. 00:25:04.840 |
So I like the concept of coast fire, coast fire. 00:25:07.620 |
And the thing I think about it is that you've kind of saved enough money that if you stopped 00:25:12.920 |
contributing to your retirement or whatever you want to call that long term savings, 00:25:19.680 |
And so you can, if you want, you can adjust your income by changing your job such that you 00:25:26.280 |
can live on your earnings, but you don't need to keep contributing to savings because chances 00:25:31.300 |
are over, you know, like you said, you know, your savings is going to grow over time as it's 00:25:36.360 |
And when you've got $1 to $10 million saved, that will grow to be probably what you need when 00:25:42.660 |
you're done working, assuming, you know, you're not trying to stop working now. 00:25:51.300 |
And it depends, you know, well, where are you in level three? 00:25:53.640 |
And that's where it's like, yes, this is a step function. 00:25:55.500 |
But at the same time, like if you're at a hundred thousand, that's very different from 00:25:59.860 |
That's someone low on level three versus someone middle level four, obviously very different. 00:26:03.600 |
But if you're like, oh, I have 800,000 net worth or I have 1.4 million, like, you know, 00:26:09.480 |
That's a lot of money, but their lifestyles are not that different. 00:26:12.240 |
Even though that's a large difference, like that $600,000 is not going to generate enough 00:26:16.560 |
income on its own for you to, unless you consume it all, right? 00:26:19.060 |
If you plan on consuming all of your resources, then yeah, it is a big difference. 00:26:21.960 |
But most people don't want to consume all the resource. 00:26:23.720 |
They want to leave money to the next generation, et cetera. 00:26:25.900 |
As a result, you know, the income that generates is not that high. 00:26:30.100 |
And what are some of the risks that people face as they're kind of creeping up level four 00:26:36.160 |
that are different than what you might have at level three? 00:26:39.640 |
So the risks I think about, obviously investment decisions, you know, once again, you're 10X more 00:26:44.420 |
wealth, the investment decisions are 10X more important, right? 00:26:48.020 |
So bad investment decisions that can lead to all sorts of stuff. 00:26:51.020 |
And I don't have too much data on this in particular, like what the portfolios are of millionaire 00:26:56.140 |
households versus like households with a hundred thousand to a million in terms of what's in 00:27:01.380 |
But I would guess that the people, as you kind of move up the wealth ladder, there's a little 00:27:08.420 |
If you said, hey, I have a bunch of individual stocks and maybe they did well, and you keep 00:27:12.680 |
making those types of bets in level four and beyond, like you could keep growing your 00:27:17.580 |
So I think that the thing is, once you're in level four, you want to kind of get more diversified, 00:27:22.140 |
You probably want to start owning more treasury bills. 00:27:24.900 |
I mean, also, it depends on a host of things in your life without knowing much about you. 00:27:28.220 |
It's very hard to make a quote recommendation or advice, and I'm not trying to give that advice. 00:27:31.580 |
But at the end of the day, like protection, I think is a little bit more important in level 00:27:37.280 |
And so it's something to think about as you're kind of making that transition. 00:27:40.900 |
It's like, okay, am I over concentrated or is, am I, you know, overlooking some risk in 00:27:45.740 |
my financial life, in my investment portfolio? 00:27:47.660 |
It matters in every level, but it's obviously much more important because you can't make up for 00:27:52.380 |
Let's say you have $5 million and you make a 10% investment mistake. 00:27:56.520 |
Like, let's say you can save $100,000 a year, which is a lot of money. 00:27:59.420 |
That would take you five years to make up for a mistake that could happen in the course of 00:28:04.200 |
So if you're in level three and you can save $100,000 a year, you can make up for that type 00:28:10.160 |
So that's the difference is like your labor is far, far less useful at impacting your finances. 00:28:16.580 |
And so because of that, all the decisions you make not related to your labor and your work 00:28:22.600 |
One other thing you mentioned in the book was kind of the role of these kind of speculative 00:28:27.140 |
investments that come in as you start building your wealth. 00:28:29.920 |
And it's something I've seen amongst people in that kind of level four camp. 00:28:34.840 |
And the risks that I've seen them face is one, they kind of feel like, oh, wow, now I 00:28:40.560 |
maybe see this path to being on level five one day and they start wanting to act like that. 00:28:45.820 |
And they're like, I need to be doing these crazy, you know, private syndicated real estate deals 00:28:51.680 |
And one, I'm not sure they need to be doing that because the amount at which they're doing 00:28:57.520 |
relative to the potential outsized return, I'm not sure it has the impact it does. 00:29:02.100 |
But the other thing I've seen people come into a problem with is they want to get, let's 00:29:08.760 |
And they don't realize the kind of liquidity constraint that comes with some of these sophisticated 00:29:14.480 |
And if you're thinking about someone who has $50 million, if they've got $40 million tied 00:29:19.940 |
up somewhere that they can't really access for five years, well, that's okay. 00:29:23.980 |
But if you've got $3 million and you tie up $2.9 million of it in a way you can't access 00:29:29.740 |
it, I've seen a handful of people that are squarely like far into level four that are 00:29:38.420 |
Like I've tried to do all these sophisticated things and like their problem is they don't 00:29:43.800 |
I don't know if you've seen that in this level or not. 00:29:47.860 |
I don't obviously don't have data on like what percentage of households are locked up in 00:29:53.580 |
But I do think it's something that people overlook like liquidity matters and you don't 00:29:57.640 |
realize how much it matters until you need it. 00:30:00.580 |
It's like, you know, you're you're living in a paradise and all of a sudden you realize 00:30:03.980 |
that we're in a drought and you're like, I need water and like I don't have it. 00:30:06.220 |
And it's like liquidity is a very real thing in that sense. 00:30:08.380 |
It's like you don't you don't actually realize you need it until you actually need it. 00:30:12.140 |
I think people should be mindful of how liquid they are, especially once you're at that level. 00:30:16.140 |
It's like, okay, you know, I have, you know, let's see, 3 million bucks. 00:30:18.640 |
Maybe I can have 10%, maybe 20% private investments. 00:30:24.700 |
But, you know, if you're having, you know, anywhere over 50% of your net worth, that's 00:30:29.120 |
And then this is the same with owning a business. 00:30:30.680 |
You can own a business that's shooting off a lot of income. 00:30:33.180 |
But if you can't sell it or something at the end of the day, that's just like having 00:30:37.340 |
And in many cases, it's like a job you have to keep working, right, to service the income. 00:30:40.720 |
So it's it's a it's interesting place to be in. 00:30:43.280 |
And what are some of the biggest things that change as you go from level four to level five? 00:30:51.480 |
And I don't mean this as a diss or anything like that. 00:30:53.920 |
It's just the the things that got you into level four are not the things that get you into 00:30:59.380 |
And the biggest surprise I got from, you know, going through this whole process, analyzing 00:31:04.300 |
all this wealth data, et cetera, was just how hard it is to get a level four. 00:31:09.020 |
Let's say you've acquired a million dollars in assets, right? 00:31:11.980 |
Let's just pretend it's all liquid for now just to make it easy. 00:31:14.140 |
You have a million dollars and you're saving $100,000 a year after tax. 00:31:17.940 |
How long does it take until you get to $10 million? 00:31:19.740 |
The answer and by the way, growing at 5% a year, the answer is 28 years. 00:31:27.800 |
You're saving $300,000 a year, right, with your million dollars. 00:31:30.120 |
How long would it take you to get to $10 million? 00:31:33.040 |
You know, do you know how hard it is to save $300,000 after tax? 00:31:39.620 |
Like when you really do the math on this, you're like, holy crap. 00:31:42.460 |
That's why I think a lot of people get stuck in the data shows. 00:31:44.880 |
The level you're most likely to get stuck in is level four. 00:31:48.820 |
I think you can have an amazing life in level three, level four. 00:31:54.960 |
The things that got you in there are not the things that are going to get you to level five. 00:31:57.680 |
You have to do something completely different. 00:32:03.220 |
Like that's the only way I've seen people get out. 00:32:06.000 |
There's obviously exceptions, celebrities, entertainers, stuff like that. 00:32:08.760 |
But for the most part, assume you're not one of those people. 00:32:15.380 |
And it's not a bad thing, but it's like you can't get out. 00:32:19.160 |
So like once, like I expect myself to be in level four the rest of my life. 00:32:24.380 |
Even after tax and everything, I'm not nowhere close to level five, right? 00:32:29.540 |
So it's like I could do all this stuff and I'm still not going to get out of that. 00:32:33.340 |
I have to go and, you know, start my own business, do this whole other thing for me to get there. 00:32:37.460 |
And I don't really think that's going to be worth the trade-offs of doing that. 00:32:40.580 |
So everyone has to make those decisions personally. 00:32:42.880 |
And that's why I think Coast Fire is such a great solution for a lot of this stuff because 00:32:46.020 |
you can spend more time with family, kids, whatever, those things that you care about. 00:32:49.720 |
But I think that getting to that point is what really matters. 00:32:52.560 |
And, you know, even if you waited those 28 years saving $100,000 a year, you finally you say, 00:33:00.220 |
That doesn't necessarily mean anything changes the moment you go from 9.99 to 10. 00:33:06.740 |
So I guess we can come back to the question I brought up earlier. 00:33:09.480 |
It's like, how do you know when anything in your life should change? 00:33:13.420 |
You didn't say it yet, but I know that the spending freedom in level five is house freedom. 00:33:18.100 |
You know, I assume someone who goes from $9,999,000 to $10 million isn't like, great, 00:33:28.020 |
So how do people generally know when they can change when they're comfortable spending a little 00:33:36.660 |
That's where the I try to really use the point of one percent rule. 00:33:40.240 |
Like I really believe that that rule helps because over time, as you're saying, hey, look, 00:33:45.440 |
It allows you to spend more and more in certain categories. 00:33:48.020 |
Now, of course, like where that and it's a sliding scale because it's 0.01% of your wealth. 00:33:52.900 |
It's always if your wealth keeps increasing, that number is going up, right? 00:33:55.740 |
So if you have, you know, a million dollars, you can spend 100 bucks a day without even thinking 00:34:00.600 |
And that's my 100 bucks a day on top of whatever else you're spending, assuming you're not spending 00:34:06.220 |
So like it's one of those things where like, hey, oh, this is going to cost me 100 bucks. 00:34:09.760 |
So if you're in level four and you and $20 dropped out of your pocket and you can't find 00:34:14.000 |
it, you just don't spend time looking for it. 00:34:17.760 |
It's one of those things where like it's not going to impact you. 00:34:19.860 |
You just got to kind of move on with your life. 00:34:21.500 |
And so when I start thinking about like, OK, well, you know, when does it change? 00:34:27.000 |
And a lot of this is psychology in terms of how people think about money. 00:34:29.600 |
But I like to really use this rule because, you know, when I was younger, I go to a restaurant. 00:34:34.560 |
I'd be like, yo, I got to get the cheapest thing. 00:34:36.840 |
And so now and then over time, I kind of gave myself the freedom to spend more. 00:34:39.800 |
Now I go to a restaurant, I get whatever I want, what I want, you know, basically, besides, 00:34:42.900 |
as I said, the expensive French wine, I'll pass on those things. 00:34:48.680 |
And that's only because I've demonstrated the discipline. 00:34:54.680 |
There's going to be people say, don't let your lifestyle creep. 00:34:57.020 |
I'm like, yeah, let your lifestyle creep if you've demonstrated the financial discipline to 00:35:01.920 |
And I say it gets you a little bit the best of both worlds. 00:35:04.200 |
That's what I'm really trying to do is get rid of spending guilt, but I'm not giving you 00:35:08.460 |
And that's where I think this is a nice balance of those two things. 00:35:10.840 |
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What advice would you have for someone who may or may not be like me, where it's like, 00:37:49.280 |
I've used the 0.01% rule, and I should be able to spend these things. 00:37:55.160 |
But I find myself sometimes getting caught up. 00:38:02.660 |
There are days where my wife and I are at the grocery store, and we're like, God, that's 00:38:06.300 |
like, I remember we were at Costco the other day. 00:38:08.340 |
It was like organic strawberries are like $11.99 or something like that. 00:38:22.820 |
That's something you just have to deal with personally. 00:38:25.160 |
Because it feels like you're getting ripped off. 00:38:27.760 |
And it doesn't matter if an injustice is a penny or $10 or $100. 00:38:32.900 |
At the same time, you'd be like, well, how much do I care about strawberries? 00:38:38.620 |
Like, if you really care about that, like, obviously, there's some point where it's like, 00:38:45.480 |
Because I'm like, yeah, that's kind of silly. 00:38:46.820 |
Like, at some point, like, there's like a full premium. 00:38:51.260 |
I know we probably, I'm going to say maybe we have one or two listeners in level six. 00:38:55.780 |
So, we don't need to spend too much time there. 00:39:02.060 |
Because I think the main thing to focus on, and this is helpful for any wealth level. 00:39:06.280 |
But as you get to level five, level six, as you just build wealth in general, 00:39:10.360 |
all of your problems in your life are less likely to be money problems. 00:39:14.880 |
I'm not saying you can't have money problems in level six or level five or level four. 00:39:18.180 |
But when you're in level one, you could have other problems. 00:39:20.920 |
But most of your problems are money problems. 00:39:22.500 |
As you get to the higher wealth levels, all of your problems cannot be solved by money. 00:39:29.220 |
Because you can't write, you can't like, oh, well, I've been working so much to build this wealth, 00:39:33.000 |
to sell this business, so now I'm worth $15 million. 00:39:35.720 |
But as a result of that, I can't write my spouse a check to say, hey, just forget about 00:39:42.080 |
Like, we have money now, so let's all get along. 00:39:48.220 |
You can't ACH your cardiovascular system just to work better, right? 00:39:52.140 |
So like, all the problems you're going to have in level five and level six are all the 00:39:56.980 |
That's what's being amplified there is all the non-financial pieces of your life. 00:39:59.980 |
Because you can't, money's not going to buy them, right? 00:40:06.540 |
So the thing I tell people to focus on, if you're in those levels, they're probably not, 00:40:11.480 |
they're probably focusing too much on their money and not enough on everything else in 00:40:16.020 |
So that's the, in the, in the wealth ladder, in the book, I talk about this stuff in level 00:40:20.220 |
fives and level six, which is like, hey, focus on all the non-financial pieces because 00:40:26.100 |
Focus on all the other things because I bet you're overlooking at least your health or your 00:40:30.220 |
relationships or your friendships or some piece of your life you're overlooking and you 00:40:35.200 |
When I, when I first started with the book, I was like, oh, you know what? 00:40:38.760 |
I feel like Nick needs to go read Sahil's book about the five types of wealth. 00:40:44.860 |
Then I get to the point of the book where you actually referenced the entire thing. 00:40:47.640 |
So I'm curious to date, all of the wealth you've talked about on the ladder, moving up the 00:40:53.160 |
How do you think about other types of wealth, whether it's family or health or anything like 00:40:59.040 |
It's very funny because I collaborated with Sahil on his book when he needed help with the 00:41:05.760 |
And so it's very interesting because all these types of wealth, like they're easy to overlook 00:41:11.900 |
Like I can look at my bank balance or I can give you a number of like, hey, here's what's 00:41:16.100 |
Of course it's approximated, but still like, I can give you a number. 00:41:18.620 |
Can I give you an exact measure of my health? 00:41:21.900 |
Like I could, I would assume, well, I could tell you my VO2 max. 00:41:25.260 |
I can tell you all this stuff at the end of the day. 00:41:26.600 |
Like for all you know, there's something going wrong somewhere else in my body that 00:41:29.880 |
I can't even predict that none of these measures are going to pick up. 00:41:32.400 |
So at the end of the day, your relationship, you can't with your spouse, with your children, 00:41:37.360 |
You can, you can come up with a rating, but you don't know like the other person's feelings, 00:41:43.380 |
So they just kind of, they get overlooked basically. 00:41:45.820 |
And so I think that's the big problem with the other types of wealth. 00:41:50.880 |
And especially after talking about level five and level six, where it's like, these people 00:41:54.340 |
have all this wealth and all this wealth is not going to fix these other problems in their 00:41:58.140 |
So it's a good reminder of all the other things that matter in our lives and kind of where 00:42:03.460 |
I've been fortunate to have a lot of travel in my life, but I've met people all around the 00:42:09.800 |
Some of whom are, are very squarely in level one, uh, very happy people. 00:42:15.500 |
And when I heard you saying like, Oh, this got you into level five, it almost made it feel 00:42:20.440 |
like you've got to climb and climb the ladder. 00:42:23.360 |
And I'm wondering how you think about general life happiness and whether we even need to be 00:42:30.480 |
climbing or maybe once you get to level two or three, like, is that enough? 00:42:33.860 |
Uh, versus kind of thinking of it as something that we need to get to the top of. 00:42:40.260 |
Without a doubt, level four is like, you know, 1 million to 10 million. 00:42:43.800 |
If you're in that level, you do not need to keep climbing. 00:42:45.620 |
I don't think it, it's going to add much value to your life personally. 00:42:48.820 |
However, I can see why people would say, you know what, maybe level three is not enough 00:42:55.060 |
And even if you have a million dollars, that's not gonna be able to throw off enough income 00:43:00.440 |
So I think it matters like based on your lifestyle, what you value in your life. 00:43:04.400 |
Like there's people level two, level one that are very happy, that are happier than 00:43:08.880 |
In general, happiness tends to go up with income and wealth, you know, as long as you're 00:43:13.000 |
But, um, that's why I said, like, where's enough? 00:43:17.520 |
I think for most people, it's level three and level four. 00:43:19.840 |
Now, of course, can you get, there's happy people all over the place. 00:43:23.000 |
But, you know, if you don't want to have to worry about money, stresses, all those other 00:43:26.520 |
things, I encourage people to get at least out of, you know, level one for sure. 00:43:35.540 |
You can be much happier, you know, with, with no wealth. 00:43:38.400 |
But I'm just saying, I'm showing what the data shows. 00:43:40.180 |
The data shows, remember that original study from, you know, Kahneman and Deaton, it was 00:43:43.740 |
like, hey, your happiness doesn't increase after $70,000 a year. 00:43:47.400 |
Well, and they kind of went through the data and get again and dug through it. 00:43:50.100 |
And basically, um, happiness does keep increasing above $70,000 a year in income and with wealth, 00:43:57.320 |
They've looked at wealth and at income, but the issue is you have to already be happy, right? 00:44:04.200 |
If you're not a happy person, more money is not going to make you happier. 00:44:08.600 |
But if you're happy and you're loving life, I'm telling you more money is going to probably 00:44:13.700 |
No, I don't know why people are saying otherwise. 00:44:16.060 |
I just don't want to, you know, mislead people. 00:44:17.920 |
And you mentioned, um, the kind of, I don't know, the myth we see on, on the internet of 00:44:22.540 |
like all these people that are in their thirties that are millionaires and how the data shows 00:44:27.560 |
Um, what is the kind of timeline to get through these levels? 00:44:32.440 |
Like how long does it take to move up and what other kind of myths might exist in society 00:44:37.800 |
about, about, you know, where we should be at certain times? 00:44:41.980 |
So the, the data is all in, in chapter 10 of the book where I go through a lot of this stuff, 00:44:45.520 |
but like the median age for someone in level four, which is 1 million to 10 million is 00:44:53.960 |
And I have data in the book, which goes through like all the percentages in terms of, okay, 00:44:58.380 |
you know, this percentage of people, um, went up one wealth level within 10 years or 20 00:45:03.000 |
Basically long story short is like, it just takes time. 00:45:06.580 |
So after, after 20 years, uh, 32% of households will have gone up one level. 00:45:14.420 |
So wherever you are now, whatever wealth level you're in, you know, within the next 20 years, 00:45:24.080 |
This doesn't control for ages across all ages. 00:45:26.360 |
There's a 5% chance you'll be up two wealth levels, right? 00:45:30.160 |
And then over a 10 year front timeframe, there's a 20% chance you're up one level. 00:45:34.260 |
There's a two and a half percent chance you're up two levels. 00:45:36.500 |
So it does happen, but as you can see, it's hard. 00:45:39.080 |
And so you can still build wealth and stay in your level. 00:45:42.120 |
But just to show that the percentage of households moving up and down levels is, 00:45:48.320 |
Uh, I can't help, but think with two kids about the chutes and ladders analogy. 00:45:52.700 |
It's like, you know, yes, you can stay standing. 00:45:55.980 |
Yes, you can move up, but do people do things like overspending or make risky investments and 00:46:04.280 |
I can give you the date again, over a 10 year period, roughly 11% of households will go 00:46:10.580 |
And then 2% of households will be down two levels. 00:46:15.280 |
It's, there's much more upward mobility than downward mobility, because I think most households 00:46:20.260 |
63% of households won't change their level at all. 00:46:22.700 |
And then over a 20 year period, only 12% of households will be down a level over 20 years, 00:46:28.540 |
whichever level you're in today, there's only a 12% chance you're going to be down any number 00:46:33.620 |
So it's unlikely over long periods of time that that happens, but it's something to consider, 00:46:39.800 |
You can look at, and there's even switching matrices where it's like, oh, if you start 00:46:43.620 |
at this level, what's the percentage I'm going to be at that level in 10 years or 20, 00:46:46.880 |
And so you can start going through all the data and thinking about this stuff. 00:46:49.620 |
And I think it's kind of cool to see that because I'm actually following the same households. 00:46:54.420 |
I'm like saying, let's look at how households actually built wealth since it's from 1984 to 00:46:59.560 |
And so we're kind of just looking through all these 10 year and 20 year periods that are 00:47:03.120 |
And we're just saying like, how did they actually build wealth and what percentage of them moved 00:47:06.620 |
And it's very fascinating for me to see this data. 00:47:10.300 |
If someone really wanted to nerd out, they can download it and play around with it. 00:47:13.540 |
It's the it's from the University of Michigan PSID data. 00:47:19.720 |
But if you're interested in doing this, please DM me. 00:47:27.040 |
You can probably get this thing up and running if you even if you've never programmed too much 00:47:30.600 |
And you can actually download the data and get all this stuff running and you can play with 00:47:35.880 |
That's one of those things where I'm like, oh, that would be fun. 00:47:37.900 |
But you've done a pretty good job summarizing it. 00:47:39.980 |
So I'm not going to go down that rabbit hole. 00:47:45.320 |
The core idea is there is mobility upward that's generally true, at least in U.S. 00:47:51.380 |
I think that's probably going to be true in the in the future, even though, yes, it's been 00:47:55.600 |
I think Gen Z, millennials, you know, Gen Alpha, all these people like it's been tougher on them 00:48:02.420 |
Like for a host of reasons, I think housing prices is one of those big determinants that's 00:48:07.060 |
But we're going to see this change over time as the as the boomers, you know, pass on and 00:48:11.600 |
stuff all that wealth is going to start moving back into the next generation, etc. 00:48:16.220 |
I think we just the median home, the first time homebuyer age is going to go up. 00:48:19.500 |
Like we're just going to delay what we normally would have done earlier in life. 00:48:22.900 |
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So I love the .01% rule, but there's also a 1% rule that I hadn't heard, which maybe I thought 00:49:46.960 |
was even more impactful as someone who loves a good side hustle, but recently has been trying 00:49:53.060 |
to make sure that I don't waste time on business opportunities or work ideas that aren't really 00:50:02.720 |
So the 1% rule is just take 1% of your net worth, and that's the amount that should 00:50:08.780 |
be the minimum before you consider getting into an opportunity. 00:50:12.900 |
Let's say you're worth $100,000, and someone's like, hey, would you be willing to come speak 00:50:22.340 |
Your cutoff should be $1,000, which is 1% of your net worth. 00:50:28.000 |
It's like you have to think about income opportunities and how they impact you, and 00:50:31.820 |
so whether you're willing to take on that income opportunity. 00:50:34.480 |
And of course, obviously, it matters how much time you have to put into the thing, but I just 00:50:39.200 |
like using it as a different way to evaluate a new income opportunity, right? 00:50:42.900 |
Because a lot of times, people will be thinking about these things, and they'll say, oh, wait, 00:50:46.900 |
And it's like, oh, wait, that's actually not going to move the needle at all. 00:50:50.420 |
And this is really true more for business owners and entrepreneurs, and people have all these 00:50:53.500 |
different things, a lot of hats, a lot of things you're doing, side hustles, things 00:50:57.160 |
I think it's more applicable for those people than it is for others. 00:50:59.960 |
And so you're lower on the wealth ladder, you'll say yes to almost everything, right? 00:51:03.080 |
Because 1% of your net worth isn't that much money. 00:51:04.620 |
But as you go up, you're like, yeah, this isn't really worth my time anymore. 00:51:07.180 |
And so you have to really rethink that, because it just doesn't make an impact. 00:51:11.100 |
For some reason, I never thought about it as a percent of net worth, and I always just 00:51:16.980 |
Whereas early on, it was like, oh, is this thing going to make a car payment? 00:51:21.120 |
And then it's like, oh, okay, now is this thing going to make a rent payment or a mortgage 00:51:25.320 |
Or maybe you have kids in school, is this going to cover their tuition? 00:51:30.660 |
And I've always visually thought of it as something, but I never really had a framework for how to 00:51:40.900 |
Yes, I have a business and we have opportunities where we're like, oh, should we plan trips 00:51:47.860 |
But even when I was working, it's like, oh, here's this side hustle. 00:51:51.600 |
I talked about buying and selling gold at Costco, and I did a whole episode on it. 00:51:55.640 |
It's like, okay, but how much is this thing actually going to make? 00:52:00.700 |
Because not only is there time involved, but we have this limited amount of headspace to 00:52:07.440 |
And I could spend all my day thinking about flipping gift cards from the grocery store. 00:52:11.680 |
But if the overhead that's going to cause and the anxiety of, oh, is there a sale this weekend 00:52:17.120 |
All of those things combined will make me $500 a month. 00:52:20.720 |
I should probably take that thing and just shove it to the side. 00:52:23.780 |
But 10, 15, 20 years ago, me in college totally would have been all over it. 00:52:29.600 |
It's like, you're going to make different decisions about your spending income investments 00:52:35.500 |
I try to come up with different rules for each one of these things. 00:52:37.840 |
We were talking about travel and how, you know, level four, you've got a million dollars 00:52:44.180 |
I know people that listen to this show probably want to travel even sooner. 00:52:48.680 |
And how has that been a part of your journey? 00:52:50.860 |
So it's not that you can't travel sooner than that. 00:52:56.760 |
It's like, because at a million dollars, that marginal spend from the 0.01% rule is a hundred 00:53:04.120 |
So that's not a ton of money, but like, hey, I can get a slightly better seat or I can upgrade 00:53:10.040 |
You can start making those types of decisions when you start to get into level four. 00:53:13.520 |
But as you get deeper into level four, then you can make bigger and bigger types of travel 00:53:19.920 |
It's not that like, oh, as soon as you hit a million bucks, now you can do whatever you 00:53:23.020 |
No, but it's like over time, you're gonna be able to do that. 00:53:25.360 |
And so what I say is like, that's why I think hacks like this matter because I'm in level 00:53:29.620 |
So I'm like, hey, travel freedom matters to me, but I need to use these hacks because I don't 00:53:35.720 |
I can't go and upgrade my, uh, my flight anytime I want. 00:53:39.420 |
So I have to use points and all these things. 00:53:40.540 |
So a lot of this stuff matters in the context of your level. 00:53:43.880 |
Even if you're in level four, you still need to kind of use these things. 00:53:47.020 |
So something to think about, you know, for those that are, that are wanting to travel a lot. 00:53:50.520 |
I think that the, the nice thing is that as you're earlier in your journey, you have a 00:53:57.400 |
We were talking with some friends who have no children and they're like, oh yeah, we could 00:54:01.880 |
You know, they could go anywhere, anytime, no, no regard to school schedules, you know, 00:54:06.360 |
three hour red eye, 12 hour layover, it doesn't matter. 00:54:09.140 |
Um, and so earlier in your career or your journey or your life, uh, the ability to leverage things 00:54:17.240 |
like points and miles where flexibility just gives you a huge, huge leverage on, on what value 00:54:24.580 |
you can get, gives you a kind of like shortcut to some of these, these freedoms. 00:54:29.100 |
Like, I think you have a lot of travel freedom earlier in your career. 00:54:31.820 |
If you, if you play the points game well, and you're flexible that otherwise would have 00:54:36.000 |
cost you, you know, a lot that would be kind of not prudent to spend on. 00:54:42.160 |
So that's a very different way of thinking about travel freedom in that sense. 00:54:45.460 |
Like you can do more stuff, but like, you're kind of, because you're more flexible, you're, 00:54:49.260 |
you know, it's like, you can't go like, you know, I can't take my family to Hawaii during 00:54:53.820 |
Cause that's when everyone else wants to go to spring break in Hawaii, right? 00:54:55.680 |
It's like, that's the type of stuff where like, you don't have that flexibility. 00:55:02.620 |
There's ways to hack travel freedom, to have it earlier in, you know, with less wealth. 00:55:05.940 |
But it requires a little bit more effort on your part, right? 00:55:08.440 |
The whole idea of travel freedom is by the time you get to 10 million, you don't have to 00:55:11.540 |
You say, Hey, I want to go here at this time. 00:55:12.880 |
You just go, you know, that's the kind of the difference. 00:55:15.360 |
You've been on this journey yourself, you know, through some of the levels. 00:55:19.120 |
What are some of the big takeaways you've gotten and some of the mindset kind of shifts 00:55:23.080 |
you've made as you move through this journey? 00:55:24.860 |
So a few things, the first one that I had was like, stop focusing so much on my investments 00:55:31.300 |
And that was, I over obsessed with investments and that's why I'm an investment financial 00:55:35.180 |
But like at the same time, like I should have been focused a little bit more on my career 00:55:39.440 |
in terms of just actual financial dollars I was bringing in. 00:55:43.300 |
So that was the first mindset change was to really become income focused. 00:55:49.920 |
It's just, it's how my relationship with money has changed. 00:55:54.860 |
I would say level two, even though my, my parents declared bankruptcy twice. 00:55:57.740 |
It happened within like a 10 year span basically. 00:55:59.740 |
And though that's technically level one, like I didn't grow up in level one for all practical 00:56:04.260 |
So I would say like, I grew up in level two, I've lived that lifestyle and then kind of going 00:56:08.140 |
to level three and level four and just seeing those changes and kind of understanding 00:56:11.880 |
like how different people like, you know, view money. 00:56:15.120 |
And it's just interesting to me to kind of, to, to witness that personally, but then also 00:56:19.220 |
like how it's, it's been able to transform my life and my relationship with my family. 00:56:22.840 |
Like my sister, her car broke down and she was like, Oh my gosh, what am I gonna do? 00:56:25.380 |
I'm like, you know, I was like, Kelly, I'll just write you a check. 00:56:30.860 |
And so that's the big thing that I've seen change is like how my relationship with money 00:56:34.980 |
and it's a tool for a lot of things that can help people. 00:56:37.640 |
And I think that, you know, getting that first thing out of level one into level two is 00:56:42.540 |
And so just, and building on that is what's important. 00:56:46.280 |
If you had to zoom out a little bit and think, what do you think someone who, who kind of 00:56:50.940 |
understands the ladder and understands how to get through it and the risk associated, how 00:56:55.660 |
do you think that really impacts their life and their journey? 00:56:59.940 |
I think you can make much better decisions on how to prioritize your time and what you're 00:57:05.960 |
And I think if you don't understand the ladder, you're just going to keep trying to maximize 00:57:11.520 |
And if you understand it, you can understand what the trade-offs are and what's needed to 00:57:16.120 |
And like the sacrifices and all those different things. 00:57:19.320 |
I think you can make much better decisions about what do I want to do with my time? 00:57:22.700 |
How do I want to spend my time with who, you know, at what frequency, et cetera. 00:57:27.500 |
I think those are the types of decisions that really impact your life because you can start 00:57:32.340 |
And once you realize that, so I talked a little bit about the level four stuff, it's because 00:57:37.680 |
And you're spending all this time, you know, running on the hamster wheel and you're never 00:57:41.180 |
going to get out and it doesn't really impact your wealth that much anymore. 00:57:46.580 |
And so I think that's kind of the big mindset shift is like realizing like, okay, once you understand 00:57:51.700 |
the ladder and all the decisions behind it, you can make much better decisions on how you 00:57:56.300 |
use your time and what you do with your life. 00:58:01.620 |
Where can people find everything you're working on? 00:58:05.860 |
All my stuff I'm working on is going to be at ofdollarsanddata.com. 00:58:08.500 |
If you want to learn more about the book, you can go to wellflatterbook.com. 00:58:11.800 |
And yeah, if you have any questions, feel free to DM me. 00:58:19.480 |
So reach out to me anytime and be happy to chat. 00:58:21.980 |
Yeah, we'll link to everything in the show notes. 00:58:25.540 |
Thanks so much, Chris. Appreciate having me on again. Thank you.