Brett
Rants
How to Become Rich
Ain't if funny, it's all about money.
Millionaire Pauper
This simple guide isn't about becoming a millionaire. Becoming a millionaire is child's play in this day and age.
How to Become a Millionaire:
- Get a halfway decent job.
- Save a significant portion of income (10-50%).
- Work for most of your life.
See, becoming a millionaire is easy and well within the reach of anyone who puts forth the time and effort.
Now, getting sickly rich, that's a different matter.
This is a Roadmap
Not a Travelogue
I'm not sickly rich. But I believe that if I were to put forth properly directed effort for a long enough period of time, I would get sickly rich.
In much the same way that I've never walked from New York to Los Angelos, but I have done enough walking, hiking, and travelling that I can more or less extrapolate what the trip would be like. And believe it or not, it's not a trip I want to make.
Streams of Income
No, this isn't some get rich quick scheme, but one has to start somewhere. And I am going to call this starting somewhere a Stream of Income. It doesn't matter much to me whether this means continuing to work as a corporate lawyer, getting a part time job at the local fast food restaurant, or babysitting the neighbour's kids.
- One has to start somewhere.
- It doesn't much matter where.
- Believe it or not, starting is the hardest part.
- The second hardest part is to keep on keeping on.
How to Become Wildly Wealthy
- Keep the best Income Stream going.
- Change that Income Stream up a little.
- Try something new.
- Rinse and repeat.
Since this may be a bit unclear, let me restate the basic idea.
- Make money as best as possible.
- Put more energy into what works.
- Put less energy into what doesn't work.
- Switch it up and try something new.
If that's still unclear, well, not everyone gets to be rich. But the one line mnemonic is:
Follow the Money
So, the real key to making money is to spend lots and lots of time doing things that make more and more money.
It's not a difficult concept.
Lead by Example
As always, individual results may vary, the only thing these examples have in common is the overall pattern.
- Start with nothing
- Become fry cook at fast food joint
- Go to school
- Get better job
- Go to night school
- Get better job
- Become corporate lawyer
- Found firm that represents corporations
- Hire other lawyers
- Rejoice in the fruits from the labour of others
But maybe one has an allergy to peanut oil and hates everything about our legal system.
- Start with nothing
- Babysit the neighbour's kid
- Get more clients
- Raise rates
- Pay another to handle overflow
- Open day care centre
- In a word, start anywhere and expand slowly but surely
'Yes. Yes. Yes. Children may be our future, but personally, I can't stand the blessed things.'
- Start with nothing
- Mow neighbour's yard
- Start yard service
- Hire some schmuck who isn't as enterprising to take care of the overflow
- Rinse and repeat
'But, hey! I've got hay-fever!'
Not to worry!
- Start with nothing
- Bake a cake
- Sell a cake
- Bake a pie
- Sell a pie
- Start catering service
- Do that county fair thing
- Open restaurant
- Open chain of restaurants
- Count vast stacks of cash
So, the basic pattern is simple:
- Start somewhere
- Expand or move on to bigger and better things
'But I don't want to work!'
Which is to say, money isn't everything.
Quality of Life
I would literally (quite literally) rather write about what I want to write about for an audience of one than slave away writing what someone else wants me to write for a few measly bucks.
There is more to life than money.
After all, many a person has decided they'd rather babysit one or two children and enjoy themselves playing with said toddlers than spending their time managing a day care centre. The later may pay better. But for some, the former is far more enjoyable.
So, keep this in mind, most folks won't pursue a life of money for two simple reasons:
- Fishing doesn't cost that much.
- They'd rather be fishing.
Final Incoherent Words
It's easier to expand by doing a good job, doing what the customer wants.
But what this means isn't always clear. Many a person has made billions following a business strategy I would have never endorsed (and in fact, would have and have betted against -- i.e. shorted).
But that's simply because there is no predicting the future or what customers want. Hence, if one wants money, the only meaningful advice is to:
Follow the Money
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Um, have I mentioned Following the Money?
And/or that this tends to be an amoral process?
© copyright 2017 Brett Paufler
paufler.net@gmail.com