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One of my good buddies has a multimillion dollar tile company. Why? He didn’t dream of owning a tile company. He just worked for a guy with a tile company and thought he could make more money starting his own thing rather then working for someone else. He was right.
Another friend worked for a Canadian company that bought energy in Canada wholesale and sold it retail to other countries. He learned the business and decided to do it on his own. He makes A LOT of money now.
Then there is me. I worked for a cosmetic surgery company right after residency and realized that it wasn’t a very difficult business model to understand. Advertise big, lots of procedures, and profit. Think hair club but with facelifts. I figured I’d try something similar and it worked!
In all of these examples, it was just a matter of experience. All three of us are entrepreneurs, we just happened to be exposed to different things. How much we all make from our businesses actually depends a lot more on the business model that we each copied than the execution. Makes me wish I worked in the energy business in Canada as a young man.
Anyway, the moral of the story is that experiences matter. The more experiences you have, the greater exposure you have to all the different nooks and crannies that life has to offer…business or otherwise.
So, putting this all in perspective, what is the take home message? Well, get out there and learn something new for one thing. Do some things you’ve never done.
Also, let me tell you how this realization affects the way I see education and the way I guide my kids. They are little but this is what I’ll tell them someday.
A broad academic education is important. You can never go wrong with an interdisciplinary perspective.
Furthermore, after school, never look at your job as work. Look at it as paid education and quit when you have no more to gain intellectually. You don’t want to be one of those people who stays in the same job for 20 years and complains about it for 18.
This advice is based on my own life experience and from the life experiences of others who I know. But it is also based in science. It is based on the way our brains learn and adapt and the more aware we are of these patterns, the more we can guide ourselves towards success.
No one knows more on this topic then my guest on this week’s Wealth Formula Podcast, behavioral neurobiologist Dr. Kelly Lambert. Make sure to listen to this show. It will be well worth your time and your brain will thank you for it!
That’s not to say that I am personally a permabull. Like most people who follow the economy, I do now expect a downturn of some kind. Even Fannie Mae Economist, Doug Duncan, thinks that’s going to happen. He’s as mainstream as it gets.
But what does that downturn look like? Is it blood in the streets or is it a recession in the industrial sector of the economy that we learn about two months after the fact? After all, most downturns look nothing like 2008.
So what is an investor to do? Well, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. Keep investing but be smart about it. Now is not the time to invest with a friend who’s trying his hat at the real estate game for the first time. Stick with high quality assets and, if you are passive investor, stick with high quality operators with good track records. Consider hedging with non-correlated investments like life settlements.
Don’t over leverage and keep some liquidity on the sidelines—preferably through a Wealth Formula Banking strategy that will keep your money working for you while you wait. Hedge your position but don’t act like the sky is falling…yet.
As I said, it is extremely difficult to predict the financial future but one private economic firm has done it with extraordinary accuracy since the 1940s during which time they have been right almost 95 percent of the time. They predicted the 2008 meltdown 3 years before it happened and they predicted all of the upside we ha