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Host Matthew Gray, welcomes personal finance professor and behavioral economist Jeff Hulett to discuss why people struggle to make good financial decisions even when they know what they should do. Jeff contrasts objective business decision-making with common consumer behavior and explains three drivers of poor decisions: human neurobiology, short-term thinking, and an American “buy now, pay later” commercial culture.
He describes “choice architecture” as a structured, repeatable decision process supported by technology that helps people define and weight their personal criteria, consider alternatives, reduce confirmation bias, and improve confidence—especially for major decisions like buying a house, including helping couples reconcile preferences.
Jeff introduces his “Five Nots” (the “not to seek” framework) to build the mindset needed to live below one’s means: not luxury, not ignorance (failure to update beliefs), not vanity, not immediate gratification, and not risk avoidance. Jeff shows how misinformation and unexamined beliefs can lead to harmful outcomes.
The episode closes with resources including Jeff's book “Making Choices, Making Money,” access to decision-making software (Definitive), and guidance on using generative AI as a thinking partner rather than a crutch.
00:37 Today’s Topic: Why Money Decisions Feel So Hard
02:03 Meet Jeff: Behavioral Economist + Banker Perspective
05:13 The $16 Million Retirement Path (and Why Most Miss It)
08:38 Why Bad Money Decisions Happen: Brain, Culture, and the Information Age
14:49 What Is Choice Architecture? A Repeatable Decision-Making System
19:57 Values vs Feelings: Using Structure to Beat Confirmation Bias
22:29 Couples Example: Reconciling Priorities When Buying a Home
26:33 The “Five Nots” Framework: A Mindset for Living Below Your Means
30:21 Not Seeking More: Diminishing Returns on Luxuries (Morgan Housel Tie-In)
31:11 Money, Income & Happiness: The Curve That Flattens Out
33:52 The 5 “Not-Seeking” Rules (Football Field Boundaries)
35:30 Not Luxury: Beating FOMO (The $17,000 Bike ‘Faux Pro’ Trap)
41:52 Opportunity Cost Reality Check: What That Upgrade Really Costs
43:55 Not Ignorance: Updating Beliefs, Habits & Confirmation Bias
51:39 From Framework to Life Decisions: The “Good Decision Road”
55:34 Tools to Apply It: Book, Choice Architecture Software & GenAI
59:10 Parenting & Quiet Wealth + Wrap-Up, Disclosures
Resources
Jeff Hulett
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffhulett/
https://www.financerevamp.com/
Making Choices, Making Money Book
The Art of Spending Book
Matthew Gray
https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-gray-cfp%C2%AE-5a2144134/
https://schrockfin.com/
Securities and advisory services offered through LPL Financial, a registered investment advisor, Member FINRA/SIPC
By Matthew Gray, CFP®Host Matthew Gray, welcomes personal finance professor and behavioral economist Jeff Hulett to discuss why people struggle to make good financial decisions even when they know what they should do. Jeff contrasts objective business decision-making with common consumer behavior and explains three drivers of poor decisions: human neurobiology, short-term thinking, and an American “buy now, pay later” commercial culture.
He describes “choice architecture” as a structured, repeatable decision process supported by technology that helps people define and weight their personal criteria, consider alternatives, reduce confirmation bias, and improve confidence—especially for major decisions like buying a house, including helping couples reconcile preferences.
Jeff introduces his “Five Nots” (the “not to seek” framework) to build the mindset needed to live below one’s means: not luxury, not ignorance (failure to update beliefs), not vanity, not immediate gratification, and not risk avoidance. Jeff shows how misinformation and unexamined beliefs can lead to harmful outcomes.
The episode closes with resources including Jeff's book “Making Choices, Making Money,” access to decision-making software (Definitive), and guidance on using generative AI as a thinking partner rather than a crutch.
00:37 Today’s Topic: Why Money Decisions Feel So Hard
02:03 Meet Jeff: Behavioral Economist + Banker Perspective
05:13 The $16 Million Retirement Path (and Why Most Miss It)
08:38 Why Bad Money Decisions Happen: Brain, Culture, and the Information Age
14:49 What Is Choice Architecture? A Repeatable Decision-Making System
19:57 Values vs Feelings: Using Structure to Beat Confirmation Bias
22:29 Couples Example: Reconciling Priorities When Buying a Home
26:33 The “Five Nots” Framework: A Mindset for Living Below Your Means
30:21 Not Seeking More: Diminishing Returns on Luxuries (Morgan Housel Tie-In)
31:11 Money, Income & Happiness: The Curve That Flattens Out
33:52 The 5 “Not-Seeking” Rules (Football Field Boundaries)
35:30 Not Luxury: Beating FOMO (The $17,000 Bike ‘Faux Pro’ Trap)
41:52 Opportunity Cost Reality Check: What That Upgrade Really Costs
43:55 Not Ignorance: Updating Beliefs, Habits & Confirmation Bias
51:39 From Framework to Life Decisions: The “Good Decision Road”
55:34 Tools to Apply It: Book, Choice Architecture Software & GenAI
59:10 Parenting & Quiet Wealth + Wrap-Up, Disclosures
Resources
Jeff Hulett
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffhulett/
https://www.financerevamp.com/
Making Choices, Making Money Book
The Art of Spending Book
Matthew Gray
https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-gray-cfp%C2%AE-5a2144134/
https://schrockfin.com/
Securities and advisory services offered through LPL Financial, a registered investment advisor, Member FINRA/SIPC