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#1 MONEY EXPERT Reveals The 75/15/10 Money System That Builds Wealth with ANY Income!

#1 MONEY EXPERT Reveals The 75/15/10 Money System That Builds Wealth with ANY Income!

Jay Shetty Podcast

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[00:02]

[music]

[00:08]

[music]

[00:30]

If someone's living paycheck to

[00:32]

paycheck, what's the very first step

[00:35]

they can take to break that cycle?

[00:37]

>> Yeah. One of the most unfortunate things

[00:39]

about money is we use money every single

[00:42]

day. It costs money to eat. It costs

[00:44]

money to feed other people. We go to

[00:46]

work to earn money. Yet, most of us are

[00:49]

never taught a thing about money. And so

[00:51]

what happens to so many people is we go

[00:54]

to school to get a good job and now we

[00:58]

go and get an income and then we go and

[01:00]

spend money and that recipe is a

[01:04]

disaster. Just statistically the

[01:07]

majority of Americans are living

[01:09]

paycheck to paycheck. And by majority it

[01:11]

depends on which study you read. It's

[01:12]

somewhere between 55% and some people

[01:15]

say as high as 78% of Americans have no

[01:19]

money left over for a gift, a vacation,

[01:23]

let alone an investment after I just pay

[01:25]

my basic necessities. [sighs]

[01:28]

And now the problem and question

[01:30]

everyone has is why and how do I get

[01:33]

out? And in order to get out, because

[01:36]

that's your question, you have to

[01:38]

understand the why.

[01:40]

Because the reality, and this is going

[01:42]

to sound harsh, but I learned this the

[01:44]

hard way. Our system

[01:48]

is so rigged

[01:50]

for the rich and the financially savvy.

[01:54]

But we're never taught to be financially

[01:57]

savvy. What do I mean? When you

[02:00]

understand money, it's much easier for

[02:04]

you to get that money and grow that

[02:06]

money. When you don't understand it,

[02:09]

you're the one that's making everybody

[02:10]

else rich. So, in this system where you

[02:14]

are working to make money and spend

[02:18]

money, you're working to make everybody

[02:20]

else rich except yourself. Why? Because

[02:23]

the majority of America and really the

[02:26]

world now is I make money and I spend

[02:30]

money. And every dollar you spend is a

[02:32]

dollar going into somebody else's

[02:34]

pocket. And in our society, we live in

[02:37]

what's called a creditbased economy.

[02:39]

What that means is if I make $100 from

[02:42]

my job, I have the ability to spend that

[02:44]

$100 plus more thanks to Visa, Amx,

[02:48]

Mastercard, Discover, and all the other

[02:50]

forms of debt out there. And so if I go

[02:53]

out and spend $100, I'm going to make

[02:55]

you $100 richer. If I spend $100 plus

[02:58]

$50 on my credit card, I just made you

[03:00]

$150 richer. And so when we live in a

[03:04]

society that's built around spending,

[03:06]

but more specifically, credit based

[03:08]

spending, and you don't have that that

[03:10]

shield, that financial education, that

[03:12]

financial savviness to know what to do

[03:15]

with your money. Well, now every

[03:17]

corporation in the world, every bank in

[03:19]

the world is going to hire the smartest

[03:21]

marketers, the smartest MBAs to get you

[03:23]

to spend your money there because that's

[03:24]

going to make them rich. And you are

[03:26]

going to work just to pay bills, just to

[03:29]

make them rich. And now you never have a

[03:31]

chance to get ahead. So this system is

[03:34]

designed this way. Now, how do you get

[03:36]

out? And the way you get out, we can

[03:38]

break it up into multiple steps now. And

[03:41]

it starts with step number one, building

[03:43]

the right mindset. So I'm going to break

[03:45]

it up into seven steps. Step number one

[03:47]

is the mindset.

[03:50]

And when it comes to mindset, there are

[03:52]

four different layers of this mindset

[03:55]

that you have to understand. Number one

[03:56]

is I will become wealthy. Number two is

[04:00]

money is abundant. Number three is money

[04:03]

is a tool. Number four, it's it's my

[04:06]

duty to become wealthy. And the reason

[04:08]

why I say that is a lot of us grow up

[04:11]

with some sort of money trauma, some

[04:13]

sort of money negativity.

[04:16]

And people say poverty is generational.

[04:19]

Well, it's not that we have a gene in

[04:21]

our DNA saying you're going to be poor.

[04:23]

What it is is you grow up hearing money

[04:26]

is bad, money is evil, we don't have

[04:27]

enough money, that's too much money, we

[04:29]

can't afford that. We hear these types

[04:30]

of things growing up. And so we start to

[04:33]

normalize those things that, oh, okay,

[04:35]

as a kid, I can't afford that trip to

[04:37]

Disneyland.

[04:38]

I can't afford these nice things that I

[04:40]

want. And then as you start to get

[04:42]

older, you start to have kids yourself.

[04:45]

What happens when your kids want nice

[04:46]

things? We can't afford that. That's too

[04:48]

much money. That that's beyond what we

[04:50]

have. So that gets passed down. It's

[04:52]

that that mindset that gets passed down.

[04:54]

So the first step is you need to change

[04:57]

the way you talk and say, "I will become

[05:00]

wealthy." And I did a little exercise. I

[05:03]

used to guest teach in Detroit public

[05:05]

schools.

[05:06]

And it was a very tough school district,

[05:09]

very rough school district. And I would

[05:12]

talk to these kids about money. And I

[05:14]

think we talked about this on our last

[05:15]

podcast, but one of the things I would

[05:16]

ask them is, "What is your dream car?"

[05:18]

[gasps]

[05:18]

And many people would have dream cars of

[05:21]

things like a Ford Focus or a Dodge

[05:23]

Challenger. And I would say, "Why not a

[05:24]

Bugatti? Why not a Rolls-Royce?" And the

[05:27]

answer that I would get is somebody like

[05:29]

me from my background could never have a

[05:31]

nice car like that. So when you tell

[05:33]

yourself I can't, I guarantee you can't.

[05:37]

Which is why you have to start saying I

[05:39]

will become wealthy. Number two is money

[05:41]

is a tool. Many people are scared to

[05:43]

talk about money because we're insecure

[05:45]

about our own money. But the reality is

[05:48]

money is a tool that can amplify who you

[05:51]

are. You give a good person more money,

[05:52]

they have a tool to do more good. You

[05:54]

give a bad person more money, they have

[05:55]

a tool to do more bad. Which is why we

[05:57]

need more good people with money and

[06:00]

understanding that hey, you know what?

[06:01]

It is just a tool that can allow you to

[06:03]

do more things to take better care of

[06:05]

your family, your kids, your parents,

[06:06]

and your community. Yeah. I think the

[06:08]

challenge is we look at how much we're

[06:11]

worth as a sign of how much we are

[06:14]

worth, right? Like there's that idea of

[06:17]

we're almost looking at it. The reason

[06:18]

we're uncomfortable or insecure talking

[06:20]

about money is because in some way we

[06:22]

believe society values us based on how

[06:24]

much we make. And suddenly we may have

[06:27]

started to value ourselves that way as

[06:28]

well. Well, this is 100% true. And just

[06:33]

take a look at it from Instagram.

[06:37]

Instagram has become a highlight reel.

[06:40]

I'm going to show my best self. But we

[06:41]

often don't look at it as somebody

[06:43]

else's highlight reel. We look at it as

[06:45]

somebody else's average. And now, let's

[06:46]

say you're in a relationship. Uh, your

[06:50]

wife is now on Instagram and she sees,

[06:52]

"Oh my god, this couple's going to

[06:53]

Cancun. Oh my god, look at this nice

[06:54]

house that this couple has. Oh my, look

[06:56]

at the car he just got her. What's going

[06:58]

to happen? Hey, hub's husband, how come

[07:01]

we can't have these nice things? What

[07:03]

are we doing wrong? How come we we feel

[07:05]

the sense of like I'm missing out?" And

[07:09]

so now we go back to my money is my

[07:12]

worth.

[07:14]

But that's not true. Money is one part

[07:17]

of our lives. And you have to understand

[07:20]

that more money will allow you to

[07:22]

fulfill the financial part of your life,

[07:24]

which is important. But the only way you

[07:26]

get there is by getting on the same page

[07:28]

about money and building that separation

[07:32]

between the emotional side of money and

[07:35]

the logic side of money. And that can be

[07:37]

difficult because often times,

[07:39]

especially when we're struggling with

[07:40]

money, we're thinking emotionally. Why

[07:43]

is it that the casinos are in the

[07:46]

poorest neighborhoods? Why is it that

[07:49]

all these stores are designed to profit

[07:53]

off of people that don't have money?

[07:56]

It's because when you don't have money,

[07:57]

man, it is easy to say, "Hey, let me

[08:00]

give you a dopamine hit. Buy this nice

[08:03]

pair of shoes. Buy this Gucci purse. buy

[08:05]

this whatever thing to the people that

[08:09]

can least afford it because it gives you

[08:10]

that emotional rush that oh [gasps]

[08:13]

that spending therapy. But that's the

[08:17]

same thing that's keeping you broke. You

[08:20]

look rich. You feel better for the

[08:22]

moment and then you have to pay it back

[08:24]

plus interest. And in the beginning of

[08:27]

this podcast, I said our system is

[08:28]

designed to profit off of people that

[08:31]

don't understand this. Well, the reality

[08:33]

is our system is designed to profit off

[08:35]

of keeping you poor. And it's going to

[08:38]

sound harsh, but the reality is banks

[08:40]

profit when you are in debt. The more

[08:43]

debt you are in, the more money they

[08:44]

make. Corporations profit when you spend

[08:47]

money. The more you spend, the more they

[08:49]

make. The government profits when you

[08:51]

are financially uneducated because now

[08:53]

you're going to pay the highest taxes

[08:54]

and you're going to be stuck relying on

[08:56]

the government. when in reality when you

[08:58]

become financially educated you can pay

[09:00]

less money in taxes legally and not need

[09:05]

those same services per se from the

[09:08]

government. That's why the financial

[09:10]

education is so important. But the only

[09:12]

way you can get there is if you can

[09:15]

separate the emotional side from the

[09:17]

logic side. And it starts with that

[09:19]

mindset.

[09:20]

>> Money is a tool.

[09:21]

>> Money is a tool.

[09:21]

>> Yeah.

[09:22]

>> And then it's number three. Money is

[09:24]

abundant. This one is is is a tough one,

[09:27]

but it is one of the most powerful

[09:30]

tools to become financially successful.

[09:35]

Let's say now you make $50,000 a year

[09:38]

and you start to watch some financial

[09:41]

education content on YouTube and you're

[09:42]

like, "Oh, wow. I like this idea to

[09:44]

invest my money." And you become

[09:46]

extremely aggressive and you find a way

[09:47]

to live off of $40,000 and invest

[09:50]

$10,000 a year. [gasps]

[09:52]

Well, what happens to a lot of people in

[09:54]

that situation is you say, "You know

[09:56]

what, Jaspit? I want to do more of this.

[09:59]

I want to be more of an investor because

[10:01]

I can see that light at the end of the

[10:03]

tunnel. I'm going to live now instead of

[10:06]

off of $40,000 a year, I'm going to live

[10:08]

off of $38,000 a year and put aside

[10:11]

12,000. Then maybe I live off of

[10:13]

$37,000. I'm going to invest 13,000."

[10:16]

This is a scarcity mindset way of

[10:18]

thinking because you think that there's

[10:20]

a limited pie and you can just squeeze

[10:22]

more pennies out of the pie. I mean,

[10:24]

everybody on the internet talks about

[10:25]

why you need to stop thinking straw

[10:27]

Starbucks so you can have $5 more to

[10:29]

invest. Well, let's flip that just a

[10:32]

little bit. You make $50,000 a year.

[10:34]

You're saving and investing $10,000. But

[10:37]

what if now you work to earn $500,000 a

[10:40]

year? And if you were going to save and

[10:43]

invest that same percentage of your

[10:44]

income, that means now you can save and

[10:46]

invest $100,000 a year. Now, the first

[10:50]

time you hear that, your response is

[10:52]

probably going to be just you are out of

[10:54]

your mind. My boss is not going to 10x

[10:56]

my income. How am I supposed to go from

[10:58]

50 grand to $500,000 a year? Are you,

[11:01]

you know, bad word? Well, I want you to

[11:04]

take a step back. What did we just say?

[11:07]

I will become wealthy. Money is a tool.

[11:09]

Money is abundant. There's a lot of

[11:11]

money in the world. A lot of money.

[11:14]

There are some people that make whatever

[11:16]

you make in a month. There are people

[11:19]

that make whatever you make in a week.

[11:20]

There are people that make whatever you

[11:21]

make in a day. And there's probably

[11:23]

people that make whatever you're making

[11:24]

in an hour. If you start to reframe the

[11:27]

way you look at money, now you can start

[11:30]

doing different things. Maybe you start

[11:31]

watching more YouTube videos on how do

[11:32]

you earn more money. Maybe you start to

[11:33]

read books about it. And maybe you don't

[11:35]

get to $500,000 a year, but maybe you

[11:37]

get 80% of the way there, 50% of the way

[11:39]

there.

[11:40]

It's still a lot further and you will

[11:43]

never get there unless you start

[11:44]

thinking about money in terms of

[11:45]

abundance. And finally, it is my duty to

[11:49]

become wealthy. In the sik religion, um

[11:52]

we have three main values. I'm not here

[11:54]

to preach anything, but there are three

[11:56]

main fundamental tenants,

[12:02]

which means remember God, serve others

[12:04]

before you serve yourself, and earn an

[12:06]

honest living. It is in my belief your

[12:09]

duty to become financially successful so

[12:11]

you can take better care of yourself,

[12:13]

better take care of your family and take

[12:15]

better care of your community. And once

[12:18]

you can understand these things and

[12:19]

change the way you think, it's not easy,

[12:21]

but if you can work on that, listen to

[12:23]

your podcast, listen to the other stuff

[12:25]

out there, now you can move on to step

[12:27]

number two, which is learn the rules of

[12:31]

money. And again, I know we're getting

[12:33]

into the theoretical stuff right after

[12:34]

this. We'll talk about the practical

[12:36]

side of what do you actually do with

[12:37]

your money. But you have to learn the

[12:38]

rules of money because one of the things

[12:40]

that I learned is that wealthy people

[12:43]

understand that money is a game

[12:46]

and every single person is playing this

[12:49]

money game.

[12:50]

>> Mhm.

[12:50]

>> But the way that wealthy people are

[12:53]

playing the money games are very

[12:55]

different than everybody else.

[12:57]

>> The average person thinks about money

[12:59]

and how you attract that money is I have

[13:01]

to go to work and I have to earn this

[13:02]

money. I have to I have to work hard to

[13:04]

get this money. Now, you do have to work

[13:06]

hard. There's no way around that. But

[13:08]

the way that wealthy people and

[13:09]

financially savvy people think about

[13:10]

money is I'm going to work hard not to

[13:13]

make the money, but own an asset.

[13:16]

>> And this asset is going to make me more

[13:17]

money. I'm going to work to own the the

[13:19]

things that will keep paying me even

[13:21]

after I stop working.

[13:23]

And that is a completely different

[13:25]

different way of thinking because the

[13:27]

average person is thinking if I can make

[13:31]

a little bit more money, I'm going to

[13:32]

drive a better car. If I can make a

[13:34]

little bit more money, I'm going to buy

[13:35]

a better house. If I could get a bonus,

[13:37]

I'm going to go on a vacation. If I

[13:39]

could get a nice raise, I'm going to buy

[13:40]

my wife a nice purse. We think in terms

[13:43]

of spending. Wealthy people think in

[13:45]

terms of investments. And there's three

[13:48]

rules of money that I learned that you

[13:51]

have to understand. Number one is that

[13:54]

money flows to the investor.

[13:57]

When I go to Chipotle and I and I buy a

[14:01]

bowl of extra guac, who am I benefiting?

[14:06]

Am I really supporting the employees?

[14:08]

Yes, in a way, because I will be paying

[14:10]

their salary, but the the real profits

[14:13]

are going to the owners of Chipotle.

[14:15]

It's going to the investors of Chipotle.

[14:18]

Money rule number two is inflation

[14:22]

benefits the investor. What does that

[14:24]

mean? Over the last 5 years, we've seen

[14:28]

the prices of things rise. This is

[14:30]

because of inflation. Inflation didn't

[14:32]

just start after the pandemic. It's been

[14:34]

happening for a long long long time. And

[14:36]

so you might have heard your

[14:37]

grandparents or parents say, "When I was

[14:39]

young, I used to go to the movie theater

[14:41]

for a nickel, a dollar, whatever it

[14:42]

might be. Now it's $25 to go to a

[14:45]

movie." This is inflation. So now when

[14:47]

you spend those more dollars at Chipotle

[14:49]

who's getting those more dollars, it's

[14:50]

the owners of Chipotle, the investors.

[14:52]

And then finally is our system is

[14:55]

designed to benefit the investor. As a

[14:58]

licensed attorney, who's not your

[14:59]

attorney, I can tell you that when you

[15:01]

earn your money as an investor,

[15:03]

you are going to pay a lower tax rate

[15:06]

than when you earn your money as an

[15:08]

employee.

[15:09]

That's why it is so important to

[15:11]

understand the rules of money because

[15:13]

our entire system is designed to make

[15:16]

the financially savvy wealthier while

[15:18]

everybody else is paying the price. I'll

[15:21]

give you one more example. When I was in

[15:23]

law school, I learned about this concept

[15:25]

called fiduciary duty.

[15:27]

And what I didn't understand and what I

[15:30]

learned is that the CEO of a company,

[15:34]

your boss, has a fiduciary duty to make

[15:37]

one person rich. Do you know who that

[15:38]

is? It's not the employees at the

[15:41]

company. It's not the customers at the

[15:43]

company. It is the owners of the

[15:46]

company, the investors in the company.

[15:47]

The CEO has to make decisions to make

[15:50]

the investors rich. And we're never

[15:53]

taught to become an investor. We're

[15:55]

taught to become an employee. Now, it's

[15:56]

not bad to work a job. That's not what

[15:58]

I'm saying. In fact, that's probably the

[16:00]

best thing for most people. What I'm

[16:03]

saying is you have to understand that

[16:05]

when you go to work, you now have to

[16:07]

take some of that money and become an

[16:08]

investor. Now when you do that, now you

[16:10]

can start to get into the practical

[16:12]

steps of what you do with your money.

[16:13]

>> Yeah.

[16:14]

>> So we talked about now step number one

[16:17]

is you have to build the mindset. Now

[16:19]

you have to learn the rules of money.

[16:20]

Now we get into the practical side,

[16:22]

which is step number three. Get out of

[16:24]

the financial danger zone. And what I

[16:27]

mean by that is the very first thing you

[16:30]

have to do is save $2,000 as fast as

[16:33]

possible.

[16:34]

>> Just 2,000.

[16:35]

>> Just start with 2,000 as a start and

[16:38]

then pay off your credit card debt.

[16:42]

Half of America today does not have

[16:45]

$1,000

[16:47]

put aside to protect them against

[16:49]

emergency. So if your car breaks down,

[16:52]

your kid gets sick, your window breaks,

[16:55]

the average person

[16:58]

has to go into debt to pay for that

[17:00]

expense. You have zero breathing room.

[17:03]

If you want to go on vacation, you want

[17:05]

to do anything, you have to go into debt

[17:06]

to do that. So we need to stop that. I

[17:10]

call this the financial danger zone. You

[17:11]

need to save $2,000 as fast as possible.

[17:14]

And the way you can do that is by

[17:15]

spending less or working to earn more.

[17:17]

And you have to make some extreme

[17:18]

sacrifice if you don't have that.

[17:20]

>> Do you know what people are wasting the

[17:22]

most amount of money on right now in in

[17:24]

the United States? Is there any research

[17:26]

on that?

[17:27]

>> Oh man. [laughter]

[17:29]

Well, if you are somebody who does not

[17:32]

have $2,000 saved up, there's a lot of

[17:36]

things you got to cut out. And this is

[17:37]

going to sound mean, but I don't say

[17:38]

what I say to make friends. I say what I

[17:40]

say to help people be better with money.

[17:43]

You should not be eating at a

[17:44]

restaurant. You should not be going on

[17:46]

vacations. You should not be driving

[17:47]

around in a fancy car. You shouldn't be

[17:49]

living in a big fancy house right now.

[17:52]

You got to make some extreme sacrifices

[17:55]

if you don't have $2,000. So much so

[17:59]

that what I tell people is you should

[18:01]

not have a Netflix subscription.

[18:03]

Not because it's going to save you $15 a

[18:06]

month, but because the average American

[18:09]

is watching somewhere between two to

[18:11]

three hours of Netflix a day.

[18:14]

If you don't have $2,000,

[18:16]

how can you feel comfortable sitting

[18:18]

there at night time watching whatever

[18:19]

the heck is on Netflix? You have to have

[18:22]

a little bit of urgency that, oh my god,

[18:24]

I got to take care of my family. So,

[18:27]

whatever you can cut back on, do it. And

[18:30]

then once you get that $2,000, pay off

[18:33]

your high interest credit card debts.

[18:35]

Because when you are in that situation

[18:38]

where you have those high interest

[18:39]

debts,

[18:41]

you are trying to climb a mountain with

[18:44]

a,000 lbs of chain strapped to your

[18:46]

back. You're never going to get to the

[18:48]

next step because anytime you get some

[18:51]

money, you got to pay it back off. In

[18:52]

fact, let me give you an example, Jay.

[18:54]

If I gave you $6,500

[18:56]

today and you invested that money today,

[18:59]

you never touched that money again, you

[19:01]

never invested another penny again, and

[19:03]

you could get a, let's say, 20% return a

[19:05]

year on that money, in 40, 45 years,

[19:09]

you're going to retire very wealthy.

[19:12]

You're not going to have a million, $5

[19:14]

million, $10 million, $50 million.

[19:17]

you're going to have closer to $60

[19:20]

million

[19:21]

off of that one investment of the $6,400

[19:25]

$6,500 that I give you today. Now,

[19:27]

you're going to say, "All right, sign me

[19:28]

up, Josh. Put it give me that money and

[19:29]

where do I invest it?"

[19:31]

>> Well, here's the reality. Do you know

[19:33]

who's getting those returns? Amex, Visa,

[19:37]

Mastercard, Discover. And do you know

[19:39]

who's paying it? You. M

[19:41]

>> if you have credit card debt. And so

[19:42]

instead of you having that wealth, you

[19:45]

are the one that's paying for their

[19:47]

private jets. You are the one that's

[19:48]

paying for their big buildings. You are

[19:50]

the one that's paying for their

[19:51]

luxuries.

[19:52]

Which is why I get so serious about this

[19:55]

that if you want to become wealthy, you

[19:56]

have to you have to you have to get out

[20:00]

of this financial danger zone. Once you

[20:03]

get there, now we can get to the next

[20:05]

step. Step number four. This is where

[20:06]

things not get fun because you finally

[20:08]

have a little bit of a foundation.

[20:09]

[gasps]

[20:10]

Now you can create a system for your

[20:12]

money. The difference between wealthy

[20:15]

people and everybody else is wealthy

[20:17]

people know what they're going to do

[20:18]

with their money before they earn it.

[20:20]

Everybody else gets the money and then

[20:22]

they wonder, well, what should I do? How

[20:23]

should I spend this money? And this is

[20:25]

where it is very helpful to have a a

[20:28]

system for your money. One that I teach

[20:31]

is a 751510

[20:33]

plan [snorts] which says for every

[20:35]

dollar that you earn from here on out.75

[20:38]

is the maximum that you can spend. 15

[20:42]

cents is the minimum that you invest. 10

[20:45]

cents is the minimum that you save. This

[20:48]

way whether you're earning $30,000 a

[20:50]

year, $300,000 a year, or $3 million a

[20:53]

year, you're always going to have a rule

[20:55]

of how much you can save, invest, and

[20:58]

spend. and break that down for us again.

[21:00]

>> 75 15 10. So the way I'd like you to do

[21:03]

this is I want you to open three bank

[21:05]

accounts and you're going to make money.

[21:07]

Money gets deposited into one bank

[21:09]

account. Create an automatic withdrawal

[21:11]

and deposit. That money gets pulled out

[21:13]

of one bank account and 15% goes into

[21:16]

your bank account holding your

[21:17]

investment money. 10% goes into your

[21:19]

bank account holding your savings money.

[21:22]

The reason why you want to have three

[21:23]

different bank accounts is because if

[21:25]

you have $100 in one bank account and

[21:27]

you think, "This is my investing money

[21:29]

and my saving money. You go into the

[21:31]

store and you see this nice sweater on

[21:33]

sale. It's $90. I have $100 in my bank

[21:36]

account. Well, I should be able to

[21:37]

afford it, right?" Well, you forget that

[21:40]

some of that money is supposed to be

[21:41]

saved and invested. And then you pay

[21:43]

taxes on that sweater. And now you spent

[21:45]

$989 on that sweater. And oops, I just

[21:48]

spent my savings and my investment

[21:50]

money. which is why you need the three

[21:51]

different bank accounts. Your savings

[21:53]

are not going to make you wealthy. This

[21:55]

is a big lie that we've been sold. Your

[21:57]

savings are there to protect you. Your

[21:59]

investments are there to make you

[22:01]

wealthy. And that spending money is what

[22:04]

you pay for your house, your groceries,

[22:05]

your vacations, and everything else.

[22:08]

Now, we move on to the next step is how

[22:10]

do you spend your money smartly? And

[22:12]

this is where things start to get a

[22:13]

little bit painful, but this is where

[22:14]

you can really accelerate your wealth.

[22:16]

You know how to spend your money now.

[22:18]

You have a good system. Now, when it

[22:19]

comes to actually accelerating your

[22:21]

wealth, you got to spend your money

[22:22]

smartly. And what I mean by that is no

[22:25]

more financing things that don't put

[22:26]

money in your pocket. And then follow

[22:29]

the rule of five when it comes to

[22:30]

luxuries. So, when it comes to no more

[22:32]

financing things, it's very normal. You

[22:35]

want to buy the new iPhone, why would

[22:37]

you pay $1,1200,

[22:39]

put it in $50 a month, 0% APR? It's free

[22:43]

money. Why wouldn't you take it? Well,

[22:45]

let me ask you a question. If I walked

[22:47]

into the bank today and I said, "Give me

[22:49]

a $1,000 loan at 0% APR." What are they

[22:52]

going to say? Heck no. There's a door.

[22:55]

Why is it that somebody's willing to

[22:57]

offer me 0% APR? Not just somebody, a

[23:01]

very profitable corporation. Because

[23:03]

they know how to make money off of you

[23:07]

with a 0% APR. Why? Because at 0% APR,

[23:12]

number one, it's going to make it much

[23:13]

easier for you to buy the new iPhone

[23:16]

more often. Number two, you don't feel

[23:18]

the pain of $1,000 leaving your bank

[23:21]

account. It's just $50 a month. Number

[23:23]

three, when you buy the new phone, well,

[23:26]

now they can sell you the new AirPods,

[23:27]

the new charger, the new case for it.

[23:30]

And then number four, they know that a

[23:32]

lot of people are not going to pay it

[23:33]

off in time and now they're going to

[23:34]

slap on that 15, 20, 25% interest, which

[23:37]

then makes them even wealthier, which is

[23:39]

why you should not be financing things

[23:41]

even at 0% APR. If it doesn't put money

[23:43]

in your pocket, do not finance it. The

[23:45]

only exception is the house that you

[23:46]

live in. [sighs and gasps] And then my

[23:48]

rule of five, if you can't buy five of

[23:51]

them, you can't afford one of them,

[23:53]

[laughter]

[23:53]

especially for luxuries.

[23:54]

>> That's a good rule. So, you want to buy

[23:56]

a nice $1,000 watch, you better have

[24:00]

$5,000.

[24:02]

So,

[24:02]

>> of disposable income,

[24:03]

>> of extra money.

[24:04]

>> Yeah.

[24:05]

>> Now, we can get into the next step,

[24:08]

which is how do you earn more money? The

[24:11]

step number six, because now we know how

[24:14]

to create a system with your money. You

[24:15]

know that I'm going to do 75, 15, 10. I

[24:17]

know how to spend my money. Now, let me

[24:19]

earn more money. And this is the part

[24:21]

that many people get flipped because

[24:22]

they assume that I just got to make some

[24:24]

more money. Well, if you make more money

[24:25]

without knowing what to do with that

[24:26]

money, you make more money, then you

[24:28]

make other people rich with it because

[24:29]

you just go and spend it. This is where

[24:31]

now it is important for you to figure

[24:33]

out how can you earn more money. Maybe

[24:35]

you ask for a raise at your job. Maybe

[24:36]

you get a second job. Maybe you create

[24:38]

your own business. Maybe you learn how

[24:39]

to utilize artificial intelligence. You

[24:42]

find ways to earn more money. But you

[24:44]

keep following that system, the 75, 15,

[24:47]

10. And that's the key is as you earn

[24:49]

more money, you keep investing more

[24:51]

money because that's what's going to

[24:53]

make you wealthy. And then finally at

[24:55]

the top step number seven

[24:58]

is you have to protect your assets. And

[25:02]

there's two parts to this. Number one is

[25:03]

you got to understand the legal side.

[25:05]

That means understanding taxes because

[25:07]

taxes can be one of the biggest expenses

[25:09]

that you have to pay. You have to

[25:11]

understand how do you pass this wealth

[25:13]

down? How do you put shields around you?

[25:15]

Because when people realize you have

[25:16]

money, they're going to want some of it

[25:17]

for themselves.

[25:19]

And this also means how do you give

[25:21]

back? How do you help others? How are

[25:22]

you going to leave a legacy for yourself

[25:24]

and your family? That's now wealth

[25:27]

planning. And so we talked about now

[25:29]

kind of the whole progression of these

[25:31]

seven steps. But it starts with that

[25:33]

mental side of understanding the

[25:34]

mindset. Then you got to understand the

[25:36]

framework of the rules of money. Then we

[25:38]

start with the basics of saving the

[25:39]

2,000, paying off the credit card debt.

[25:41]

Then you build a system for your money.

[25:43]

From there, once you have the system,

[25:44]

you have to know how to spend your money

[25:45]

the right way. Then you have to learn

[25:47]

how to earn more money the right way.

[25:49]

Then you learn how to manage your

[25:51]

wealth, grow your wealth, and pass on

[25:54]

your wealth.

[25:54]

>> Yeah, that is a really brilliant system.

[25:57]

I mean, that's a masterclass truly

[25:59]

because

[25:59]

>> I call it the climb to wealth.

[26:00]

>> Yeah, it's brilliant. It's so great. And

[26:02]

I love that it goes from I love that you

[26:05]

start with the mindset and then switch

[26:06]

into the practicals of money because

[26:10]

if you taught all the practical stuff

[26:12]

and people didn't have the mindset,

[26:13]

you'll make mistakes and you'll actually

[26:14]

put your money in the wrong places. And

[26:17]

if you only have the philosophy and the

[26:19]

mindset and don't have the practicals,

[26:21]

well then it's just a nice idea. On

[26:23]

eBay, every find has a story. Like if

[26:26]

you're looking for a vintage band tea,

[26:28]

not just a tea, the band from the last

[26:32]

show your favorite band ever played. You

[26:35]

wore it everywhere. Then your best

[26:36]

friend started wearing it, which was

[26:38]

cute until they unfriended you and took

[26:40]

it with them, which was not so cool.

[26:43]

Anyway, now you're on eBay and there it

[26:46]

is. Same tea from the same tour, still

[26:49]

living in your memory, rentree forever.

[26:52]

See, the things you love have a way of

[26:55]

finding their way back to you. But eBay

[26:58]

isn't just forgetting whatever your ex

[27:00]

or ex- best friend stole back. It's also

[27:02]

for that rare championship foul ball you

[27:05]

caught, then heroically gave to the kid

[27:07]

next to you. And where else are you

[27:09]

going to find your first car? The one

[27:11]

you wish you never sold, but now finally

[27:14]

get the chance to take back home. For

[27:16]

good this time, shop eBay for millions

[27:19]

of finds, each with a story. eBay,

[27:22]

things people love. The big question

[27:25]

that comes to my mind right now is for

[27:28]

anyone who's like, "Justree, I'm making

[27:29]

that $50,000. I'm making that $30,000. I

[27:32]

want to make more money right now. What

[27:34]

is the fastest, most effective,

[27:37]

realistic way I can make more money

[27:39]

today?" so that I have more of the 7510

[27:44]

split to ultimately invest more. What do

[27:46]

you recommend I do in this day and age

[27:49]

right now?

[27:50]

>> And can I recommend what you shouldn't

[27:51]

do too?

[27:52]

>> Yeah. So, I talk about investing a lot.

[27:54]

That's that is my focus is the financial

[27:56]

side of what do you do with that money

[27:58]

and so uh I was actually just doing a

[28:00]

conversation with somebody about this

[28:02]

where

[28:03]

a lot of people who end up in a tough

[28:05]

financial situation whatever it might be

[28:07]

maybe you have debts you have expenses

[28:10]

you have you're in a situation where

[28:11]

money is tight you go into the internet

[28:14]

and now you start to hear about this

[28:15]

topic called passive income

[28:18]

and now you think wow if I could just

[28:22]

have some more money coming in passive

[28:23]

ly I could pay all my bills and no

[28:26]

longer have to worry about money.

[28:29]

But that's not how it works. Investing

[28:32]

and everything that I'm talking about

[28:34]

when it comes to growing your wealth is

[28:36]

when you have extra money that you don't

[28:38]

need and you throw it into this

[28:40]

investment. You throw it into this asset

[28:42]

that is going to then grow and make you

[28:44]

more money. It is not fast, but if you

[28:47]

do it right, it works and it can make

[28:50]

you wealthy.

[28:52]

And that's how that works.

[28:54]

>> Mhm.

[28:55]

>> Your question was, "How can somebody

[28:58]

start to earn more money fast?" And

[29:02]

the first thing that you can do, ask

[29:04]

your boss for a raise. But don't do it

[29:07]

with the way most people do it. Because

[29:09]

what most people will say is, "Hey boss,

[29:12]

I've been working here for a long time.

[29:14]

Can I get an extra $5,000 a year,

[29:15]

$10,000 a year, whatever it might be?"

[29:17]

[gasps]

[29:18]

And well, what your boss is probably

[29:21]

going to say is,

[29:23]

"No, because I'm going to pay you to do

[29:25]

the same thing." No. Instead, I want you

[29:28]

to think about it from their

[29:30]

perspective.

[29:32]

The fastest way for you to make more

[29:33]

money at your job is to make your boss

[29:34]

more money. And if you can show them,

[29:37]

hey, I'm going to make you an extra

[29:39]

$20,000 a year. You pay me an extra

[29:41]

$10,000 a year. Now, they will probably

[29:44]

say yes because you are adding more

[29:46]

value to them. How can you do that? It's

[29:48]

going to depend on your position. But

[29:50]

find a way to add more value and go to

[29:52]

them and say, "Hey, look, here's what

[29:53]

I'm going to do. Here's how much more

[29:55]

revenue I'm going to drive. Here's how

[29:56]

much more money I'm going to make you. I

[29:58]

just want a piece of what I'm going to

[29:59]

make you." Some people are going to say

[30:01]

and say, "Wow, I like that idea." Others

[30:03]

are going to say, "Screw that. I don't

[30:04]

want to make my boss richer." Okay, then

[30:07]

well, you can try to do something for

[30:08]

yourself. And today AI is probably not

[30:14]

probably it is the biggest opportunity

[30:17]

that we have at our fingertips. It is

[30:19]

growing faster than the rate of the

[30:22]

internet. It's growing faster than the

[30:24]

adoption of blockchain. And most people

[30:27]

think that AI is how do I go on to chat

[30:30]

and search guacamole recipes.

[30:32]

But if you can understand AI,

[30:36]

you can get ahead of the curve and solve

[30:39]

a problem for many businesses or people

[30:42]

with money. Help them understand it.

[30:45]

Help them use it. And in exchange, you

[30:48]

charge them money to do that. And

[30:50]

there's so many ways to do it. I mean,

[30:51]

this is going to get into how do you

[30:53]

actually make money? How do you build a

[30:55]

business? But if you can find a pain

[30:57]

point, for example, dentists have a pain

[31:01]

point which is that patients don't show

[31:03]

up for their services.

[31:05]

Well, you can use AI to help solve that

[31:07]

painoint. What can you do if you can

[31:09]

show these dental offices, hey, let me

[31:12]

build you an AI tool that will

[31:13]

automatically text your patients when

[31:16]

they have an appointment and it will

[31:18]

say, if you can't make it, click this

[31:20]

button. If they can't make it and you

[31:22]

click the button, your AI tool will then

[31:25]

work to find somebody else who's on the

[31:27]

waiting list to come in and fill that

[31:28]

slot. Well, now all of a sudden, you

[31:31]

helped that dentist office

[31:35]

fill more of the slots, have less

[31:36]

vacancies, and make more money. And then

[31:38]

you could take it one step further.

[31:40]

After they're done with a procedure,

[31:42]

send out an automatic text message

[31:43]

saying, "Did you like your service? How

[31:46]

was it? If you enjoyed it, give us a

[31:47]

fivestar review on Google." which is

[31:50]

going to help drive more patients for

[31:51]

the dentist office. And so that's the

[31:54]

thing is people assume I'm just going to

[31:55]

go teach AI. I'm going to go help. It's

[31:57]

too broad. Get specific. There are every

[32:00]

business in the world should be using AI

[32:04]

to some way, shape, or form. Most people

[32:06]

have no idea how it works. If you have

[32:09]

some time, study it, learn,

[32:13]

and if you can figure out a one pain

[32:15]

point, go out and solve it for one

[32:17]

person. Let there be a testimonial for

[32:19]

the second. Let there be a testimonial

[32:21]

for the third. And now all of a sudden,

[32:23]

you're in business.

[32:24]

>> Yeah. I love I love I love the first

[32:26]

piece of advice as well. And I think

[32:28]

there's three types of people that ask

[32:30]

for a raise. The first person just asks

[32:33]

for a raise, as you said. They're like,

[32:35]

oh, can I get some more money? And it's

[32:37]

like, well, you're doing the same exact

[32:38]

thing. Why would I pay you? The second

[32:40]

type of person shows you everything

[32:42]

they've done in the past and ask for a

[32:45]

raise. And the person again goes, "Well,

[32:48]

that's great, but you did that anyway."

[32:50]

>> Yeah.

[32:50]

>> And then the third type of person goes,

[32:51]

"This is what I want to do." Which is

[32:53]

what you're saying, which is like, "Hey,

[32:55]

here's I'm going to make you 10,000,

[32:57]

20,000% more, whatever it may be in your

[33:00]

position." And that third type of person

[33:02]

is the person who gets the raise because

[33:04]

you're now investing,

[33:05]

>> right,

[33:06]

>> as an employer in what you hope is

[33:08]

something that's valuable to you if it's

[33:10]

a win-win.

[33:10]

>> If you work a job, you have to know how

[33:14]

you're making money for your company.

[33:15]

Yeah,

[33:16]

>> if you don't spend this weekend figuring

[33:19]

that out because unless you understand

[33:22]

how you drive revenue for your business,

[33:25]

you are just a a piece of space. And I

[33:30]

say this as nice as possible because

[33:33]

we're talking about AI. AI is getting

[33:35]

smarter. It is getting more advanced. I

[33:37]

mean, CATBT did not exist 5 years ago.

[33:41]

It is getting more advanced every single

[33:43]

day. And you know, there's a lot of talk

[33:46]

about people being replaced by AI, which

[33:48]

is true, but the bigger threat to that

[33:51]

is you being replaced by somebody who

[33:53]

knows how to use AI.

[33:55]

>> Yeah.

[33:55]

>> And so, if you don't understand how

[33:57]

you're driving revenue for your

[33:59]

business, [snorts]

[34:00]

well, there's a chance that there's a

[34:02]

missing link between what you're doing

[34:04]

as a job and what the business needs

[34:07]

from what you are there to do.

[34:10]

>> Yeah.

[34:10]

>> And that's what we got to figure out.

[34:11]

And even with your second part of the

[34:12]

answer which is like how do you learn to

[34:14]

use AI for something? It is people who

[34:17]

start with problems like trying to

[34:19]

figure out a problem that you can help

[34:21]

solve.

[34:22]

>> Mhm.

[34:23]

>> That is really where it is. I think

[34:25]

often we sit there we go I want to come

[34:26]

up with a really cool idea.

[34:28]

>> Yeah.

[34:28]

>> And it's like every cool idea was only

[34:31]

cool because it solved a good problem.

[34:33]

If it didn't solve a problem it wasn't a

[34:34]

cool idea. And so if you are close to a

[34:37]

problem like sometimes people think also

[34:40]

I want to go do something that I enjoy

[34:41]

and love and that's great and and

[34:43]

wonderful if it works out but it's like

[34:45]

there's something that you know in your

[34:47]

career path.

[34:48]

>> Yeah.

[34:48]

>> Because you're close to it. I have a

[34:50]

friend funnily enough you talked about

[34:51]

dentistry. I have a friend who's a

[34:52]

dentist. He just understands the dental

[34:55]

industry better because he's been so

[34:57]

close to it for so many years. It's not

[34:59]

his passion. It's not what he loves.

[35:01]

It's not what he enjoys. But he's been

[35:02]

able to build solutions for dental

[35:05]

practices that allows him to make more

[35:07]

money than even being a dentist. And

[35:11]

again, it comes back down to what you

[35:13]

just said, which is start where you are.

[35:15]

Start where you understand problems. You

[35:17]

don't have to go and learn some new

[35:18]

industry and figure something out

[35:20]

because I think that can feel quite

[35:21]

overwhelming sometimes to think, "Oh

[35:24]

god, I don't know anything about what's

[35:25]

happening in the world." you got to know

[35:27]

your your skill set as well, but I think

[35:30]

you nailed it on the head with that

[35:32]

problem side because I looked as you

[35:34]

were talking I was kind of smiling cuz I

[35:35]

was looking back at my life and I was

[35:37]

like everything that I've kind of done

[35:40]

sort of successfully was because there

[35:43]

was some problem that I was trying to

[35:45]

solve. My first kind of reals I don't

[35:48]

want to say first but one of my earlier

[35:50]

more successful businesses was an

[35:52]

e-commerce company. It was a

[35:53]

waterresistant sock. And this is I mean

[35:57]

it goes so beyond what we're talking

[35:59]

about. But I came up with this idea

[36:00]

because I was in school. I was in

[36:02]

college taking a public speaking class

[36:04]

and they gave us an assignment to pitch

[36:07]

a product to the class kind of like

[36:09]

Shark Tank or Dragon's Den.

[36:12]

>> And I procrastinated. I put it off. And

[36:14]

one day it was raining for class and I

[36:16]

ran to class. I stepped in a puddle. I

[36:19]

got to class and the teacher's like,

[36:20]

"It's your day to present." And I said,

[36:21]

"Present what?" She's like, "The

[36:23]

product." And I said, "Oh crap." I'm

[36:25]

standing in front of class, my heart is

[36:26]

beating, my socks are wet. And I started

[36:29]

talking about water resistant socks that

[36:31]

if you're an athlete, because I used to

[36:32]

put football in high school, American

[36:33]

football. Uh oh man, when it rains, your

[36:36]

feet feel soaked. And I started talking

[36:37]

about water resistant socks and how

[36:39]

athletes would love it. And I I sat down

[36:41]

and I was like, "That's kind of a cool

[36:43]

idea. How can I do that?" So I created a

[36:45]

water resistant sock. And that was my

[36:47]

first kind of internet business. And

[36:48]

then I think about what I'm doing now.

[36:50]

Uh so I run a company called Briefs

[36:52]

Media. Our flagship product is called

[36:54]

Market Briefs which is a a free daily

[36:56]

newsletter. And that started because

[36:59]

during COVID the economy flipped upside

[37:02]

down like in a matter of a day. And so I

[37:05]

went from making YouTube videos like

[37:07]

three times a week to 7 days a week. And

[37:10]

there's a there's there's so much

[37:11]

happening in the news that I asked my

[37:13]

team. I said, "Hey, uh, can you send me

[37:15]

a daily briefing of what's happening in

[37:17]

the markets and make it stupid simple so

[37:19]

I can understand because I don't like

[37:20]

complex jargon." And so my team started

[37:23]

sending this to me and I I was like,

[37:25]

"Huh, I wonder if other people would

[37:26]

like this." So I would occasionally

[37:29]

mention this on my YouTube channel that,

[37:32]

hey, if you want to get a daily report

[37:34]

of what's happening in the markets, you

[37:35]

can just join this newsletter. At the

[37:36]

time, it was called the Minority Mindset

[37:38]

Newsletter. Super original, right? And

[37:41]

um it's that started picking up uh

[37:43]

attention. People started to like it and

[37:45]

I was like, "Huh, we can actually do

[37:46]

something with this. We're not making

[37:48]

any money, but I was like, I I see the

[37:50]

value because I like reading this

[37:52]

newsletter and I don't like the complex

[37:54]

jargon of all the traditional financial

[37:56]

news. I just want to know what's

[37:57]

happening in the stock market and the

[37:59]

housing market and crypto." I just break

[38:01]

it down into a quick fiveminute read.

[38:03]

And that's when we re rebranded it into

[38:06]

market briefs. And I said, hm, let's

[38:08]

ignore all this other like stuff that we

[38:10]

were doing. Let's put more energy and

[38:11]

focus into market briefs. And that's

[38:12]

what then allowed that to take off,

[38:14]

which then was the flagship for many

[38:17]

other products that we have now in our

[38:19]

company. But it started with that

[38:21]

painoint.

[38:21]

>> That's awesome. Yeah. Yeah. It's always

[38:23]

a pain point. I just whether it's

[38:25]

something like that like a newsletter,

[38:27]

whether it's the biggest business in the

[38:29]

world today, like it all started from a

[38:31]

painoint.

[38:32]

>> Yeah. And and I think if we spent more

[38:34]

time with pain points, we'd come up with

[38:37]

better ideas rather than trying to come

[38:39]

up with solutions and ideas to problems

[38:41]

that either don't exist or that we're

[38:42]

imagining. I I know a lot of people like

[38:45]

this, probably even on my team, people

[38:46]

that I know, friends and family who are

[38:48]

like they were never exposed to

[38:50]

investing. They even I wasn't. I had no

[38:53]

idea growing up what investing was.

[38:55]

>> You and me both.

[38:56]

>> Yeah. I had no clue. No one ever

[38:57]

explained it to me. I didn't know anyone

[38:59]

who invested really, I don't think.

[39:03]

Maybe I knew one person who had one

[39:05]

other property than the one they owned.

[39:07]

I didn't grow up in that circle. If

[39:09]

someone's out there going, "Okay, I want

[39:11]

to start investing. What's the smallest

[39:13]

amount I need to start investing? What's

[39:16]

the number? Where do they start?" Now,

[39:19]

$1.

[39:20]

You can start investing with any amount

[39:22]

of money. And the whole idea of

[39:23]

investing is you take this extra money

[39:26]

and you're going to put it into this

[39:27]

thing. you're going to buy something

[39:28]

with it with the goal of making money

[39:31]

off of this thing as opposed to just

[39:33]

buying a watch or a pair of shoes.

[39:37]

But the part that I think a lot of

[39:38]

people don't understand, especially if

[39:40]

they don't grow up learning about

[39:41]

investing like we didn't is there's more

[39:43]

than one way to invest because

[39:46]

10 years ago, what was investing or what

[39:49]

did people think investing was? How do I

[39:51]

find the next Amazon? How do I find the

[39:53]

next Apple? Today, a lot of people think

[39:55]

investing is how do I find the next

[39:56]

memecoin? How do I find the next

[39:58]

cryptocurrency before it pops off? We

[40:00]

start to think of investing in terms of

[40:03]

gambling. Especially because now there's

[40:06]

so much of it around us. I mean, there's

[40:09]

sports betting, there's uh there's

[40:12]

foreign exchange markets, there's poly

[40:14]

markets. I mean, people are betting on

[40:17]

uh what the Federal Reserve Bank is

[40:19]

going to do next. They're betting on

[40:20]

these wild decisions off of You remember

[40:23]

that one? There was a big couple that

[40:25]

got caught cheating at the Cold Play

[40:27]

concert. I forget who it was.

[40:28]

>> There was a a betting market around are

[40:31]

they going to file a divorce or not. So

[40:33]

people are quote unquote investing their

[40:35]

money

[40:36]

>> on don't that type of thing. So people

[40:38]

are now like making businesses out of

[40:41]

all sorts of prediction markets. And so

[40:44]

we start to assume without any financial

[40:46]

education that investing is the same

[40:48]

thing. We're just going to predict

[40:49]

what's going to happen in something

[40:50]

tomorrow. But that's really not what

[40:53]

investing is. Investing is something

[40:56]

that you want to buy and own for the

[40:59]

long term that you believe is going to

[41:02]

either go up in value and maybe pay you

[41:06]

with some sort of interest along the

[41:08]

way. Maybe it's going to deposit money

[41:10]

every month, maybe it's going to deposit

[41:11]

money every 3 months, maybe it's going

[41:12]

to deposit money every year into your

[41:14]

bank account for not doing anything.

[41:17]

That's what investing is. So now, how do

[41:19]

you go about doing it? And there are

[41:21]

three layers that you need to

[41:23]

understand. Number one is the most

[41:25]

hands-off.

[41:27]

And that is I'm going to give my money

[41:29]

to you, a financial adviser, and you are

[41:31]

going to manage my money for me. And now

[41:33]

it's completely handsoff. And so if you

[41:36]

just run some basic numbers, if I invest

[41:38]

$1,000 a month for 30 years, and my

[41:41]

financial adviser can beat the markets,

[41:43]

they do 11% a year, I'm going to end up

[41:46]

with 1.8 million, but I got to pay a

[41:49]

fee. I got to pay a price.

[41:53]

You might have to pay 1 and a.5% in

[41:54]

fees. So, you might end up paying 500 or

[41:57]

$600,000 in fees. So, the 1.8 million is

[42:00]

what you're getting after the fees.

[42:03]

Option number two, if you want to be a

[42:05]

little bit more involved but not fully

[42:07]

involved, is what I call being a passive

[42:09]

investor. And passive investing is all

[42:13]

about finding a basket of stocks and now

[42:16]

you just keep consistently investing

[42:18]

your money in it. So, for example, you

[42:20]

can invest in the United States economy,

[42:23]

in the broad economy. And one of the

[42:25]

most common and popular ways to do that

[42:27]

is to invest in something called the SNP

[42:30]

500. That's a group of the 500 largest

[42:33]

companies in the stock market. You don't

[42:35]

have to go out and find Amazon and Tesla

[42:36]

and all these companies. You just invest

[42:38]

in this fund and you don't have to touch

[42:41]

it. And the nice thing about it is if

[42:43]

you invest your money into this fund and

[42:45]

let's just say Amazon goes bankrupt, you

[42:48]

don't have to do anything. The fund is

[42:49]

going to kick Amazon out as they get

[42:52]

smaller and they're going to replace

[42:53]

them with another company. So it's

[42:54]

completely fast passive for you.

[42:57]

Historically,

[42:58]

this has averaged about 10% growth a

[43:01]

year. A little bit more than that, but

[43:03]

right around 10% historically despite

[43:06]

the recessions, despite market crashes,

[43:08]

because know we know that they happen.

[43:10]

it has averaged about 10% a year. So if

[43:13]

you invest $1,000 a month for 30 years,

[43:16]

that would be about $1.9 million.

[43:19]

Then you have layer three, the most

[43:21]

involved. This is called being an active

[43:23]

investor. And being an active investor

[43:25]

is not trading. It's not flipping. It's

[43:28]

I want to own good investments that I

[43:30]

believe in, that I've researched, I put

[43:31]

the work into, and I want to own them

[43:34]

for the long term. So this might be

[43:35]

investing in individual companies,

[43:36]

individual stocks. Maybe now I want to

[43:39]

invest in Amazon. Maybe now I want to

[43:40]

invest in McDonald's or whatever. Maybe

[43:42]

it's investing in individual re real

[43:44]

estate properties.

[43:46]

And the goal with this is you're taking

[43:48]

on more risk for more potential return.

[43:54]

So we talked about how if you just

[43:57]

invest your money into the broad

[43:59]

economy, you're averaging about 10% a

[44:00]

year. as an active investor, you know,

[44:04]

we're not talking about 200% returns or

[44:06]

100% or even 50% returns that people

[44:08]

like to talk about on the internet

[44:09]

because that's not sustainable. It's a

[44:11]

lie. It's a scam and they're screwing

[44:12]

you over.

[44:14]

We're talking about a slight edge. Let's

[44:16]

just say 13% a year. If you can do that,

[44:20]

13% a year, $1,000 a month for 30 years,

[44:24]

well, now you're going to have about

[44:26]

$3.5 million. So, we're talking about

[44:29]

$1.6 $6 million more than if you

[44:32]

passively invested. You're taking on

[44:33]

more risk. It's more work and more

[44:35]

research,

[44:37]

but there's more potential upside. And

[44:39]

so, you have to know kind of where along

[44:41]

this curve you want to be because active

[44:42]

investing is not for everybody. This is

[44:44]

what our firm focuses on is that

[44:47]

research for active investors,

[44:50]

but it's more risk for more potential

[44:52]

upside.

[44:53]

>> Yeah. And and it almost feels like it's

[44:56]

better to start and move layer by layer

[44:59]

by layer rather than dive straight in.

[45:01]

It often is just to start with what's

[45:03]

most accessible to you because what is

[45:05]

most accessible to most people is

[45:08]

something like a 401k or IRA.

[45:12]

And I personally don't use a 401k

[45:14]

because it's not right for me. But

[45:16]

personal finance is personal. Okay?

[45:17]

What's right for you is not going to be

[45:19]

right for me. Start with whatever you

[45:21]

have access to and then take the next

[45:23]

step. and then take the next step. And

[45:24]

then you'll start to realize what are

[45:26]

all the options out there because it can

[45:27]

be intimidating because you say, "Oh my

[45:29]

god, should I invest in stocks or real

[45:31]

estate or crypto? Should I invest in

[45:32]

individual companies or ETFs or mutual

[45:34]

funds? Oh my god, should I be investing

[45:36]

in apartments or or single family

[45:37]

houses? Should I be using like take a

[45:39]

breath? It's okay. Just start. The

[45:42]

reason why people don't see the success

[45:45]

that they want out of their investments

[45:47]

isn't generally because they made the

[45:49]

wrong decision. It's because they never

[45:50]

made a decision. It's because it never

[45:52]

started. But once you can get started,

[45:55]

you can make that adjustment. I talk I I

[45:57]

relate uh investing to working out all

[46:00]

the time. Because I see the same thing

[46:02]

in the gym. People that are getting

[46:04]

started with working out, they'll say,

[46:05]

"Just what should I do? Should I go do

[46:07]

these highintensity workout? Should I do

[46:08]

this low intensity workout? Should I do

[46:10]

carnivore diet? Should I do a vegan

[46:12]

diet? Should I do you know, look, just

[46:14]

get on a treadmill and put down the

[46:16]

donuts, right? Start and then take the

[46:18]

next step. and then the next step and

[46:21]

just just start and then you'll see what

[46:23]

works better for you.

[46:24]

>> Yeah. How do you track the stock market?

[46:26]

Break that down for me for someone who

[46:28]

doesn't know where to start. Kind of

[46:30]

like what we're saying right now where

[46:32]

you know someone's like, "Oh, I'm

[46:33]

thinking of doing this. I'm thinking of

[46:34]

doing this." They don't understand. How

[46:35]

would you break it down for them?

[46:36]

>> Yeah. So, well, the stock market is a

[46:38]

place where anybody can go out and buy a

[46:42]

piece of ownership in a company.

[46:46]

Not every company. the company has to be

[46:48]

what's called publicly traded. So for

[46:50]

example, Briefs Media, my company, it's

[46:52]

private, meaning you can't invest in my

[46:55]

company. But if a company is publicly

[46:58]

traded, for example, McDonald's,

[47:01]

you can buy a piece of that company.

[47:03]

It's called a share. And if you buy one

[47:06]

share of McDonald's, you become one of

[47:08]

the owners of that company. So when I go

[47:12]

to Nike and I buy a pair of shoes, I am

[47:14]

a consumer at Nike. When I own one share

[47:18]

of the Nike stock, I become one of the

[47:20]

owners of Nike. As the owner of Nike, I

[47:23]

profit. When you buy the Nike shoes, as

[47:26]

a consumer of Nike, I am making the

[47:28]

investors richer, but I look cool cuz I

[47:30]

got the Nike. I got the Jordans on. And

[47:32]

so, the whole idea behind the stock

[47:35]

market is you are buying shares of these

[47:37]

companies that are publicly traded. Now,

[47:41]

the price of a stock is going to depend

[47:43]

on whatever the stock is. And what

[47:45]

causes the price of a stock to go up and

[47:47]

down is not how much money the company's

[47:49]

making. It's supply and demand. And what

[47:53]

I mean by that is the price of any

[47:55]

asset,

[47:56]

real estate, stocks, crypto, it

[47:59]

ultimately depends on how many buyers

[48:01]

and sellers there are of that asset.

[48:04]

So if more people want to buy the

[48:07]

McDonald's stock than there are sellers

[48:08]

of the McDonald's stock, that stock

[48:11]

price will go up. If people are selling

[48:14]

the stock more than there are buyers,

[48:15]

the price of that stock goes down, which

[48:18]

then goes to the next question. What

[48:19]

causes it to go up or down? Why do

[48:21]

people buy versus why do people sell?

[48:23]

And there are a whole list of reasons,

[48:25]

but you can look at the obvious. If

[48:28]

McDonald's starts to produce bad

[48:30]

hamburgers, the owners might say, "I

[48:32]

don't know about this." Well, maybe not

[48:33]

the hamburgers cuz McDonald's is

[48:35]

actually in the real estate business.

[48:36]

But if McDonald's starts to have some

[48:38]

problems, the owners might say, "Maybe I

[48:40]

should sell." If McDonald's starts to

[48:43]

have smaller profits, now the investors

[48:45]

might get concerned. If they start to

[48:47]

have bigger profits than expected, more

[48:49]

people might want to buy, which could

[48:51]

push the stock price up. So, you have to

[48:54]

understand the psychology of the buyers

[48:56]

and sellers

[48:58]

because there's two parts to successful

[49:01]

investing. One is the the financial

[49:04]

side, but it's also the emotional side.

[49:07]

And in today's market,

[49:10]

our markets are more emotional than ever

[49:13]

before. Business Insider actually did a

[49:15]

study on this recently where they I mean

[49:18]

it's not really that hard to find, but

[49:20]

they said that our stock market is more

[49:22]

volatile than previous decades,

[49:23]

[sighs and gasps]

[49:24]

which for the average person is not good

[49:29]

because they say, "Oh my god, I'm scared

[49:30]

my the markets are going to go down. I'm

[49:32]

going to lose money." But for the

[49:33]

financially savvy,

[49:35]

that creates more opportunity than ever.

[49:38]

In 2025, for example, we saw three stock

[49:41]

market crashes. When we saw the first

[49:44]

announcement of tariffs, markets

[49:46]

crashed. Then tariffs were paused,

[49:48]

markets hit new record highs. Then we

[49:50]

had the second announcement of tariffs,

[49:52]

markets crashed. Once those were paused,

[49:54]

markets rose again. Then we had

[49:56]

liberation day, the third announcement

[49:57]

of tariffs, markets crashed at the

[50:00]

fastest rate since the pandemic. Then

[50:02]

there were paused and markets broke new

[50:04]

record highs. See, for the average

[50:05]

person, that was a nightmare. But for

[50:08]

the financially savvy, all of those

[50:10]

downturns created a great buying

[50:12]

opportunity.

[50:13]

The thing that I like to tell people is

[50:15]

you're going to see ups and downs. But

[50:18]

when you have those crazy times, I want

[50:21]

you to remember one thing. I want you to

[50:23]

remember poop. P O P. Why? Because panic

[50:29]

leads to overselling leads to

[50:31]

opportunity leads to profit.

[50:35]

And that's where, you know, we've been

[50:37]

talking a little bit about the education

[50:38]

side of investing, but that psychology

[50:40]

is just as important because if you're

[50:44]

the one that's panicking, well, you're

[50:46]

making somebody else wealthier.

[50:48]

>> Yeah.

[50:48]

>> And you have to understand what it is

[50:49]

that you're investing in and know how

[50:51]

that fits in with your investing

[50:52]

strategy. That way you can actually make

[50:55]

money instead of being the person that's

[50:57]

making somebody else money.

[50:58]

>> Yeah, I was gonna I was going to say

[50:59]

that one mindset that sticks very close

[51:01]

to what you're saying, which may have to

[51:04]

go earlier on in your system, is this

[51:06]

idea of I'm trying to get the language

[51:08]

right. You you'll name it better because

[51:10]

it's your system. But this idea of just

[51:12]

don't chase fast money. Because I think

[51:15]

the reason why we get scared when the

[51:17]

markets crash, when we're not

[51:18]

financially savvy, is because we

[51:19]

thought, "Oh god, I lost all my money.

[51:21]

Let me take it out." Right? or let me

[51:24]

avoid putting more money in because

[51:26]

things are not looking safe. And this

[51:27]

idea of this mindset that we have around

[51:30]

I just want to make money quick, you

[51:31]

know, I just want to put something in

[51:32]

next year it's huge and then I want to

[51:34]

pull out. And it's like well that's like

[51:37]

very very rare for people to pull off.

[51:40]

And I think that speedy money is what

[51:42]

stops us from making good decisions

[51:44]

because by the time you actually put

[51:46]

money in, you're like, "Oh, they I

[51:47]

should have done it last year." Right?

[51:49]

Cuz you're just watching that quick win.

[51:51]

Does that make sense? Yeah. And that

[51:52]

that is actually it goes back into what

[51:54]

you were saying a little bit ago when

[51:56]

you said, "What about that person who's

[51:58]

living paycheck to paycheck?" What does

[52:00]

that person want? I want a relief of

[52:02]

where I am. So what is that relief

[52:05]

often? It's fast money. It's like, "Oh

[52:08]

my god, my arm hurts. What do I want? I

[52:09]

want relief. Give me the extra strength

[52:11]

Tylenol or whatever it is because I just

[52:13]

want a quick fix." And so what happens

[52:17]

to a lot of times that person in the

[52:18]

situation and we we were hinting at this

[52:21]

from a different angle before is you get

[52:23]

screwed over. The system profits off of

[52:25]

you because well you are a prime

[52:27]

candidate for spending money.

[52:31]

But now if you start to say, "Oh my god,

[52:33]

I just want to make some more money."

[52:35]

What happens? Well, you become a prime

[52:37]

candidate for that fast money. And that

[52:40]

fast money

[52:42]

most of the times is not there. And when

[52:45]

it is there, if it does happen to come

[52:47]

fast, you are also going to lose it just

[52:50]

as fast. Because if you don't know what

[52:51]

to do with that money, well, it can go

[52:53]

and leave just as fast. It's a they say

[52:55]

I think it's like 80% of lottery winners

[52:58]

go broke or bankrupt within 5 years of

[53:00]

winning the lottery. Why? It's not

[53:02]

because you didn't have enough money.

[53:03]

People have won millions and millions

[53:05]

and millions of dollars. If you don't

[53:07]

have the financial education and the

[53:09]

money comes fast, it's going to

[53:10]

disappear just as fast. And on the other

[53:12]

side, when you become desperate for

[53:14]

money, you become a prime candidate to

[53:16]

buy those programs and services that are

[53:17]

trying to sell you this dream of, hey,

[53:21]

all you got to do is work 3 hours a week

[53:23]

on a laptop off of a beach in Bali and

[53:25]

you're going to make $10,000 a month.

[53:27]

$10,000 a week. You don't have to do

[53:29]

anything. It sounds amazing. Sign me up.

[53:32]

$997, no problem. Well, that fast money

[53:37]

>> Yeah.

[53:37]

>> doesn't work like that.

[53:38]

>> Yeah.

[53:39]

>> There's no sacrificing the hard work.

[53:40]

Yeah, you brought up AI. Where do you

[53:43]

see the biggest opportunities with AI

[53:45]

and investing right now?

[53:46]

>> Oh man. Well, let me premise it with

[53:50]

this because I love talking about

[53:51]

history because while history doesn't

[53:53]

exactly repeat itself, it does rhyme.

[53:55]

When the internet started to become

[53:57]

popular in the '9s,

[54:00]

we started to see very similar things

[54:01]

happen. What do I mean by that? If you

[54:03]

started a company in the mid to late 90s

[54:07]

and you put the word.com at the end of

[54:09]

it, you could go to whatever bank or

[54:12]

investing institution you wanted and

[54:14]

raise a couple million dollars because

[54:15]

they wanted a piece of that action.

[54:17]

Money was just being dumped into the

[54:19]

internet companies. And then came the

[54:22]

year 2000. And in the year 2000, that

[54:25]

internet bubble that was created popped

[54:29]

and we saw internet stocks get wiped out

[54:34]

and there was a index called the NASDAQ

[54:38]

which tracks a lot of these techy type

[54:40]

companies. At that time it was a lot of

[54:42]

internet companies. That index fell by

[54:45]

about 78%.

[54:48]

And it was a disastrous crash

[54:53]

where even Amazon stock fell by more

[54:56]

than 90%.

[54:59]

But during that time, we started to hear

[55:02]

the news that the internet must be a

[55:04]

fad. The internet's done. No one's using

[55:06]

the internet before. I mean, there was a

[55:07]

lot of famous headlines from big

[55:09]

newspapers that published that.

[55:11]

>> Well, what happened?

[55:14]

It wasn't that the internet died, but a

[55:16]

lot of internet companies did die. It

[55:18]

was the strong companies that survived

[55:20]

and Amazon became what it is today. So,

[55:24]

you talk about AI. Could we be in an AI

[55:26]

bubble? Absolutely. Uh we're always in

[55:29]

some sort of bubble. We have more money

[55:31]

going into AI than ever before. And it

[55:35]

really feels like that rate is

[55:36]

accelerating. And it's like it's like a

[55:38]

infinite black hole of money. It's just

[55:41]

money coming out of everywhere from the

[55:43]

government, from foreign countries, from

[55:44]

investors. Everybody wants a piece of

[55:46]

the action.

[55:48]

Could we see an AI bubble burst?

[55:50]

Absolutely.

[55:52]

But just like how the internet bubble

[55:54]

burst, it doesn't mean the AI is going

[55:56]

to go away if it does happen. It means

[55:59]

that the smart and the savvy will

[56:02]

survive and then the others will get

[56:03]

wiped out. So now let me ask that answer

[56:06]

that question. Now, where's the

[56:07]

opportunity? And I'm going to explain

[56:09]

this like an onion because like onions

[56:13]

have multiple layers. That's how savvy

[56:15]

investors like to think about their

[56:16]

investments. Because when a lot of

[56:18]

people think about AI, they think how

[56:20]

can I invest in chat GPT?

[56:23]

Well, when you're saying that, what

[56:25]

you're essentially saying is I want to

[56:26]

invest in the company that's producing

[56:28]

the AI. And there are companies that do

[56:30]

that, which sure, but that's the top

[56:33]

layer of the onion. What every savvy

[56:36]

investor wants to do is they want to

[56:37]

know where is the money moving, where's

[56:39]

the money going to go before other

[56:41]

people understand. That's what

[56:43]

investment research is all about. And

[56:44]

that's what I I tried to spend a lot of

[56:46]

my time and what's my company works on.

[56:49]

So let's let's now go one layer deeper.

[56:52]

Well,

[56:55]

what is the AI going to be powered by?

[56:58]

What is powering this technology? Well,

[57:00]

right now it's being powered by computer

[57:02]

chips because in order to do this AI

[57:05]

computing, you need powerful computers.

[57:09]

Well, the next generation of computer

[57:11]

chips, which we don't have yet, could be

[57:14]

something called quantum computers. And

[57:17]

a quantum computer is essentially a

[57:19]

supercomput to the 10,000th power on

[57:22]

steroids.

[57:24]

that a a typical computer like so and I

[57:28]

don't want to get too technical but a a

[57:30]

typical computer that we have today can

[57:32]

solve one math problem a second that's

[57:35]

just the way that it works but what a

[57:38]

quantum computer can do is it can solve

[57:41]

multiple problems per second so a 64-bit

[57:45]

computer that we have today which exists

[57:46]

that can solve one problem a second a 64

[57:50]

cq-bit computer can solve if I remember

[57:54]

the numbers correctly. I think it's 18

[57:55]

quintilion

[57:57]

problems a second.

[57:58]

>> Wow.

[57:59]

>> What does that mean? A quantum computer

[58:02]

can solve what a normal computer would

[58:05]

take hundreds of years to do.

[58:09]

That same problem could be solved in a

[58:10]

matter of seconds. It's

[58:11]

>> insane.

[58:12]

>> It is. We're not there yet, but there

[58:13]

are companies that are investing in it.

[58:15]

If that happens,

[58:16]

some of those companies could make a lot

[58:18]

of money.

[58:19]

>> Mhm.

[58:20]

>> Well, let's keep going another layer

[58:21]

deeper, right? We're going down the

[58:22]

onion. So we talked about the first

[58:23]

layer which is the AI maybe quantum.

[58:24]

What about the third layer? If if I have

[58:27]

a AI company or I have AI, I have data.

[58:33]

And as much as we want to talk about

[58:35]

privacy, the reality is if you have a a

[58:37]

smartphone, you have data that's in the

[58:39]

cloud. Well, the cloud isn't in the

[58:41]

clouds. The cloud is actually in a

[58:44]

physical building called a data center.

[58:47]

So, as AI starts to gather more data,

[58:51]

because anytime you ask Chad GPT a

[58:52]

question, whether it's a guacamole

[58:55]

recipe or it's something, write me this

[58:56]

email, that data is being stored

[58:59]

somewhere and that data is being stored

[59:00]

in a data center. And that could also

[59:03]

create an investment opportunity because

[59:05]

now as we start to have more data being

[59:07]

processed, as more people use AI, more

[59:09]

data is being created every single

[59:11]

second. So now data centers are now

[59:14]

booming because of that. In fact, I was

[59:16]

just reading that there are some

[59:18]

companies looking at putting data

[59:19]

centers on the moon now as a way to

[59:22]

diversify. And that's how crazy it's

[59:24]

getting that we're looking for new ways

[59:26]

to put data centers outside of the

[59:27]

earth. We could take it now one layer

[59:30]

deeper in the onion, right? So, we

[59:32]

talked about data centers, but those

[59:34]

data centers have to be powered too

[59:35]

because those data centers need energy.

[59:37]

those uh data centers that are keeping

[59:39]

all this stuff use a lot of power and

[59:41]

there are specific companies that are

[59:43]

powering those data centers and these

[59:47]

companies are trying to be as innovative

[59:49]

as possible of how can we now power the

[59:52]

data center for as low cost as possible

[59:55]

and somebody is going to win that race

[59:56]

and the one that wins that race is going

[59:58]

to make a lot of money that can create

[60:00]

an investment opportunity. Let's take it

[60:02]

one layer deeper in this onion.

[60:05]

That data center has to be kept at a

[60:08]

specific temperature because they have

[60:10]

all these computer parts in there that

[60:11]

get hot.

[60:12]

>> I mean, if you if you use a computer,

[60:15]

you know, you get that sound, it gets

[60:16]

hot. Well, if that data center starts to

[60:18]

overheat,

[60:20]

>> it is going to malfunction and no AI

[60:23]

company, no tech company wants to lose

[60:26]

it. I mean, it would be a disaster.

[60:30]

So these data center companies are

[60:31]

investing heavily into data center

[60:33]

cooling, which is a whole new industry

[60:36]

of companies.

[60:37]

>> Yeah.

[60:38]

>> Well, one of those companies is going to

[60:39]

be the most efficient. They're going to

[60:41]

be the most innovative. And they're

[60:42]

going to be the best one, the the one

[60:44]

that everybody wants to use. Well,

[60:46]

they're going to have the opportunity to

[60:48]

make a lot of money as well. And so this

[60:49]

is what smart investors are doing is,

[60:51]

you know, when people think about AI,

[60:53]

oh, I want to invest in this AI stock.

[60:55]

>> Well, that's the first layer of the

[60:58]

onion. But what savvy investors are

[61:00]

doing is they're pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe

[61:00]

pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe

[61:00]

pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe pe

[61:00]

pe pe pe pe pe peeling that layer back

[61:01]

and they're trying to think two years

[61:03]

down the road 5 years down the road and

[61:05]

what are all the things that are

[61:06]

impacted by that artificial intelligence

[61:10]

now you can invest in the individual

[61:12]

companies there are funds that can give

[61:14]

you exposure to to artificial

[61:15]

intelligence but the whole idea is

[61:17]

understanding I mean this is investing

[61:19]

101 is understanding where the money is

[61:21]

moving

[61:22]

>> and that's where the opportunity will be

[61:25]

>> it's a great answer sign me up to market

[61:27]

briefs

[61:28]

Yes, that's what we cover.

[61:30]

>> But that's the that's the insight you're

[61:31]

giving people, right? Like if if someone

[61:34]

signs up, are you able to say, "Hey,

[61:36]

these are the three companies right now

[61:38]

that are building XYZ for you to be

[61:41]

informed and then someone could go and

[61:43]

look at that or

[61:44]

>> how does that work?"

[61:45]

>> So, so market briefs itself is the news.

[61:48]

We we give you a snapshot of what's

[61:49]

happening. That's free,

[61:51]

>> right? Then for the investors, we have

[61:55]

different types of products for the

[61:56]

different type of investor because we

[61:58]

talked about people that want to work

[61:59]

with a financial adviser. Well, we can

[62:00]

help refer you to a financial adviser.

[62:02]

For those of you that want to be passive

[62:04]

investors, we're building tools for you.

[62:06]

That way, you can analyze ETFs and do

[62:08]

all that stuff with the power of AI in

[62:11]

there. We're building our own

[62:12]

proprietary tools, which I've never

[62:14]

talked about before, but hey, here we

[62:15]

are. Uh, launching in 2026. Some really

[62:18]

powerful stuff. Then for active

[62:19]

investors, we have our briefs pro

[62:22]

product which is research. And the thing

[62:27]

that makes this so unique and powerful

[62:29]

is

[62:31]

traditionally if you wanted to know what

[62:33]

Wall Street knows, it was number one

[62:36]

extremely expensive.

[62:39]

Number two, it's extremely complicated.

[62:41]

I mean, if you go and read Black

[62:44]

Rockck's reports, which I do, I'm a

[62:46]

weirdo, I know, but if you read any of

[62:48]

these banks reports, it is complicating.

[62:51]

It's difficult and there's a lot of

[62:54]

technical jargon in there that, you

[62:55]

know, unless you are a professional,

[62:59]

it's really hard to understand what

[63:01]

these companies are doing. So, what we

[63:04]

try to do is we have analysts that

[63:06]

do real research. I mean, we're we're

[63:08]

going out talking to executives. They're

[63:10]

going out and attending trade shows.

[63:12]

They're going out and putting in all

[63:13]

this work to find where money is moving.

[63:17]

And then we break it down into our pro

[63:18]

research for the active investors

[63:20]

because not everybody should be an

[63:22]

active investor.

[63:23]

>> It's for the people that actually want

[63:25]

that research that we break down into

[63:27]

plain English.

[63:28]

>> How should someone who's a university

[63:31]

graduate right now, a young person

[63:34]

prepare for an AIdriven economy? What

[63:37]

should they be thinking about? You

[63:38]

better learn it. You better. It is

[63:42]

inevitable. At first, you know, I'm one

[63:45]

of those guys. I hate to say this, but

[63:47]

I'm one of those guys that kind of has

[63:48]

always fought technology. I was very

[63:50]

anti smartphone for a long time. I was

[63:52]

very anti-touchscreen phone for a long

[63:55]

time. Uh I still don't really understand

[63:56]

how to use Netflix. My wife is the the

[63:59]

lead on that. And I was kind of like,

[64:02]

you know, with AI, I was like, this is

[64:04]

cool. We'll see where this goes. And as

[64:08]

I started to learn about it more and

[64:09]

more and I started to use it in my own

[64:11]

business, I started to realize, oh my

[64:14]

god, this is not one of those things

[64:16]

that I can just kind of sit on

[64:19]

because

[64:21]

the internet changed the world

[64:24]

quickly. And the companies that

[64:27]

understood the internet

[64:29]

were able to grow very fast. And the

[64:31]

companies that didn't failed.

[64:33]

Blockbuster bankrupt. Sears bankrupt.

[64:37]

Well, AI is doing the same thing at a

[64:40]

much bigger level at a much faster rate,

[64:43]

but our minds haven't gotten faster. And

[64:46]

that's what makes it very unique because

[64:50]

humanity can only evolve as fast as we

[64:54]

can evolve. I mean, our minds can only

[64:56]

grow at a certain rate. Technology keeps

[64:59]

growing exponentially faster. So when

[65:02]

the internet started to grow, we thought

[65:04]

it was extremely fast. I mean over the

[65:06]

course of 2000 to 2010, we saw a lot of

[65:11]

companies that were not getting involved

[65:13]

with the internet getting wiped out.

[65:15]

Well, chat GPT did not exist 5 years

[65:18]

ago.

[65:20]

And here we are today in 2025 and you

[65:23]

have a lot of companies that have

[65:25]

replaced workers with AI. and and and

[65:28]

sure there's a lot of companies that

[65:30]

have not started adopting it yet, but

[65:32]

the companies that are savvy have

[65:34]

started integrating AI in some way,

[65:36]

shape, or form. I mean, I I have a

[65:38]

YouTube channel in Spanish. I'll give

[65:40]

you an example. And what I used to do is

[65:44]

we used to take my videos, send it to a

[65:47]

person who would then write down my

[65:49]

script, and then he would record it or

[65:51]

he would translate it, and then he would

[65:52]

record it. He would give us the audio

[65:54]

recording and then we would take the

[65:56]

audio recording and impose it onto that

[65:57]

video. I mean this was the process. I'm

[65:59]

sure you've done something similar and

[66:00]

then that would get published and that's

[66:02]

what we did for a long time.

[66:04]

>> Then came AI. You take the YouTube URL,

[66:08]

you put it into this thing, you press

[66:09]

enter and 15 seconds later it's a video

[66:12]

dubbed in Spanish in my voice

[66:16]

at a fraction of the price

[66:18]

>> and speed.

[66:20]

>> Insane.

[66:21]

>> You don't have to rely on somebody else.

[66:22]

this guy's on vacation, I have to wait

[66:24]

for him to come back for vacation. Or if

[66:25]

I'm doing an interview with somebody

[66:27]

else and I need two voice editors, I

[66:29]

mean, it it was just it it was difficult

[66:32]

and expensive. Now with AI, it's not

[66:34]

like that. So, we're talking about in

[66:36]

just a few years, we've gotten to where

[66:39]

we are today, and we're not even at the

[66:41]

goal of what AI wants to be. The goal

[66:44]

with AI is

[66:47]

AGI, artificial general intelligence.

[66:52]

And if you read what OpenAI has

[66:55]

published on their website, they say

[66:56]

that their goal is to build a smarter

[66:59]

artificial general intelligence for

[67:01]

humankind. Meta has said the same thing.

[67:03]

I mean, pretty much any AI executive has

[67:05]

made it explicitly clear that their goal

[67:07]

is not artificial intelligence. It's

[67:09]

AGI.

[67:11]

And what AGI is, it's an AI that will do

[67:15]

the work for you. So, let's say I wanted

[67:17]

to start a a guacamole business, right?

[67:20]

I I like

[67:22]

I like food. I'm just a food person.

[67:24]

>> So, if I go to AI and I say I want to

[67:27]

start this business, it can give me some

[67:28]

recipes and I can say, you know, you can

[67:30]

do uh you need to file an LLC. You

[67:32]

should go fi find an assistant and you

[67:34]

should find a place to build your

[67:36]

recipes and things like that. If I ask

[67:39]

that same question to AGI,

[67:42]

the results are very different. Instead

[67:44]

of telling me what I need to do, AGI

[67:47]

will go out and actually file my LLC for

[67:49]

me. It will go out and sign a lease for

[67:51]

me to rent my warehouse. It will go out

[67:55]

and hire me a team. It'll hire me an

[67:57]

exist an executive assistant to run the

[68:00]

business for me.

[68:01]

>> You'll probably hire an AI exist

[68:02]

>> and it'll hire the AI to do that work.

[68:05]

>> That's what's every AI company is

[68:09]

working for. And the first company to

[68:10]

get there is going to be the one that is

[68:13]

going to be making all that money.

[68:15]

And if you don't understand that, you're

[68:19]

going to be left behind. So if you're

[68:20]

out of college, you have to learn about

[68:24]

AI. I don't care what industry that

[68:25]

you're in, learn how to use it. Because,

[68:28]

you know, a lot of people talk about

[68:29]

there's not going to be need for human

[68:30]

workers. I don't necessarily agree with

[68:32]

that.

[68:33]

>> Yeah, I agree with you.

[68:34]

>> But there's not going to be a need for

[68:35]

people that don't really understand how

[68:37]

to use AI. And so you need to understand

[68:40]

how to use it to make your work better,

[68:42]

to make your work more efficient.

[68:45]

because

[68:46]

you might not be replaced with AI but

[68:49]

you'll be replaced by somebody who

[68:50]

understands AI and I know at our company

[68:54]

when we hire I don't care what the

[68:56]

position is even our customer service

[68:57]

reps we ask them how do you use AI what

[69:00]

do you understand about AI because we

[69:02]

want to know how you are thinking and if

[69:06]

you are out of college you are in a I

[69:09]

mean this and people look at it as a big

[69:13]

con and a big hindrance

[69:15]

But for the savvy, it's a huge

[69:17]

opportunity because most people have no

[69:19]

idea. They don't know anything beyond

[69:21]

chat GPT and all they use chat GPT for

[69:24]

is the very basic stuff of how do I

[69:27]

write an email or analyze this for me.

[69:29]

But if you can start to research it and

[69:32]

there's a lot of free resources on

[69:33]

YouTube.

[69:33]

>> Yeah. What would you recommend for

[69:34]

someone who's like, I really want to

[69:36]

learn AI this year. I want to give, you

[69:38]

know, a couple of hours a week to do it.

[69:40]

Maybe a couple of hours a day because

[69:41]

I'm really excited about it. where where

[69:43]

do they start?

[69:43]

>> Start with YouTube. I mean, YouTube's

[69:45]

got so much free content out there and

[69:47]

and learn something and it's free for

[69:50]

you to try it. Go on to Chad GPT. Go on

[69:53]

to YouTube and learn what can I use AI

[69:55]

for? And you're going to see all these

[69:57]

crazy stuff. Just start to go down some

[69:59]

rabbit hole that can align with your

[70:02]

career. So, if you're a dentist, how can

[70:04]

I use AI in a dentistry office? If you

[70:06]

are an engineer, how do I use it as an

[70:08]

engineer? If you are a construction

[70:10]

worker, how can construction workers use

[70:12]

uh AI? I mean, there was a that thing

[70:15]

that I was reading about window washers.

[70:18]

This is not a techsavvy industry,

[70:21]

but it was talking about how there's a

[70:24]

business of people now that are building

[70:26]

AI tools for window washers saying,

[70:28]

"Hey, when you have to go and clean

[70:33]

people's windows, how do you know which

[70:36]

house to go to first?

[70:38]

If you can have an AI tool to build that

[70:40]

route for you, you can save time and do

[70:42]

more houses in a day. And if you can use

[70:44]

that same AI tool to help you give

[70:48]

quotes that are more realistic to

[70:50]

maintain your profit margin without you

[70:52]

necessarily having to go to every single

[70:54]

house. Now you can give more quotes that

[70:58]

are more accurate and spend less time

[71:00]

doing it. So if you want to edge as a

[71:03]

window washer, use AI. If you want to

[71:06]

edge as a real estate agent, use AI. I

[71:09]

mean, in real estate,

[71:12]

there was if you want to help sell a

[71:15]

house, you want the house to be

[71:16]

furnished. You want it to have the nice

[71:17]

furniture so people can imagine their

[71:19]

themselves living there. Well, it's

[71:21]

expensive to furnish a house. But what

[71:24]

if you can take a virtual tour of a

[71:27]

house because somebody can take a video

[71:28]

of it and you can use AI to superimpose

[71:31]

the furniture in the house. Now,

[71:33]

somebody can imagine themselves living

[71:35]

in that house with a virtual tour where

[71:37]

they don't have to go to the house and

[71:40]

it costs you a fraction of the cost of

[71:42]

actually furnishing it, which means that

[71:44]

you can find more of that potential

[71:46]

buyer faster, easier if you can show

[71:50]

them how they could potentially live

[71:52]

there. Again, it's not replacing the

[71:54]

need for them to go there,

[71:56]

>> but it's making it easier for them to

[71:58]

>> decide if they want it or not.

[72:00]

>> Yeah, definitely. Yeah, I've seen the AI

[72:02]

that lets you try on things when you're

[72:04]

online shopping for your

[72:06]

>> avatar to see it, for you to see it,

[72:08]

whether it's purchasing something.

[72:11]

>> It's it's incredible just how much it's

[72:13]

speeding up decision making. Purchase

[72:15]

again, which means again going back to

[72:17]

your original point where we started is

[72:19]

you're either going to become the

[72:20]

consumer

[72:21]

>> Yeah.

[72:22]

>> or the investor and the user

[72:23]

>> 100%

[72:24]

>> because we are all going to consume

[72:25]

based off of AI because it's going to

[72:26]

make it easier to spend more.

[72:28]

>> Absolutely. Yeah.

[72:29]

>> And the people that understand it, it's

[72:31]

going to the internet made some people

[72:33]

wealthier. It made it easier for

[72:36]

everyone else to spend money, right? It

[72:37]

started off with, oh, you can just spend

[72:39]

money without driving to the store.

[72:42]

Well, then it became the one-click

[72:44]

purchase and because Amazon realized

[72:46]

that for every time you had to click a

[72:48]

button to get to the checkout page, they

[72:49]

lost about 50% of buyers. So, they said,

[72:52]

"How about we just create the one-click

[72:54]

purchase?

[72:56]

That way, it's so easy to buy." Then

[72:58]

came buy now pay later online. So you go

[73:01]

to the purchase. Don't you don't even

[73:02]

need the money to buy anymore. Just hit

[73:05]

buy and we'll figure out how to get your

[73:06]

payments later. Now with AI, it's going

[73:10]

to know what you want before you know

[73:12]

what you want

[73:14]

>> and it will be presented to you and the

[73:16]

people that don't understand how to

[73:18]

control their finances

[73:21]

are going to be spending their money

[73:22]

much faster. the people that understand

[73:25]

this are going to be able to gather that

[73:26]

money much faster.

[73:29]

So, it's what side of the game do you

[73:30]

want to be on? And it goes back to the

[73:33]

financial education, which we're never

[73:35]

taught.

[73:36]

>> It's great master class. It's fantastic.

[73:39]

Really great, man.

[73:40]

>> I appreciate it, man. The world is the

[73:42]

world is changing.

[73:42]

>> So simple. No, but the world is

[73:44]

changing. It's changing fast. But what I

[73:46]

really appreciate about talking to you

[73:48]

is you make it so simple and you make it

[73:50]

applicable for everyone. And I hope

[73:51]

everyone who's been listening and

[73:52]

watching today has a road map. I feel

[73:55]

like they have the steps that they need

[73:56]

to take to improve their financial

[73:59]

well-being and that they're supported in

[74:01]

that because it's such a systematic

[74:03]

process and it doesn't matter how much

[74:06]

or how little you have. It feels like

[74:08]

you've given people a real blueprint to

[74:10]

start with. The reason why I wanted to

[74:11]

do this is because I was actually

[74:13]

reading a statistic um right when your

[74:16]

team emailed me, which was we know that

[74:20]

somewhere between 50 to 70% of Americans

[74:23]

are living paycheck to paycheck. And

[74:26]

then I was reading a statistic that said

[74:28]

72% of Americans have Netflix.

[74:31]

What that told me

[74:33]

is that the average American is spending

[74:36]

more money on Netflix than they are on

[74:39]

their investments.

[74:40]

And that's a problem

[74:43]

that should be flipped. It should be way

[74:45]

beyond flipped.

[74:47]

And it's what are we prioritizing? And

[74:49]

the the reality is the reason why so

[74:51]

many people do that is because we just

[74:52]

don't know there's an alternative.

[74:55]

And that's what we're on the mission to

[74:56]

do is to help help people be better with

[74:59]

money

[75:00]

because it costs money to eat. It costs

[75:04]

money to feed other people. And unless

[75:07]

you learn,

[75:09]

you are going to be the person making

[75:10]

everybody else rich and never wondering,

[75:13]

never understanding

[75:14]

why, why, how come I can't ever have

[75:17]

freedom? How come I can't ever have

[75:19]

those nice things? How come I can't ever

[75:20]

do that stuff that everybody else is

[75:22]

doing? But it starts with your mindset.

[75:24]

It starts with that financial education.

[75:26]

>> Great. That's great thing. Everyone,

[75:28]

make sure you go and subscribe to Market

[75:30]

Briefs, the newsletter if you want to

[75:32]

find out simple, actionable tips on the

[75:35]

news around finances and stock market.

[75:37]

Marketbriefs.com or is it I want to make

[75:39]

sure

[75:39]

>> briefs.co/market

[75:41]

>> briefs.co/market.

[75:43]

>> Yeah. Or you can just go to briefs.co,

[75:45]

you'll see market briefs there.

[75:46]

Honestly, if you go to marketbriefs.com,

[75:48]

it'll still be there, too. But but

[75:50]

briefs.co is our homepage.

[75:51]

>> Okay. Amazing. Just really, thank you so

[75:53]

much for your time, your energy. I

[75:55]

learned so much. I hope that you keep

[75:57]

coming back on the show again and again

[75:59]

to give great insights and I'm so

[76:01]

excited for everyone to go and make

[76:02]

better investments. This is my actual

[76:04]

hope for people after this. Please do

[76:07]

not sleep on this advice. Please go and

[76:10]

subscribe to Market Briefs. Please go

[76:12]

and figure out how to invest $1. That's

[76:14]

all I want you to do to actually go and

[76:16]

do it so that you get into the practice.

[76:18]

We were talking about waiting around for

[76:20]

a long time. And the third is go and

[76:22]

really make sure you make those three

[76:24]

bank accounts. thought that was a

[76:25]

brilliant piece of advice to actually

[76:27]

have your savings, your investment, and

[76:29]

your spending money. Those three

[76:31]

actionable items from this episode will

[76:33]

transform your financial well-being. And

[76:35]

of course, there was so many more

[76:36]

insights that Jasp gave that I hope

[76:39]

change your life and change your

[76:40]

family's life as well. So, yeah, thank

[76:42]

you, man.

[76:43]

>> Well, thank you, Jay. You know, it's

[76:44]

always a pleasure to be on with you.

[76:46]

>> Uh we got to bring you to Detroit

[76:48]

sometime. Absolutely. And you know, the

[76:49]

small changes add up.

[76:51]

>> So, get started. It doesn't matter where

[76:53]

you are, it adds up. And I'm going to

[76:56]

give one last stat because as you said

[76:58]

that I was like, oh, you know, I should

[76:59]

say this.

[77:01]

>> If you can invest $4 a day from the day

[77:04]

you turn 21 until the day you turn 65

[77:07]

and you just invest your money into the

[77:08]

markets, you will retire a millionaire.

[77:11]

$4 a day. That's something that I think

[77:17]

everyone in a first world country can

[77:20]

strive to do. Regardless of where you

[77:22]

are, it's possible. Just get started.

[77:26]

>> Well, amazing, man. Thank you.

[77:29]

>> Thank you.

[77:29]

>> Thank you so much for listening to this

[77:32]

conversation. If you enjoyed it, you'll

[77:34]

love my chat with Adam Grant on why

[77:37]

discomfort is the key to growth and the

[77:40]

strategies for unlocking your hidden

[77:42]

potential. If you know you want to be

[77:44]

more and achieve more this year, go

[77:46]

check it out right now.

[77:48]

>> You set a goal today, you achieve it in

[77:50]

six months, and then by the time it

[77:52]

happens, it's almost a relief. [music]

[77:54]

There's no sense of meaning and purpose.

[77:56]

You sort of expected it and you would

[77:57]

have been disappointed if it didn't

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