Money is only a tool. It will take you wherever you wish, but it will not replace you as the driver. -Ayn Rand
Many of you out there I am sure have heard of Bigger
Pockets. It is the place to be for anyone interested in Real Estate (RE).
Basically, they are the Facebook of Real Estate.
Bigger Pockets (BP) is the real estate social network. You
can find out all types of things such as how to finance rental properties, find
property management companies, and how to invest in real estate.
While on my journey to learn ALL THINGS MONEY, I came across an interesting post called House Hacking.
For readers of my blog, you know I am a fan of Millennial Money (MM). Grant Sabatier is the money genius behind that site and because I was a fan of his is how I came to learn about Bigger Pockets. I learned so much from Grant that I wrote a blog post about how he inspired me to save more money.
It was on his website that I read about House Hacking, which is when you live in one of the multiple units of your investment property as your primary residence, and have renters from the other units pay your mortgage and expenses.
Like I stated on my last post, one of the biggest expenses
in any budget is housing. The trifecta of expenses is housing, food, and
transportation. If you can cut your expenses in this area, you are g2g (Good to
Go). đ
It just so happened that he did an interview with Scott Trench
from Bigger Pockets. I am not the best when it comes to listening to podcasts,
as I prefer to read books! However, the podcast is transcribed so I read
through that. Great idea there Grant. The transcription was so good that I
listened to the podcast and just like that a fan of BP was born.
That is what made me decide to pick up the book How to
Invest in Real Estate from Bigger Pockets authored by Josh Dorkin and Brandon
Turner.
I just so happened to post a tweet and saw FINCON ask what books am I reading? So I answered and tagged the authors of the book. To my surprise, Josh Dorkin replied to my tweet and said thank you for reading and asked if I would post a review on Amazon.
Since he was polite in asking for this small request, I not only did the Amazon review (still pending as of this writing), but I also decided to review the book on my site. They say ask and you shall receive. So, I gave him a 2-for-1 and posted a review and did this blog post. One tweet did all of that.
So, without further adoâŠ
How to Invest in Real Estate: The Ultimate Beginner’s Guide to Getting Started
THE #1 QUESTION
The reason Brandon and Josh wrote this book was to help
people. One of the most asked questions they get is, “How Do I Get Started
in Real Estate Investing?”
Well, guess what? They say ask and you shall receive, right?
Then Brandon and Josh answered.
They wrote this guide to help people along their way.
Although, the Bigger Pockets forum and blog is filled with tons of information,
it can be overwhelming. Where do you begin?
This book packs many of the interviews they do on the podcast and brings it together in one place as a reference guide.
WHAT WILL YOU LEARN
The guide contains eight chapters but my three favorites are: Chapters 1, 4, and 7.
The book will show you the following:
How to get started in Real Estate?
How to invest with no money, bad credit, and
with a full-time job?
Why you should save cash reserves?
What is an LLC? Do you even need one?
Real Estate Niches (as the riches are in niches)
đ
12 Ways to Finance your Real Estate Deals
Real Estate Exit Strategies
I think the reason people choose to invest in RE is not only
to get rich (obviously), but to have more financial control over their lives.
In addition, real estate is tangible. Unlike stocks, bonds, and CDâs you can drive by and visit with your investment. Have a cup of coffee in it. Heck, you can even live in it!
THE REAL WORLD OF INVESTING
Remember the television show âThe Real Worldâ on MTV. Well,
that was a lot of fiction and made up drama for ratings. This book provided
insight directly from RE investors with real world experience.
One of my favorite stories actually came from Chad Carson of the Coach Carson blog site. Chad decided the go big or go home route to RE was the best route for him. His niche was house flipping.
He tested this hypothesis and decided to change courses. Instead
of trying to flip 50 properties, he then decided to do less for the sake of his
sanity. This method worked.
This taught me that flipping is NOTHING like the television shows portray. We are getting the Campbell Soup version (condensed). I need the đŻ real.
You must find out what works for you. Although, you can
learn from the mistakes of others, usually trial and error will show you the
way. Fail fast, early, and hard. Then you can start to profit from your
knowledge and experience.
The book is filled with tons of stories. I just shared one.
If you want to learn more about Real Estate, then hop on over to Bigger Pockets. You can also look up some real estate blogs and books. Just like I did with this one.
Have you recently wrote a book? Are you looking for a review? Do you want to be Greenback’d? Tweet me. I’ll be here @mjp2520
All human wisdom is summed up in two words; wait and hope. –
Alexandre Dumas, author of The Count of Monte Cristo and The Three Musketeers
As I am sure by now you can tell, that I like to not only be entertained, but to entertain my readers as well. Well, this blog post du jour will be no different. One of my favorite stories is one that was written many years ago.
This tale has it all. Money. Lust. Power. Greed. Revenge.
I am sure many out there have heard of the book called The
Count of Monte Cristo. It was written by Alexandre Dumas in 1844. Although, the
bookâs origin is over 200 years old, its plot is just as poignant today as it
was then.
The story takes place in France, Italy, and islands in the
Mediterranean. The Italian island of Monte Cristo is where the protagonist in this
story derives his name. The historical events in the novel happen between
1815-1839, during the time Napoleon Bonaparte was exiled. A true adventure tale
that involves the themes of betrayal, hope, justice, vengeance, mercy, and
forgiveness.
The plot involves a young sailor that is wrongfully accused
of a crime he did not commit. Falsely
convicted with no trial and imprisoned, he escapes from jail, acquires a
fortune, and sets out a plan to exact revenge on those who conspired against
him.
His name is Edmund Dantes. And this is his story.
This post will focus on the 2002 film version of this story.
So, sit back, relax, pull up a chair, pour yourself a glass of wine, and enjoy this post.
Money Nuggets of Wisdom I got from The Count of Monte Cristo. Â
ALL WEALTH BUILDING STARTS WITH INCOME Â Â Â
Money Nugget One:
You must earn money to save money. Frugality allows you to save more money.
In order to even start building wealth, you have to have
income. Money needs to come in before you can start saving any. But make no
mistake, all wealth building starts with saving. Once you have money to save
then you have to allocate funds to savings.
Please do not discredit the act of saving and frugality. It is far easier to slash expenses and save then it is to make more money.
Work with what you have. It will be far harder to save once you start making more money. So, start saving while you have small sums so you will already be in the habit to do so when you have large sums.
And make time to spend on fun. Do not cut back on fun. Spend more on fun. It will give you the energy and inspire you to earn and save more money. So that you can have even more fun.
I started by reviewing my bank statements and seeing what I
was spending.
I made the decision to get rid of as many fixed expenses as
possible. In addition, as I paid off debt I would incrementally up my savings.
I started with $1 a day. That was $365 a year. Then went to $50 per month and so on until I finally reached $13,333.06 a year. I cut out tons of subscriptions and services I didnât need or wasnât using. Once I saw how much I could save and in such a short time period, as I went from saving $3k a year to $13k a year within 12 months, I started realizing the power of saving.
In the film, Edmond (played by Jim Caviezel) is a Second
Mate of a French merchant vessel. It starts in 1815. As their shipâs captain is
ill, Edmond commands the ship to stop on the island of Elba. Napoleon Bonaparte
offers the help of his physicianâs services if Edmond will deliver a letter. And
is sworn to secrecy.
Keep in mind, Napoleon is in exile and any correspondence delivered
from him would be considered to be treason to the French monarchy as he is an
enemy to the crown. The letter was to be
delivered to a powerful politicianâs father. You can pretty much guess where the story is
headed.
However, before that happens, Edmond must deliver the letter he promised. He gives it inadvertently to the son of the man the letter was meant for. The politician J.F. Villefort (played by James Frain) said the letter was treasonous. It is revealed that Edmond could not read. All was good until he said the name of who was to receive the letter. Upon hearing his fatherâs name and knowing it would ruin his political career, Villefort burned the letter and ordered Edmond to be arrested.
RICH IS RELATIVE
Money Nugget Two: Rich is relative
Edmond escapes arrest and goes to his friend Fernandâs house. His father is a count and he goes there for help and protection. However, his friend turns him in to the gendarmes (the French police). As he is arrested, he gives Edmond a chess piece as that is game they used to play as a parting gift.
Then Edmond asks, âwhy?â He replies that he should not envy the son of a fisherman or someone not of noble birth. Thatâs cold.
At this point in the film, you are reeling. A good man has
been falsely accused and arrested. Put away in prison for life because he was a
pawn in a much bigger scheme. One he was unaware of.
Letâs stop and think for a second.
Letâs meet the money players. Because everything always comes back to money. If you truly want to know something., then follow the money. Â
Villefort is a well-known, connected, and in a respectable position of a salaried politician.
Danglars is an educated shipman.
Fernand is the son of a count, wealthy, of noble birth and education.
Edmond Dantes is none of those things. He had to work for
every dime. He is poor and illiterate. When a sacrifice had to be made and a
lamb had to be slaughtered, the sacrificial lamb was a poor man. Just something
to think about right there.
Although, these people have money and connections, all of them disliked a man of no means, who lacked money, prestige, position, power, and education.
Money will not make you happy as you can clearly see from above.
Money itself has no power. It is what you do with it that gives it meaning or power. It does have the power change lives ad make life easier, but that’s about it. Therefore, rich is relative. It is what you perceive it to be.
Perception is reality.
Rich is different for everyone.
 NEGLECT CAN BE AN ALLY
Money Nugget Three:
You can build a fortune without anyone knowing. Stealth wealth anyone?
One of the best parts of the film happens while Edmond is in prison. After six years, he meets a fellow prisoner by the name of Faria (played by Richard Harris), who was once a general in Napoleonâs army. He himself has been imprisoned for 11 years because he would not divulge the whereabouts of a secret treasure; the treasure of Spada.
Faria asks Edmond to help him dig tunnels to escape the
prison. They barter. Edmond will only help if the man will teach him how to
read. Faria agrees. In addition, he also teaches him how to fight.
Over the next 7 years, Edmond becomes a scholar and a swordsman.
This was made possible because the guards completely ignored
and shunned them. Their neglect became their ally.
This is similar to a story I read in Millionaire Women Next Door. While a young womanâs parents were ignoring her, she built up a healthy work ethic and saving plan that helped turn her into a millionaire as an adult. Do not let anyone tell you that you cannot be anything you want to be. If it is important to you, then you will find a way.
If I hear one more person tell me they do not have time to
read personal finance books, Iâm going to start a bull**it jar and put $20
bucks into it every time I hear that. By the end of 3 years, I will probably
have enough to buy a car with cash.
If you have time to surf the Web, spend hours on Twitter, or read Facebook posts, then you can read about finance.
Now, I need your undivided attention for this next part. Reminder that glass of wine I mentioned earlier? Well, I need you to put it down for one minute.
Once you get all this knowledge, then put it to use. Start
investing. Even better, after you grow your fortune, tell no one. Then they canât
hit you up for gifts and interest free loans.
Think Iâm joking? Look up bankrupt, broke, or rich NBA
players and see interviews where they talk about how friends, hangers-ons, and
family members ask them for money.
I regularly tell people I am just out here trying to make
it, you know, trying to make a dollar out of fifteen cents. Whatever will
distract them from asking me about my money.
Sure, I have money in the bank. However, I am not a bank.
Money Nugget Four: There is power in getting an education.
After one conversation, Edmond was very upset. Faria helped
him figure out who, how, what, and why he was sent to prison for life. That is
when Edmond decides he wants justice. He must live and get out of prison.
Faria is hurt badly in prison, but before he dies, he tells
Edmond where the secret treasure is hidden and provides him with a map. Knowing
this was his chance to escape, Edmond hatches a plan to get out of prison.
After he escapes, he runs into a band of pirates and befriends them.
He then sets off to see old acquaintances and in search of
the lost treasure.
After getting the information he required on all his old enemies
and his nemesis, Fernand, he finds the treasure.
Once a poor man, he is now the richest man in Marseille. He gives himself a new identity; a count. And a new name: Count of Monte Cristo.
I remember hearing this growing up, beauty fades but dumb is forever. You cannot get by on looks alone. Get an education. It could be the difference of a life of penury or extreme wealth. You decide.
MONEY OFFERS PROTECTION
Money Nugget Five: Money attracts money. Money also provides protection.
Edmond Dantes is no more. The Count of Monte Cristo is what he is referred to from this moment on. Everywhere he goes, people hang on to his every word. No one dares to disrespect or cross him to his face, but they will behind his back.
There are some excellent parts in the film as to what he does with his money and how he acquires his home. He is also careful with his identity. He guards it close. He is aloof and cold but not recalcitrant. He is very respectful to all levels of gentry no matter how noble or what manner of nobility a man is. An inferior or low ranking birth means nothing to him. Only power.
Youâll see what I mean in this scene from the film.
In the illustrious words of Charlotteâs Web, âSalutations.â Or in the case of Monte Cristo, âGreetings.â đ Now this is how you make an entrance! This is my favorite scene in the film.
Monte Cristo is nobodyâs fool. He has been to both sides of the island. Having been voted off the island of poverty so many years ago, he knows which side to be on.
âIn this life we are either kings or pawns, emperors or fools.â – Napoleon Bonaparte
Money is not only a tool, but one of protection. You can
afford to pay your fare and your fair share of any financial obligations.
Financial mediocrity is a foolâs game. You should respect money and take care
to grow your money so that you can pay your share of any bill that comes in
your mailbox.
Money offers protection from eviction.
Money offers protection from sleepless nights and worrying
how to pay bills.
Money offers protection from bankruptcy.
Money offers protection from poor health.
I think you get my point.
I want you to be protected. I want you to have the means to
take care of yourself and your family. That is why I write. I want to help
people improve the quality of their financial lives. I want you to be
self-made. I want you to be a financial
rock star. To fulfill your dreams. And if you happen to look for suggestions on
good reading materials, you can come here.
May I suggest this literacy classic be one of those books, The Count of Monte Cristo, on your road to wealth that you pick up along the way. Or check out the movie and see how the story ends.
If you enjoyed this post, then you will not regret it.
How did a small company that sold shoes out the trunk of a car get this far?
One word: Endurance.
The man behind it all fought through endless money woes,
legal problems, lawsuits, and inventory issues for 20 years, but came out ahead
in the end.
He is now estimated to be worth over $10 billion dollars.
His name is Phil Knight and this is his story.
A RUNNER WITH NO DIRECTION
âIf youâre following your calling, the fatigue will be
easier to bear, the disappointments will be fuel, the highs will be like
nothing youâve ever felt.â â Phil Knight
Phil Knight was born in Portland, Oregon on February 24,
1938.
In his youth, he liked two things: sports and running.
At the University of Oregon (OU) he earned a journalism
degree in 1959.
After Phil Knight graduated from University of Oregon, he then
earned an MBA from Stanford Graduate School of Business. He graduated from the
school with a master’s degree in business administration in 1962. At the age of
24, he has no idea what to do.
He looks over his final paper he wrote on shoes.
In his small business class, Knight produced a paper,
“Can Japanese Sports Shoes Do to German Sports Shoes What Japanese Cameras
Did to German Cameras?,” which would foretell his eventual foray into
selling running shoes.
WHAT’S IN A NAME
Ford had just paid a
top-flight consulting firm $2m to come up with a name of its new Maverick, I
announced to everyone. âWe havenât got $2mâââbut we got 50 smart people, and we
canât do any worse than⊠Maverick.â â Phil Knight
The company was founded on January 25, 1964, as Blue Ribbon
Sports (BRS), by University of Oregon track runner Phil Knight and his coach Bill
Bowerman, with a partnership by handshake and officially became Nike, Inc. on
May 30, 1971.
The name from Nike, is named after the Greek goddess of
victory.
When they needed to choose a name for Nike, the “Buttfaces”
(an affectionate term for the inner circle) were trying to come up with
something.
That night as Nike legend has it, Johnson, from a dead
sleep, sat upright: “Nike, the winged goddess of victory! That’s IT!”
Jeff Johnson, employee number one of Nike, and fellow
Stanford runner whom Phil hired as he hasnât met anyone with his passion for
running, suggested calling the firm “Nike,” named after the Greek
winged goddess of victory.
Itâs pronounced ânyâ-kee.â
The name is Nike and their rival was Adidas.
It met with a lukewarm Buttface reception. In the eleventh
hour, Knight begrudgingly went with it.
“‘What’d you decide?’ Woodell asked me at the end of
the day. ‘Nike,’ I mumbled. ‘Hm,’ he said. ‘Yeah, I know,’ I said. ‘Maybe it’ll
grow on us,’ he said.
FIND A MENTOR
FPhil had a great mentor, Bowerman, a great American running
coach, who was constantly experimenting with shoes.
Bowerman would make then on his waffle iron.
Bowerman stressed that an extra ounce on a shoe added 55
pounds of lifting over one mile. As a mediocre runner, Phil was Bowermanâs
favorite guinea pig (he wouldnât dare jeopardize the top runners with
experimental shoes).
He trained Olympic athletes so he knew what they needed to
wear on their feet to compete. He trained one of the most prolific Olympic
runners of that time: Steve Prefontaine.
Somebody may beat me,
but they are going to have to bleed to do it. â Steve Prefontaine legendary runner
of the 1972 Olympics
Bowerman was the most famous track coach in America,
training local champions. It was said future Olympian Steve Prefontaine known
as âPreâ did not want to run for anyone, but him.
He was also one of the top paid Nike endorsers before his death
in 1975.
In my personal opinion, I do not think I have ever seen any
runner run like Prefontaine with so much passion. I hold my breath every time I
watch him run. Itâs like time is standing still. You donât want to blink
because you know without a shadow of a doubt that you are witnessing greatness
and what the human spirit could do without limits.
The real Steve Prefontaine
THE BUSINESS OF RUNNING
âDonât tell people how
to do things, tell them what to do and let them surprise you with their
results.â â Phil Knight (original quote by George S Patton)
Back in his day, running wasnât a âthing.â People were
ridiculed for running. There were no real running shoes. So, he set out to
change that.
After graduating, he decides he must travel to figure out a
plan how to see what the Japanese do with the making of shoes. Alas, he has no
money. His only option is to ask his no-nonsense father. However, he feels that
his father will not fund his wanderlust. But in a surprise, his father agrees
and gives him $1,000 to go to Japan.
âHow can I leave my mark on the world, I thought, unless I
get out there first and see it?â â Phil Knight, Shoe Dog
Phil goes to Kobe, Japan, in November 1962.
His father has two friends in Tokyo, and they dispense
business advice â the Japanese are soft negotiators, not fans of the aggressive
American style. Armed with this advice, he sets out.
He discovers the Tiger-brand running shoes, manufactured in
Kobe by the Onitsuka Co. Phil was impressed by the quality and low cost of the
shoes. Knight calls Mr. Onitsuka, who agreed to meet with him. By the end of that
meeting, Knight had secured Tiger distribution rights for the western United
States. Off the top of his head and thinking on his toes, he thinks of the blue
ribbons on his walls in his room he won from running when asked what the name
of his company as he says, âBlue Ribbon Sports.â
SIDE HUSTLE OF SELLING SHOESÂ
SIn the beginning, there was no money.
Phil sent shoes to his old coach to see if they would sell.
Bowerman, who was obsessed with runner performance and making shoes lighter,
not only liked the shoes, but asked to work on product shoe designs and from
there a partnership was born. This was 1964.
His fatherâs friend advised him to get a CPA. With an MBA
and CPA, he would likely never be out of work. So, he gets his CPA and a job at
a small firm. It had 4 employees. He worked 70-hour weeks.
Phil still worked as an accountant during the day while
trying to get his business of the ground. Finally, in 1969, he quit working for the
likes of firms as Price Waterhouse to work on his business full-time.
So why was selling
shoes so different? Because, I realised, it wasnât selling. I believed in
running. I believed that if people got out and ran a few miles every day, the
world would be a better place, and I believed these shoes were better to run
in. People sensing my belief, wanted some of that belief for themselves.
Belief, I decided. Belief is irresistible. â Phil Knight
THE RICHES ARE IN NICHES AND PITCHES
TRunning is not a hobby or sport during his time in the 1960âs.
Mostly only student athletes were buying their shoes, as popular
as they were, they appeal to just a small niche
of the population.
He sold shoes at track meets out of the back of his car in
the Pacific Northwest.
The pitch: Japanese shoes are extremely high-quality,
low-cost shoes.
A 300 order of shoes
cost $1k. He got his half $500 from his father and the other was put up by
Bowerman.
They SOLD OUT!
The shoes were so popular that people were showing up at his
house to by them.
PHIL ON MONEY
PâBut thatâs the nature of money. Whether you have it or not, whether you want it or not, whether you like it or not, it will try to define your days. Our task as human beings is not to let it.â â Phil Knight, Shoe Dog
Money problems plagued the company.
Distribution rights became an issue so he had to fly to
Japan (ticket paid for by credit card as he has no money) to plead his case to
keep selling and got the green light. He found this out from a letter his
employee named Johnson sent him. The lesson here is to listen to good counsel
and advice. This very well may have saved the company from ever existing today.
However, the company did want a bigger player in the shoe
game to represent them, but Phil said they had offices in both coasts to shore
up the deal.
(He was lying â they didnâtâ have an East Coast office).
No venture capitalist or angel investors in 1965. Phil had
to use banks. They wanted big profits and slow growth. Phil was having none of
it.
BOOTSTRAPPING IT LITERALLYÂ
BThe company was always strapped for cash. They had to stay
lean to survive. And worked mainly in storage rooms and Philâs apartment.
Meeting the demands of the banks and customers became
equally tougher.
EVERY. SINGLE. YEAR.
Trying to get imports on time, make cash payments to
creditors, and get orders to customers was a logistical nightmare.
Onitsuka is painfully unresponsive as shoe shipments arrived
late, which meant less time to sell, and each loan repayment period to
creditors tougher.
EVERYDAY I’M HUSTLING
EPhil did everything he could do to keep the lights on, make
payroll, and keep the company going. They were growing every year and sales
were doubling, but they still had problems financially.
First year, they made $8,000 in sales in 1964. By 1967, says
had grown to $84,000. They double again in 1968 to $160,000, but Phil still canât
afford to draw a salary.
So, he did what he and adult has to do when they need money:
get a job.
Thatâs right, he went back to working in accounting.
He doesnât love the work, but it pays the bills.
At this point in Philâs story, I had to give him the slow
clap of praise for doing what needed to be done.
However, sales double again to $300,000 in 1969, Phil is able
to draw a salary of $18,000. He quits his job teaching and is at BRS full-time.
In 1970, doubling again, sales reach $600,000. By 1971, they crossed the
million dollar sales mark at $1.3 million.
Finally, it all came to a head when their Japanese exporter
decided to buy them or give their business to someone else.
AN ACE UP HIS SLEEVE OR SOLE?
AâHave faith in
yourself, but also have faith in faith. Not faith as others define it. Faith as
you define it. Faith as faith defines itself in your heart.â â Phil Knight
The biggest asset Blue Ribbon has is Bill Bowerman.
He learns that Japanese and American bodies are simply
different, and thus the shoes need to be different, like more arch support. To
have a great chance in the US, he believes Onitsuka needs to customize their
shoes for Americans.
He draws up countless designs and sends them to Japan, only
to receive no response. Occasionally they relent and make a few prototypes, and
indeed theyâre far better. Undeterred by Onitsukaâs hesitance, Bowerman even
experiments with producing homemade rubber to make new soles.
You might be able to see where this is going.
OUR SOLES AT KNIGHT LEARN YOYO: YOUR ON YOUR OWN
OThey secretly start manufacturing their own shoes. Having
dreamed about Nike as the name for the company, it was then born and the
sidestepped acquisition.
Their reputation sold their shoes and saved their company.
They also learned how powerful celebrity endorsement is as
well.
When the company was in dire financial straits one of his
top employees (#4 full-time) Woddell and his family gave him their life savings
of $8,000 ($50,000 in 2017 inflation) to keep Nike afloat. A friend indeed.
PHIL ON MANAGEMENT
PHis employee in CA, Johnson, he sends Phil mountains of
letters, detailing his every development, every sale and notable customer.
He sends advertising ideas (Phil doesnât believe in
advertising), shoe designs (Phil already has enough to deal with Bowerman), and
his insistence on opening a retail shop in Los Angeles.
Phil feels smothered and rarely replies to Johnsonâs
letters. From studying war heroes and generals, he holds a virtue: âDonât tell
people how to do things, tell them what to do and let them surprise you with
their results.â
And Johnson delivers results. His customers love him, depending on Johnson to solve their problems in both running and life. Even when he gets in a car crash and breaks his skull, heâs continuing to sell shoes. Phil even issues him a challenge â sell 3,250 pairs of shoes in a few months, and Johnson could open his retail space in LA. And sell he does â now Blue Ribbon has an official runner mecca in Los Angeles.
MARKS OF VICTORY
MOn his travels, he stopped in Greece. While visiting the temple of Athena, he notices a carving of Athena â bending down to adjust her shoe. She is known to be the goddess of wisdom, battle strategy, and victory or ânike.â
And whatâs THIS?
Thatâs a swoosh.
The hellâs a swoosh?
The answer flew out of me: Itâs the sound of someone going past you.
They liked that. Oh, they liked it a whole lot.
The trademarks of “Just Do It” and the Swoosh logo became synonymous with Nike. The logo is also one of the most powerful in the world.
The logo was commissioned for a mere $35 USD from graphic
design student at Portland State University by the name of Carolyn Davidson in
1971. She charged them only $35 for her work.
According to Nike’s website, Knight said at the time:
“I don’t love it, but it will grow on me.”
PHIL ON PRAISE AND CHARITY
PPhil never gave praise or money. ButâŠ
He was so pleased with the logo that in 1983 he gifted
Carolyn with an undisclosed amount of Nike stock for her contribution to the
brand. She had worked for the company from 1971 until 1980.
That year, 1980, is the year Nike went public with an IPO.
Phil told Oprah on her show in April 2011, that he gave
Davidson “A few hundred shares” when the company went public.
For years, the value of the stock was unknown.
Well, guess what? Youâre about to find out right here, right
now.
What is the cost of helping someone when commissioned with a
task and not thinking it is beneath you?
Counterkicks got a
hold of a recent Nike shareholders meeting transcipt in which Knight reveals
exactly how much stock he gave Davidson and the value of that stock today…
“…we
hired a graphic art student at Portland State University, and told her to come
up with something that connoted speed, and we gave her $75.00 for what she came
up with. When we went public in 1980, we called her back up and gave her 500
shares of stock, which she has never sold, and is worth close to $1 million
this day.”
His top employeeâs or the foot soldiers as I like to call
them, Bowerman is worth $9 million; Woodell, Johnson, Hayes and Strasser each
about $6 million; Phil $178 million.
In 2012, it was reported that Knight himself owned
67,097,005 shares of Class A Common Stock and 7,740 shares of Class B Common
Stock in the Nike corporation.
Nike has revenues of $20 billion annually.
In 2018, he is now estimated to be worth $29 billion
dollars. Him and his wife donate $100 million a year.
PHIL ON HELPING OTHERS
PâWhen goods donât pass international borders, soldiers will.â Though Iâd been known to call business war without bullets, itâs actually a wonderful bulwark against war. Trade is the path of coexistence, cooperation. Peace feeds on prosperity. â Phil Knight
When on travels in his younger years he went all over the
world.
He noticed incredible poverty in places like Vietnam.
When his goal of taking over Adidas as the number one shoe
company in the world, by 1986, total sales hit $1 billion, and Nike surpassed
Adidas to become the No. 1 shoe manufacturer worldwide.
He also was able to fulfill some other dream. He opened
factories in Vietnam so that war would likely stop there due to commerce and
work.
Luck plays a big role.
Yes, I would like to publicly acknowledge the power of luck. Athletes get
lucky, poets get lucky, businesses get lucky. Hard work is critical, a good
team is essential, brains and determination are invaluable, but luck may decide
the outcome. Some people might not call it luck. They might call it Tao, or
Logos, or Jnana, or Dharma. Or Spirit. Or God. â Phil Knight
Knight’s memoir, Shoe
Dog, was released on April 26, 2016 by Simon & Schuster, was rated
fifth on The New York Times Best Seller list for business books in July 2018, and
details the building of the Nike brand.
Knight has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to each
of his Alma Maters including $105 million to Stanford Graduate School of
Business in 2006.
As of 2016, according to Portland Business Journal,
“Knight is the most generous philanthropist in Oregon history. His
lifetime gifts now approach $2 billion.”
It is safe to say that Phil Knight and his Nike business are a running success.
âWalk amongst the natives by day, but in your heart be Superman.â â Gene Simmons
In 2017, Gene Simmons wrote a book called, On Power: My Journey Through the Corridors of Power and How You Can Get More Power.
This book was nothing like I expected.
It was MORE.
Like the title says, itâs about getting more power. Become more powerful than you ever thought you could be. It all starts with your actions.
Letâs get right into it.
WHO IS GENE SIMMONS?
Image: Forbes.com
The short version is that he is a co-founder and front-man of the band KISS, that he helped start in the 1970âs. They are America’s #1 gold record-award-winning group of all time.
Image: New York Post
Gene grew up dirt poor. He practiced guitar for hours after watching The Beatles on an appearance of the Ed Sullivan show, he knew then that he wanted to be a rock star.
According to Harper Collins, the book was inspired by Niccolo Machiavelliâs The Prince, Simmons offers his unique take on the dynamics of power in every realm of life, from the bedroom to the boardroom, to the world of rock, celebrity, and social media, to politics. With one-of-a-kind anecdotes from his life and career, as well as stories from historical and contemporary masters of power, including Winston Churchill, Napoleon Bonaparte, Warren Buffett, Michael Jordan, Oprah, and Elon Musk, Simmons crafts a persuasive and provocative theory on how the pursuit of power drives civilization and defines our lives.
Gene Simmons has an estimated net worth of over $50 million dollars. So, I decided to give the book a quick read. Glad I did.
POWER IS WHAT EVERYONE WANTS
People want power.
Power over their lives
Power over their time
Power over their professional lives and career
Power over their money
So, how do you get this so-called power.
Itâs a power grab for sure.
Gene takes a no-holds-barred approach to his life and on power. Itâs dog eat dog out there. You have to be one of the big dogs.
Gene believed that everyone deserves power and that it is yours for the taking.
In his book, he gives you the key to unlock the doors to the temple of power.
GENE ON EDUCATION
âIt’s up to you to educate yourself.â
âIt’s up to you to learn speaking skills and people skills.â
âIt’s up to you to try (and usually fail, but to try again) all sorts of ventures.â
âBelieve me, the library is the temple of God. Education is the most sacred religion of all.âÂ
He graduated from Richmond College in New York City getting a bachelorâs degree in education. At one point, he was a school teacher in the Upper West Side.
Gene also speaks multiple languages such as German and Hebrew.
I noticed this was also a theme of Scrooge McDuck. Get a good education, become a linguist, and get to work.
I read everything I can get my little hands on. I go to the library every month. I regularly check out 4-5 books at a time. Sometimes more. I do believe in being well-read.
GENE ON SUCCESS
The rest is a combination of hard work, being at the right place …at the right time…with the right thing…oh yes…and more (never ending) hard work.âÂ
You want success? Well, you have to work for it.
Gene puts his money where his mouth is.
He worked for a butcher hauling up huge slabs of meat and cleaning the blood off the butcher block. Gene has worked as a typist and sold fruit on the side of the road when he was 8 years old.
Make no mistake. Gene is a hard worker and a hustler. He was working multiple jobs to get ahead. Similar to Jay Leno.
As for myself, at one point, I was working as a waitress, cashier, or in sales. In addition, to going to college and studying at times up to 5-7 hours a day! Going to bed at 1 am and getting up at 6 am. Rinse and repeat! I did that for years.
GENE ON ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND CAPITALISM
âBefore I ever knew what the word Entrepreneur was, I realized in America and in the Western part of the world in general, you are given the opportunity to be whatever you want to be. And that is all anyone should ever expect from the Capitalist system. The rest is up to you.â
Yep. America is the land of YOYO (Youâre on your own).
You learn real quick that no one is coming to save you. You have to create your own safety net. You canât depend on the government. The only person to depend and rely on is self. Get it? Got it? Good.
GENE ON MONEY
âSo much of our popular mythology focuses on the negative aspects of power that we forget that gaining power is, perhaps, the only way to enable ourselves to make a difference in our lives and in the lives of others.â
Gene says you must first get your financial house in order before you can espouse love.
This is similar to what I once heard Tyra Banks mother say, âyou have to get yourself together first, before you can help anybody else.â
You should always be looking for ways to earn and expand those earnings. KISS started out with nothing. They slowly built a following. IT. TOOK. YEARS. They were riding around in an old van going from gig to gig and living off hot dogs.
But KISS got smart. They started licensing their name. Everything from lunchboxes to t-shirts. Their moniker is big. Multi-million dollar deals got them to the top of the heap. Monetize everything is Geneâs motto. And he has. And itâs been lucrative to say the least.
So, there you have it. Gene Simmons on power. If you want it bad enough, you just have to work and rock-n-roll all night, like KISS, to get it.
The first step to getting the things you want out of life is this: Decide what you want. â Ben Stein
Ben Stein is an economist and actor, who wrote a book in 2017, called The Capitalist Code: It Can Save Your Life and Make You Very Rich. He has an estimated net worth of over $5 million. So, I thought I would check his book out.
On my quest to follow the money, I have discovered lots of books, blogs, and information about money.
I have been told I am seriously into all things money. Friends sometimes call me âthe money lady.â Thatâs fine with me. I take that as a compliment. There are much worse things to be called than that.
But, I get it. I do have a laser-like focus when it comes to getting things done. I can be a task-master. It comes naturally to me. I just canât help it because I believe in finishing what I start.
I learned that lesson from one of my favorite childhood books Where the Red Fern Grows.
You could say Iâm a bit obsessed with learning about money. However, it has served me well to know about personal finance. I have a six-figure retirement and save over 40 percent of my income. All that came from reading finance books!
That is how I came to find this book. It is a quick read as the book is on the small side at 146 pages in length. I knew the name Ben Stein, but I wanted to find out What is The Capitalist Code?
But firstâŠ
WHO IS BEN STEIN?
âI’m an economist by training. I don’t really work as an economist. I only worked briefly as an economist.â
Jewish-American economic and political commentator, writer, actor and attorney. He gained early success as a speechwriter for American presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. Later he entered the entertainment field and became an Emmy Award-winning actor, comedian, and game show host. He is famous for his monotonous yet humorous voice in acting.
For those who may not be that familiar with the name you may remember him from his self-titled television show, âWin Ben Steinâs Moneyâ or from the film, Ferris Buellerâs Day Off.
âAs to a media personality, well that just happened in large measure because people found me amusing, and I did lots and lots of T.V. news interview shows.â
âIt’s a great stretch for me to do my game show. It’s very hard. It’s not me at all. The only part that’s me is sort of when I’m sitting in the booth looking tormented. That’s the only part that’s the real me.â
In Ferris Bueller, he is actually discussing a real topic of the era. During the 1980âs, Reaganomics was also referred to as voodoo economics or trickle-down economics. Iâll give you more on this topic later, in a future post. đ
Ben has written for publicationâs such as Barronâs, The New York Times, Fortune, and the Wall Street Journal. And numerous financial books including this one.
WHAT IS CAPITALISM?
By definition, an economic and political system in which a country’s trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state. You will often hear it referred to as a free market or free enterprise.
Simply put, capitalism is a system of investment in and ownership of the means of production, distribution, and exchange of wealth is made and maintained by individuals and corporations instead of by state-owned means. Â Participants privately own capital.
Ben says, âFree market capitalism is a fantastic wealth-producing system and allows individuals to amass wealth.â
In addition, âThere is no freer, more diverse, and more equal opportunity employer than capitalism. . . If you can produce a large amount of excess over your costs, you get well paid. And if you produce very much more than you cost, you get rich.â
A free market of competition, not a central government or regulating body, dictates production levels and prices. True capitalism needs a competitive market because without competition, monopolies exist.
âTrying to pick individual stocks is a trap. I can’t do it. Warren Buffett can, but hardly anyone else can beat the indexes over a long period of time.â
It’s easy to think of big business as morally bankrupt, but it isn’t, really. Business leadership can make poor/unethical decisions, but being big doesn’t make them inherently wicked, and being a small business doesn’t make it inherently virtuous.
âI agree that there are some bad apples on Wall Street. I spent about ten years exposing corporate and financial fraud for ‘Barron’s’ magazine and I found a lot to write about.â
If you want to know more about stocks, you can read numerous books and magazines on the topic such as Value Line, The Intelligent Investor, and anything by Jack Bogle.
The key point is this: Free market capitalism is an incredible machine for making wealth. Corporations ârain moneyâ year after year. If you donât participate, you are making a huge blunder. It doesnât take a genius, but it does take a planâa âlittle bit of knowledge and an even smaller amount of action.â
SCARY STATISTICS
âThe education system should teach us about money; it’s an incredibly big subject. I run into people all the time that don’t have the first clue of what they should do about money.â
Ben states the following about personal finance in America:
Most Americans have not inherited wealth or a successful business that could set them up for life
80% of millennial’s have no plan whatsoever for retirement savings
Many Americans are saving NOTHING
The average person says they need about $50,000 per year for retirement; but only has savings to achieve 20% of that number
We live in a country where more than half the people couldn’t come up with $500 in cash today if they had a family emergency
Source: GoBanking
WHAT YOU NEED TO DO
According to Ben, you need to save first, and then spendâ automatically.
Thatâs similar advice that Shark Tankâs Kevin OâLeary says: “Don’t spend too much. Mostly save. Always invest.”
Barnes and Noble provides this overview of the book: harness the incredible power of the U.S. economy for enjoyment and security by being owners of profitable businesses-by consistent, conservative investment starting as young as possible in a diversified port- folio of stocks. Anyone can be a capitalistâand should be. All it takes is a little bit of knowledge and an even smaller amount of action. All it takes is The Capitalist Code.
BEN ON EDUCATION
âThere is a clear, unequivocal, if generalized, connection between the amount of education that a man or woman achieves and the amount he or she earns.â
In the book, he shows what women can earn with a degree…
And men.
Agreed. I notice that the more education you have, the more informed decisions people tend to make.
Although, in my opinion, education is not an equalizer it does; however, provide you with increased opportunity, knowledge and exposure to scholarly information.
For most folks, a bachelorâs degree is enough. Particularly, from a reputable in-state public or private accredited institution.
I will never forget when I was reading Arnold Schwarzeneggerâs biography when he saw a PhD professor driving up in an old, beat up car and he said to himself that if that is what an advanced degree gets you, then that guy was in the wrong career.
BEN ON SPENDING
âYou must arrange your life from the very get-go so that you are spending less than you earn.â
Yep. I have learned it is not what you make, but what you spend.
You can totally blow through $200,000 USD a year after taxes! Just keep buying big homes and expensive cars.
BEN ON PICKING STOCKS
How should you invest?
âYou donât need to âplay the marketâ and try to pick stocks. Just buying and holding index funds is a simple, effective method that beats money managers most of the time.â
How long should I hold onto stocks?
âHold onto these funds as long as possible.â
Should I sell as soon as I get a sizable gain?
âTake advantage of huge tax subsidies for deferring investment gains.â
BEN ON WEALTH
âA highly disproportionate amount of the good things in life accrue to those who have financial capital. The easiest way is to own index funds.â
He states you must acquire wealth.
I too have read you must pursue wealth. You may not want to chase money, but sitting on your laurels wonât attract money and abundance to you. Wealth is something that is attracted to those that have beat inertia and exhibit exertion.
Well, there you have it.
Straight from the guy who is pretty focused on one-task himself as he continued to utter that famous line, Bueller? Bueller? Bueller? Bueller?Â
Just like someone had pity on him and answered him in the movie, Mr. Stein has answered a lot of your money answers in his book. The code is capitalist. He has given you the key to unlock the secrets on how to build wealth. So, use his key. Because guess what? The secret is out!