Whenever you receive income of any kind, immediately put 25% of it into a savings account. Whenever that savings account reaches $5,000 in total balance, invest it in something, ideally something different than what you’ve invested it in before. Buy stocks. Buy CDs. Buy commodity or precious metal or land ETFs. Buy shares in individual companies that you believe in. Then just watch it grow.
Wait, that sounds like normal investment advice! How will that help you to get rich quickly?
It’ll get you rich much more quickly than almost any other plan out there. You just need to re-evaluate your idea of quickly.
In terms of building wealth out of nothing, it doesn’t happen overnight (unless you happen to have a brilliant idea and the skills to perfectly execute it, which happens only a few times a generation). It takes time. It also takes discipline. Most of all, it takes patience.
Patience is a virtue that’s often overlooked. When people think of getting rich quickly, they think of buying a lottery ticket and having $50 million next week. They think of having some sort of secret insider information that will double their money in a month (like those endless penny stock scams that constantly float around). They think of arrangements where they hand their money to a guru who will magically cause it to multiply several times, never asking themselves why that guru even needs their money (hint: money gurus can’t perform magic).
In the real world, building personal wealth doesn’t work that way. It usually comes through saving up your money over a long period of time and putting that money to work over that same long period. However, the more diligent you are about the saving and putting that money to work, the quicker you will get rich.
Let’s say you have someone who is making $40,000 per year. They have no debts, but no assets, either – a net worth of $0. Let’s also define “rich” as being having 20 times your annual income in investments, which means if the investment earns just a 5% return, you can live on just that return in perpetuity.
If they save 1% of their income each year and put it in investments that earn an average of 7% per year, it will take 74 years to cross the “rich” mark.
Bump that savings up to 2% per year (from $400 to $800 per year, or from $15.50 per biweekly paycheck to $31), it will take 63 years to get there. Add 1% and you subtract nine years off of the time it takes to become rich.
Let’s bump it up to 5% per year. It then takes only 50 years to get there.
10%? It takes only 41 years.
Let’s say you’re a prodigious saver and save 25% per year. It takes you only 28 years to get there. Start at age 25 and you’re retired at age 53 on your own investments. When Social Security starts rolling in, it’s icing on the cake.
This really is the recipe for success. If you make $40,000 a year, live as though you make $30,000 a year. If you make $80,000 a year, live as though you make $60,000 a year. Bank 25% of your paycheck and live on the rest.
What you’ll find is that your lifestyle adjusts when your checking account does. The perks of life become actual perks that you appreciate instead of just a static routine of disposable pleasures. You can look forward to a future that involves doing whatever you want instead of working at a job until you’re unable to work any more.
If you want to get rich quickly, you already have the tools you need. The question is whether or not you have the courage to do it.
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