How Business Owners Can Increase Cash Flow

 

When you first start your business, it’s very important, actually, it’s vital that you reinvest the profits into the business to help the business grow. However, as your business continues to grow more and more, your net worth becomes enmeshed in the business. Consequently, your net worth becomes illiquid and inaccessible. And that has a direct impact on your cash flow.

As business owners, we face many challenges at various times throughout the year: how to increase revenue or increase sales, how to decrease expenses or overhead hiring people. Currently, it’s very difficult to hire people, and more importantly, it’s difficult to get the right people for the right position.  One common thread challenge that all business owners face either consistently or at various times throughout the year is how to increase cash flow.

Today, we’re going to talk about how to increase your cash flow as a business owner and we’re also going to show you how to do it without increasing your sales and without reducing your overhead expenses.

When you first start your business, it’s very important, actually, it’s vital that you reinvest the profits into the business to help the business grow. However, as your business continues to grow more and more, all your net worth becomes enmeshed in the business.

Consequently, your net worth becomes illiquid and inaccessible. And that has a direct impact on your cash flow, which has a direct impact on your ability to continue to grow your business on your ability to take care of your personal obligations, as well as your ability to procure financing, to grow your business, or even just to operate it.

In every business, there are seasons of good cashflow and bad cash flow and for the business owner, the typical diagnosis is something like this: “If only I could make some more sales, if only I could earn some more revenue, then I could finally feel the cashflow relief that I’m looking for.”

You see, typically business owners usually correlate lack of cash flow to one of two things, either too little sales or too much overhead. What we found that the real culprit is how they are using their money. How they use their money is really going to have a huge impact on a consistent basis on their cash flow.

About all the competition we have for our business checkbook. We have vendors, we have consultants, we have taxes. We have insurance. Everyone is trying to get into our checkbook and they’re trying to get in there on a consistent basis. So it’s really important that we make our cash flow as efficient as possible so that we as business owners don’t feel pinched when we need more money.

Exactly. And understand that all of those competing industries or those competing vendors are very good at what they do. And because of that, we’re giving up control of our money unknowingly and unnecessarily. But the good news is that’s where the opportunity exists for you to really increase your cash flow.

Because once we bring the awareness that knowingness, that you’re doing things in a less efficient way, we’ll be able to bring that awareness and make the changes necessary to give you the relief you’re looking for. Here’s a perfect example. A few years ago, a business came to us for some consultation on some business succession planning. Basically they had some partners that were looking to retire and they didn’t have the cashflow to buy them.

After a thorough analysis, we determined that the major culprit in pinching their cash flow was that they were in a race to get out of debt.

And what happens when you’re in a race to pay off your debt is all your disposable, monthly income is leaving your control and going into the control of a bank or a finance company.

Now understand the bank loves that because the bank was taking that money and turning it over. And literally by paying off their debt quicker, this business was making the bank’s position better and their position worse.

So what’s the moral of the story. Well, we’ve said it once and we’ll say it again. It’s not what you buy. It’s how you pay for it. That really matters.

And to underscore that point, let me share with you an analogy that we share with our clients. Let’s say that you want a special drawing to appear in the masters golf tournament in the spring of 2022. And you came to us to improve your chances of winning. Well, we point out to you that there’s really only two approaches. Number one, you can purchase the clubs of anybody who’s ever played on the tour or approach number two would be to have the swing of anybody who’s ever played on the tour. Which strategy do you think would improve your chances of winning?

Well, the obvious answer is to focus on the golf swing, how you’re using your money in our example is so much more important. And whoever has the control of your money controls your life. Sometimes we get hung up on things like loan terms and interest rates, and we take our eye off of what’s really important controlling our cash flow

When you control your cash flow, and that becomes your major focus, all of your decisions become much clearer.

NEVER be at the Mercy of Banks Again | Shuttered Line of Credit – What Happens?

 

…there’s an old saying, “A banker is somebody who will give you an umbrella when it’s sunny and take it away when it’s raining.”

Wells Fargo recently closed credit lines on their customers. Stick around to the end of this video, because we’re going to go over exactly what that could mean for their customers, for the economy, and show you a solution that will make sure that you’re never at the mercy of banks, the government or Wall Street again.

On July 8th, 2021, Wells Fargo announced to its customers that if they had a personal line of credit, they were shutting it down. Basically, if you had this line of credit, you’ve got to notice that in 60 days, Wells Fargo was going to shutter your account. Let’s go over exactly what that means.

Well, when your account is shuttered, it means two things. Number one, any unused portion of your credit line is no longer accessible to you. So you don’t have access to the unused portion. And secondly, they’re going to be getting a payment schedule for the outstanding balance that’s remaining. So how is that going to affect their customers? Well, it’s going to affect their customers in four ways. First and foremost, their access to credit has been limited. Secondly, their future cashflow is limited because now they have a payment schedule. Thirdly, because they had credit and it was shut down, that’s going to have a negative impact on their credit score. And all three of those issues are going to negatively impact their customer’s ability to obtain credit in the future.

So you could see how this simple shift from a line of credit to a term loan could have such a waterfall effect on these customers and not only their present cashflow position, but also their future ability to access capital. In the last week or so, we had the opportunity to speak with some of our clients and a lot of them asked “Is this even legal what Wells Fargo is doing? Are they even allowed to do this?” And the answer is yes, it’s written in the terms of their loan agreement.

You know, there’s an old saying, a banker is somebody who will give you an umbrella when it’s sunny and take it away when it’s raining. And this action by Wells Fargo only underscores the meaning of that saying. You see Wells Fargo is protecting themselves. They have it written into the loan agreements that they’re allowed to shutter or shut down those lines whenever for whatever reason. And by the way, it’s not only personal lines of credit, it’s home equity lines of credit that they can do this on. They can do it with business lines of credit. And not only Wells Fargo, other banks can do the same banks write documents on those loans. That’s why there’s all these legal documents when you take out a loan. Why? To protect the bank! But this should come as no surprise for Wells Fargo customers. In 2008 and 2009, when they took over Wacovia they did the very same thing.

They shut down credit lines for people, business credit lines. And I had clients call me and say, Hey, I’m in trouble. I’ve got to get a new credit relationship. I just got a letter from Wells Fargo that says I have 60 days to obtain new credit. Well, the ideal situation back then would have been to have control of their own pool of money so that they wouldn’t be affected when the bank decides that the bank wants to protect itself and they shut down your access to capital. So this is all part of what Nelson Nash referred to in his bestselling book, Becoming Your Own Banker. And in there, he has a chapter called the golden rule. And basically the golden rule, according to Nelson Nash was the one who has the gold makes the rules. Well, if you’re in control of your own pool of money and you’re making loans to yourself or to your business, you are truly in control of the process. So the question really becomes, do you want to continue to be controlled by the process and be at the mercy of the banks? Or do you want to be in control of the process? Again, the one who has the gold makes the rules!

Banks are really good at getting us to do what’s in their best interest and they do it under the premise that it’s in our best interest. And they’re so good at doing it, most of the time, we don’t even know what’s happening. And the perfect example of this is a 15 year mortgage with a low interest rate versus a 30 year mortgage with a higher interest rate. Let’s take a look at a solid example of a $250,000 mortgage.

So if our choices are a 30 year mortgage for third, for $250,000, at 4% interest, our payment is about $1,200 per month, a 15 year mortgage for 3.75%. And that’s how they entice us to do what’s in their best interests. They offer us a lower interest rate on a shorter term loan. Our payment will be about $1,800 per month. Now that’s a 50% increase in cashflow that we don’t control. And that’s cashflow that the bank now controls, but again, they have us focused on the interest. So with the 30 year mortgage, we would pay the bank $179,000 in interest with a 15 year mortgage, we’re only going to pay the bank $77,000 in interest. So here’s the issue, if the amount of interest paid is really in the bank’s best interest, why would they cheat themselves out of $102,000 of interest? Well, the answer that is, it’s not the amount of interest that’s paid. It’s how fast the bank gets it back. What the bank literally did by getting us to pay the loan back quicker, they increased their rate of return on the loan, the 30 year loan, they had about a 9.5% rate of return. And on the 15 year loan, they end up with a 13% rate of return. They almost increased their rate of return by 50%.

The thing is that with businesses, when they sell products, inventory turnover gets them more profits. And with the bank, they have a product to it’s loans. So the quicker they’re able to get the loan money back and then turn it over with a new loan, the more interest, the more profits that they’re able to make. Imagine how stressful it would feel if you had a credit line out for tens of thousands of dollars, and only had 60 days to secure new financing, to secure a new banking relationship.

Conversely, imagine having access to your own pool of money, so that when you got this notice, you can borrow against your pool of money, use it to pay off Wells Fargo or anybody else who calls your credit line and buy yourself time to obtain another relationship. In the process, while you’re using that money, you’re still earning uninterrupted compounding interest on the money you used to pay off that loan. Wouldn’t that be a great situation to be in?

If you’re ready to learn more about our process and exactly how it works, check out our free web course at tier1capital.com. It’s one hour and you could register right on our website.

And remember, it’s not how much money you make, it’s how much money you keep, that really matters.

How to Increase Your Net Worth

 

Because our money never leaves the policy, our money continuously earns compound interest even while we’re using it. It’s as if our money’s in two places at once, because quite literally it is. We’ve cracked the code on creating wealth by making purchases.

 

Wouldn’t it be great if you could increase your net worth by making everyday purchases? Most people think there are only two ways to make a purchase. You could either pay cash or you could finance. But today we’re going to talk about a third option, an option that allows you to earn continuous compound interest on your money even after you make the purchase.

When it comes to making major capital purchases, the often most convenient way is to finance the purchase. Think about it – when you go to buy a car, how easy is it to show proof of income and them to give you a loan?

So when we borrow, we have no access to capital. We have to use somebody else’s capital, therefore pay them interest, and in the process, we’re not earning interest, but make no mistake we’re using the collateral of our future income to pay for the purchase. The bank is loaning us money because they know we have the ability to earn income.

Since we’re financing and we’re giving up that monthly cashflow, it hinders our ability to save for the future. And then the next time we need to go buy a car. We’re forced to finance again, because we didn’t have the ability we didn’t have the cash flow to build up a pool of cash to self-finance or pay cash for that car.

So you see how every financial splash we make creates a ripple effect down the road.

Every decision we make financially could either move us towards financial freedom or further away from financial freedom. Often times these debts snowball. So it’ll start with a car loan and then it’ll be paying for the wedding and tuition for our kids and appliances and furniture. These monthly payments slowly grow and grow and grow. Before you know it, we’re out of control of our cashflow.

Think about it from the perspective of a financial institution, what does the financial institution want? What does it need? It needs our money. And the best way to get that is to do it on a systematic basis – on a monthly basis. So the more of our monthly cashflow that the financial institution can control, the more that they can control us, but the more profits that they could make.

The goal of every debtor is to finally be able to go out and pay cash for that car. They’ll save month after month, year after year until they finally have enough money to go out and pay cash for that car. But what happens when they drain their tank down to zero is – they gave up all the potential to earn compound interest on that money.

You see the person who pays cash – does so, so they don’t pay interest. They think they’re getting ahead of the game, but really they’re always going back to zero. They save. They wipe it out. They save again. They still have payments – it’s to a savings account, but at the end of the day, they’re still not earning interest and they’re really not in control of their financial future.

You see, there are only two components when it comes to compound interest and that’s time and money. Every time we drain that tank, we’re losing all that time. And we all know time is an asset that we can never regain.

A lot of times we talk to folks who don’t finance and the reason they don’t finance is because, “I hate paying interest.” they’ll say. My response to them is, “Oh, so you like to lose interest?” And then I get a look like, what are you talking about? And then I explained to them how they’re losing interest by paying cash.

So if financing isn’t the answer and paying cash isn’t the answer – what is the solution to finally achieving financial freedom? And here’s the secret. It’s not what you buy – it’s how you pay for it, that really matters. So you may be wondering how we do this. The answer is we use specially designed whole life insurance policies. Mainly because they have some unique characteristics and that we’re able to collateralize loans against the cash value of the policy. What that means is we’re never taking money from the policy. We’re never draining that tank, but instead we’re placing a lien against that cash value so that we have access to make major capital purchases and basically self-finance.

Because our money never leaves the policy, our money continuously earns compound interest even while we’re using it. It’s as if our money’s in two places at once, because quite literally it is. We’ve cracked the code on creating wealth by making purchases.

There are two main differences between this type of financing and traditional financing. The first is that it’s an unstructured loan repayment schedule. Meaning that you get to determine when and how much you pay back towards this policy loan. And the second key difference is that every time you make a payment, your payment is literally increasing your net worth.

Make no mistake about it – whether you finance through conventional methods, through a bank or a finance company, or with using our process and borrowing against your cash value – every payment you make will increase somebody’s net worth. Using our process, you will increase your net worth.

So every time you make a payment, you increased your future ability to access that capital again. So that over time you’re less and less dependent on the banks and financial institutions – and ultimately can reach freedom this way.

Earlier we mentioned that it’s not, what you buy, it’s how you pay for it. We talked about financing, we talked about paying cash and then we talked about using our process. In this process, we focus on showing you how to regain control of your money. You see, when you focus on controlling your money, all of your decisions become very clear. It’s only when we take our eye off the ball and we focus on interest rates, or we focus on getting a high rate of return on our money that we really start to lose control of our financial future.

If you’re ready to finally regain control of your financial future, please check out our one hour web course. It’s on our website tier1capital.com. We go into great detail about how our process works and how it could work in your life.

Remember, it’s not how much money you make – it’s how much money you keep, that really matters!

Secrets of a Wealth Creator: How to Buy, Borrow, and Pay Smarter

Let’s face it, we all buy things and we will need to buy things our entire life. It’s not necessarily what we buy, but rather the way we choose to pay for them that can have a lasting impact on our financial well being. Especially those things we call Major Capital Purchases. These are things that cannot be paid for in full with our regular monthly cash flow. Certainly things like cars, vacations, weddings are major but a new set of tires for many Americans could be a major capital purchase as well. If you can’t pay for it in full you are going to have to finance it.

Let’s take a closer look at this with the graph below:

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The first thing I want you to notice is the black line in the center. This is the Zero Line, and represents the point at which a person has nothing or owes nothing. When you owe more than you have accumulated you are below the zero line. Unfortunately living above the zero line takes more than a good job.

Let’s begin talking about The Debtor (shown in Red)

The Debtor doesn’t have any savings or resources and is forced into borrowing. They borrow the money against their future earnings, and work toward paying it off and getting back to zero. They hope to have finished paying back what they owe before another need arises. They spend their lives working to pay for what they have already spent plus interest. The only way they can support their lifestyle depends on money they have yet to earn. This obligation on future earnings is one of the biggest problems with debt. It can be very depressing when you can’t see the way to even get back to zero. Another difficulty is that when you become a debtor to a creditor, you lose control. The creditor is then in control of your resources, not you.

The Saver (shown in blue)

The Saver, being well aware of the wealth transfers inherent in borrowing at interest, will postpone a purchase until they have saved enough to pay cash in full, up front. However, at the same time they make a purchase they also consume their savings and move back toward that zero line. A very precarious position indeed. A single unforeseen circumstance could lead to depleting their savings bringing them closer to the zero line. The saver constantly moves from having access to money and needing to save to get back to where they were before they had to spend their savings. They do not like to pay interest so the drain their accounts and kill compounding each time they do.

Paying cash seems to be the best way to pay for things because it avoids the necessity to pay interest but to pay cash you must also give up the ability to earn interest on those same dollars.

Another problem with paying cash is that first, you must save it which is not necessarily an easy thing to do. Depending on where you are saving those dollars, the government may also require that you pay taxes on the growth of that money. And when you do make a purchase not only do you consume those savings, but you also negate the ability of those dollars to earn interest because they have been spent. Many people choose to pay cash in order to avoid paying interest to a lender, which seems smart. However, the part that is often missed is that they are also losing interest they could have earned had they not had to pull dollars out of the account to make a purchase in the first place. But it’s not possible to keep the dollars in the account earning interest and still make the purchase, is it?

The Wealth Creator (shown in green)

The Wealth Creator utilizes a unique approach. They also save, but when it is time to make a purchase they use their savings as collateral to secure a loan, preferably at a lower interest rate than they are earning on their money.. Now, there are a couple of key benefits here. The first is that this strategy keeps you from having to deplete your savings to make a purchase. At the same time, it allows those savings to continue to compound interest without interruption. Secondly, while the Wealth Creator does pay interest on the loan, they can often do so at negotiated rates. As the loan is repaid, the amount of savings available to be collateralized increases proportionately until the loan obligation is met. Compound interest works best over time uninterrupted. Resetting compounding on dollars we remove from accounts that are earning interest is not an efficient purchasing strategy.

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We all want to make the most of the resources available to us; to be as efficient as we can be while also avoiding wealth transfers. Once a decision has been made to part with our dollars, it is permanent. Since we can never have those dollars back again, it makes sense to spend them wisely. To spend them in a way that fosters the creation of wealth, not the relinquishing of it. Let’s spend some time together to discuss how we might improve your purchasing efficiency.

 

 

Why My Clients Choose to Work With Me

If you have had any previous experience with a financial advisor, chances are the conversation revolved around how much money you have, where it’s located, we can do a better job. It would seem that most investment firms share the same singular focus of trying to find better products that earn a higher rate of return which often take more risk. For all of the fancy analytics and mathematical acrobatics available today, nobody has yet figured out how to predict the future. Earning higher returns is certainly not a bad thing, and something we can help you with as well, however we believe we should help our clients avoid money they could be losing unnecessarily before considering options that require more risk. Return is not the only thing to consider when evaluating the efficiency of your own personal economic model. There are three types of money:

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The money used to secure your financial future must somehow come from these three areas. Accumulated money represents the dollars you currently have invested and are currently saving. You could focus your attention on these dollars in order to find better investments that potentially pay higher rates of return.

Lifestyle money represents the dollars you are spending to maintain your current standard of living: where you live, what you eat, where you vacation etc. For many people, this is where the conversation ends. While everyone wants to solve their financial problems reducing their current standard of living is not a popular option.

What if there were a way to address the issue without having to incur more risk or impact your present lifestyle? I’m glad you asked!

Transferred money represents the dollars you may be transferring away unknowingly, and unnecessarily. Such as:

  •  How you pay for your house,
  •  What you pay in taxes
  •  How you fund your retirement accounts
  •  Non-deductible interest
  •  How you pay for major capital purchases like cars, education, weddings, and other large expenses.

There are really only two ways a financial advisor can be of help to you:

  1. By finding better products that pay higher rates of return requiring more risk
  2. By helping you be more efficient by avoiding unnecessarily losses

I believe that there is more opportunity to serve my clients by helping them first avoid the losses, before trying to pick the winners. My focus with clients begins with eliminating the involuntary and unnecessary wealth transfers. Consider this. There are two ways to fill up a bucket that has holes in it. One way is to pour more in, and the other is to first plug the holes, then the bucket will fill up even if the flow is just a trickle. Which strategy more closely resembles the way you are currently approaching financial management?

 

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How GameStop changed the way we think about the stock market.

 

 

“What if you could develop a strategy that would prevent you from ever losing money ever again, and because your money was safe, you were in a position to take advantage of any manipulations or volatility in the market.”

 

Have you ever felt that the market is being manipulated by wall street, the government and banks? Do you think it’s being manipulated for our benefit or for their benefits? Did you ever give thought to the fact that not one American CEO or senior executive did any jail time for the 2007, 2008 financial crisis that almost took down the entire financial system? That’s when they went begging to their buddies in Washington to get a bailout and you and I ended up paying for the bailout. How about this? We can’t benefit from insider trading, but they can. Congress set themselves up where they’re completely exempt from insider trading, but yet Martha Stewart went to jail for insider trading. 

We have to stop playing the game by their rules because the system is rigged against us. We need to play by a different set of rules to set ourselves up for financial success. We have the opportunity to take advantage of the markets rather than being a victim to the markets. Here’s another example of how the game is rigged against us. For years and years, hedge fund managers were able to short stocks and take advantage of the market. However, in the early months of 2021, when the general public began to manipulate the stock for Game Stop, the popular trading app Robinhood, took the stock off their platform so that no one else could take advantage. No one else could benefit from the market manipulation. 

Again, it’s another example of “we could manipulate the market”, meaning the insiders, but once the public gets a hold of it, “Oh no. Now what’s wrong.” Now the regulators are talking about stepping in to make sure that this could never happen again. Do you think the regulation is going to be for our benefit or for their benefit? 

Why play a game that’s set up for them to benefit and for you to lose? What if you could develop a strategy that would prevent you from ever losing money ever again, and because your money was safe, you were in a position to take advantage of any manipulations or volatility in the market. Furthermore, even better than that, what if you can do so with total elimination or reduced taxation on your money! Wouldn’t that be vital information to have? If that type of planning was available, when would you want to get started? 

 

What am I doing wrong financially?

“We focus on the lifetime capital potential tank because that’s where the greatest opportunity lies for you to improve the efficiency of your money, improve your cashflow, and ultimately increase the amount of wealth that you’re able to accumulate over your lifetime.”

 

Up until 1993, I was exactly like you. I was making great income, but I was living pay to pay. The reason I was living pay to pay is because I was doing everything by the textbook of conventional wisdom. I had a 15 year mortgage and was paying extra on the mortgage. I was maxing out my retirement account. I was paying cash for as many things as I possibly could, but embarrassingly, I had credit cards and I had to borrow money from my father in order to pay my mortgage. The reason my cashflow was being pinched was because of the things that I was taught to do by the so-called experts. 

There are two factors that can really pinch your cashflow. The first is an unsteady income. This could be whether you are a business owner and have a cyclical business cycle, whether you’re a sales person and commission comes when commission comes or maybe you’re an employee and you were expecting a bonus that didn’t come through. These things can really tighten up your monthly cashflow and leave you feeling stuck. 

The second factor we’re going to look at is when unexpected major expenses come up, whether it’s tuition for kids or an annual premium for insurance that you’re paying, or maybe you need new tires or car repair, or we all know how bad it is when your refrigerator breaks and you’re forced to go out and buy whatever’s available at the store. All these things could really leave a dent in your personal economic model and leave your cashflow feeling tight. 

So let’s take a look at this model. This is what we refer to as a personal economic model. We all have one. This is how we show how money works in our lives. Let’s start with income, your income, all the income that you’ll ever earn in your life. We’ll go through this lifetime capital potential tank. It’s the largest tank, cause it has the most money flowing through it, but it doesn’t stay in there. It flows through this tube and hits your lifestyle regulator. Your lifestyle regulator is where you have choices. You can either spend all your money or you could force some up into your future lifestyle tanks, your investments, and your savings. 

Conventional wisdom tells us that we should focus on getting a high rate of return on our investments. That’s what most financial advisors do. They focus solely on the yellow tank and showing you how to get a higher rate of return, probably taking on additional risk. But our focus is different. We focus on the lifetime capital potential tank because that’s where the greatest opportunity lies for you to improve the efficiency of your money, improve your cashflow, and ultimately increase the amount of wealth that you’re able to accumulate over your lifetime. 

So let’s take an example of exactly how making your money more efficient can improve your personal economic model. Let’s take a look at wealth and income potential. Let’s assume you’re age 42. Do you plan on retiring at 70? Your current income is $100,000 and you don’t expect any increase in your income and you don’t have anything saved to this point, but you could expect an investment return of 5% at your retirement age of 70. Your income potential would be $2.8 million. It’s a $100,000 of income times 28 years, gives us 2.8 million. Your wealth potential would be about 6.1 million. That comes from investing your full $100,000 of income over that 28 years. 

Obviously it’s unrealistic to think that you can save 100% of your money because there are expenses that come along with our income. Whether we like it or not first and foremost are taxes, we’re going to put you in a 30% tax bracket. Now that’s federal state, local gas tax, real estate tax, and any other taxes that you would encounter on a day to day living. Our wealth potential now is reduced to $4.2 million. Additionally there’s debt. The average family pays 34 and a half cents of every dollar to service their debt. That’s student loans, car loans, vacation loans, you name it. Now our wealth potential is reduced to 2.1 million and then we have lifestyle, groceries, utilities, insurances, and hobbies. Now we’re down to $600,000. Again, conventional wisdom wants us to focus on getting a high rate of return. Well, let’s assume we can go from 5% to 8%. 

They have to take some risks to do it, but now our wealth potential goes to a million dollars and to them, it can’t get any better than that. But again, the reason you can’t get ahead is because your cashflow is pinched. The reason your cashflow is pinched is because of taxes and debt. What if we can show you how to reduce your taxes from 30% to 25%, look at the effect that has on your wealth potential. Keep in mind, we’re going to reduce your investment return from 8% to 5%. So you don’t have to take any risk in order to do it. Our wealth potential grows from 600,000 to 900,000. It grows by 50% just by reducing our taxes by 5%, but we’re not finished. 

We could also show you how to control your debt. If we can show you how to reduce your debt from 34.5 % percent down to 20%, look what happens to your wealth potential. Now you’re at $1.8 million just by reducing your taxes and controlling your debt. Now, all of a sudden you’ve tripled the amount of money you’re able to save. We’ve done all of this without having to reduce your lifestyle in order to do it. That’s the value of controlling your cashflow. This is how you can get ahead without having to earn or generate additional income. 

Here’s the good news. If you’re ready to get rid of that stuck feeling, all you need to do is stop giving up control of your money. We always say, it’s not how much money you make, it’s how much money you keep that really matters. It’s not your income that’s holding you back, it’s not your rate of return that’s holding you back. It’s the inefficiencies in your cashflow that are stopping you from getting ahead. 

Once you focus on what’s important, control of your cashflow, each and every decision becomes more and more clear and you’ll know exactly what to do. Our process focuses on identifying exactly where and how you’re giving up control, Whoever controls your cashflow controls your life.

 

 

How to shift your money to become financially free!

 

“That’s exactly why our process aims to put you back in control of your cashflow, so that you can build a pool of cash that you have access to when you need it with no questions asked.”

 

 

When people come to meet with us, they have the mistaken belief that the reason they’re stuck financially is because they don’t earn enough income. Well, we have a secret. We have clients who make $50,000 per year, and they’re stuck financially. We have clients who make over $800,000 per year and they’re stuck financially. Now, if you’re making $800,000 per year, it’s not your income that’s holding you back. 

We’ve cracked the code. What we found is, it’s not your income that’s holding you back, it’s how you’re using your money. By making your cashflow more efficient, plugging the holes in your leaky bucket, you’ll be able to experience true financial freedom. Let’s face it. Most financial frustrations arise from the fact that we don’t have access to money. Whether it’s to expand our business, educate our children, or take our family on a vacation. We’re forced to turn to banks and credit companies to get access to their money. In the process, we’re literally obligating our future cashflow to them. We found that whoever controls your cashflow, controls your life. 

That’s exactly why our process aims to put you back in control of your cashflow, so that you can build a pool of cash that you have access to when you need it with no questions asked. Here’s an example of how our process helped transform a cashflow problem to true financial freedom. We met with a client about three years ago, he was an accomplished business owner earning over $400,000 a year, but he was still struggling to pay for things like private school, expanding his business, providing for his family and not to mention every quarter when taxes were due, he was drawing on a credit line to fund those taxes. 

Now, as an entrepreneur, his natural inclination was to earn his way out of this problem. But after meeting with us, we identified the leaky holes in his bucket, which were primarily the fact that he was paying down his debt too quickly. He was literally taking profits from his business and transferring those profits to the bank to pay down his debt. The bank now controlled that money, those profits in his eyes, he was building equity, but he didn’t control that equity. Consequently, when it came time to pay his quarterly taxes, he didn’t have any access to money cause he gave it all to the bank. So what did he have to do? He had to draw on his credit line. When we asked him to sort of take a step back and look at what was happening, he was paying down this debt, but he was increasing this debt. Our question to him was, are you making any progress? 

So let’s take a look to see how our process transformed his situation. Step one was to slow down the rate at which he was paying down his debt immediately, that increased his cashflow by over 40% per month. Now we didn’t change his revenue at all. The amount of money going into his pocket every month was exactly the same. What changed was the amount of money he was keeping. Step two was to redirect some of that money to build a pool of cash that he owned and controlled so that he would have access to it when he needed it in the future, to reach his financial goals. 

Three years later, we’re proud to announce that he’s sitting on over $850,000 worth of cash. Imagine how that would feel. If three years ago you were struggling to pay your quarterly taxes and now today you’re sitting on $850,000 worth of cash. Now understand the power of this process. He’s not working any harder. His cashflow hasn’t changed. The only thing that changed is how he was using his money and because he regained control of his cashflow, he’s now regained control of his life. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How does money work in my life?

 

” It takes discipline and focus in order to save for the future. “

 

This picture is what we refer to as the personal economic model. The fact of the matter is, everybody has a personal economic model. We use this diagram as a tool to show people how money works in their lives. The ultimate goal is to get to position A, where there’s enough money in the future lifestyle tanks, the risk and the safe tank to support our current lifestyle in retirement and through our life expectancy. So let’s take a look at how money works in our lives. 

Let’s start by taking a look at how money enters our system. You’ll notice over here, we have the lifetime capital potential tank. You’ll also notice that this is the largest tank on the screen. That’s because anytime we earn income, whether it’s at our job, maybe an inheritance, maybe we will win the lottery, all that money flows through our lifetime capital potential tank. It doesn’t stay in there and it goes right through this tube and then hits the tax filter. Did you put the text filter on your personal economic model? No, none of us do. 

It comes pre-installed on all the models and the government puts it there. What it does is, it diverts money from our lifetime capital potential and it diverts it into the government’s personal economic model. Once the money flows through the tax filter, we then reach our lifestyle regulator. This is where we have some choices. We can either save some money for our future lifestyle, or we could spend 100% of our income on our current lifestyle. After money flows through and is spent on current lifestyle, there’s no getting it back into our system and it makes it very difficult for us to reach position A. Rather than consuming all of our income. We have a choice as to how much we save for the future. Notice, that our future lifestyle tube is pointing upwards. It takes discipline and focus in order to save for the future. 

Now we have some choices. We could either put money in the investment tank or the savings tank. Notice that the investment tank is labeled “risk”. There’s no lid on that tank. Depicting the fact that we have the potential to possibly lose some money in that tank. Alternatively, we can put money in the savings tank. The savings tank has a lid on it depicting the fact that we could never lose money in that tank. As long as money is in that tank. 

Remember the ultimate goal is to get to position A, where we could turn off our income and we have enough money in both of these tanks to fund our lifestyle through our life expectancy. But what happens if your lifestyle regulator is turned up to 100%? That means that you’ve had very little success in saving money for the future. In the past, maybe you have a little money in your 401k at work, and maybe you have a bare minimum of an emergency fund. What happens when you’re in this position is that you have no access to capital. What happens is, you’re forced to borrow money and take on liabilities. 

Maybe you have a little bit of credit card debt. Maybe you have a car loan. Maybe there’s some student loans that you haven’t had the chance to pay off yet. Notice that all of these debts have no collateral. The money spent on the credit cards, that’s gone. The car is a depreciating asset that the bank really doesn’t want.The car and the education, they can’t take your education back. So you have no collateral. But the fact of the matter is you do have collateral. 

You are obligating your future income to pay those debts. And by obligating your future income, that reduces your future lifestyle and further compromises your ability to save for your future lifestyle. Consequently, that really puts in jeopardy your ability to get to position A. As you can see, we use this personal economic model to show people how money enters their system. More importantly, the consequences of all the choices that they can make with their money. Are you living within your means? If you’re not sure, we recommend you start with a budget. Take inventory of what you have coming in every month and what your monthly expenses are and what you could reasonably afford to save every month.

 

 

How to get ahead with your money.

 

“We focus exclusively on making your money more efficient by showing you how to reduce or eliminate transferred money.”

 

This circle represents all the money that’s going to go through your hands throughout your lifetime. Now your circle might be larger than some folks and others might be larger than yours.  The number one thing you have in common with everybody is that you want this circle to grow. There’s many ways that that can happen. The fact of the matter is, every dollar that goes through your circle of wealth is put into three categories. First there’s accumulated money. That’s the money you have saved and invested. Second is lifestyle money. That’s the house you live in, the car you drive and the schools your children go to. Third is transferred money. Transferred money is money that you’re giving up control of unknowingly and unnecessarily. There are two key words because unknowingly means, you don’t realize it. And unnecessarily means that, working together we can fix it. 

Let me show you how we differ from traditional financial advisors. Traditional financial advisors want to take the money that you have saved and accumulated and show you how to get a higher rate of return by potentially taking on additional risk in order to do that. Well, what if you don’t want to take on additional risk? Well, you’re not a prospect for them. The second way that they can help you is they can show you how to reduce your current lifestyle in order to save more for the future. How much time do you really want to spend talking about how you could live on less? You see, nobody’s talking to you about transferred money. That’s things like interest on debt, taxes, any efficiencies in your current planning, maybe some fees nobody’s talking to you about, that transferred money. 

That’s where we differ. We focus exclusively on making your money more efficient by showing you how to reduce or eliminate transferred money. Our mission is to put you in control of your money. Take a look at how we’ve let other financial institutions creep into our checkbook every month. We have a mortgage that’s due every month  and credit card bills. We have taxes that are paid before we even get our paycheck and those cars aren’t going to buy themselves. We all know this game, Tic Tac Toe, who won the first time you played ? Well for all of us, the answer is the person who showed us how to play. They showed us just enough to play, but not quite enough to win. The same is true for financial institutions, banks, and the government lending companies. They all showed us the game, but not enough to win. 

Who’s teaching you the rules on how to win the financial game? That’s our job. We teach our clients and show them how to win the financial game. You see, traditional financial advisors focus only on your savings and investments. Their job or their goal is to move your money from where it is to them. But by focusing only on rate of return and/or taking on more risk in order to get a higher rate of return, you’re still ignoring opportunity costs, taxes, and interest on debt. The more you grow your money, the more taxes you have to pay. The more you grow your money, the more opportunity costs you’re giving up. 

You see, the golfer over there is really important because we think that by focusing only on growing your savings and investments, that’s the equivalent of focusing only on the golf club in order to improve at golf. Where our process, we focus on how you use your money. We focus on the golf swing. We think by focusing on the swing, or the process of using your money, you can get much better results rather than focusing only on the product or getting a higher rate of return. 

Most people think if they were just able to earn a little more income or a higher rate of return, that all their problems would be solved. But if we don’t address the inefficiencies in our system, they are going to grow with our circle of wealth and we’ll have more interest on debt, more taxes and more lost opportunity costs. 

Here’s how we differ from traditional financial advisors. We focus exclusively on transferred money. Let me give you an example. Here’s a couple earning $100,000 saving 6% or $6,000 per year. They’re earning 5% on their savings. Now, a traditional financial advisor will come to them and say, we can show you how to get a much better rate of return. Maybe take on some additional risk in order to increase the output of that $6,000 that you’re saving. So let’s assume they can get you to 7%. Well, they’ve just added $120 to your bottom line, but you see, they focus on the 6% that you’re saving and they’re completely ignoring the $94,000 of annual expenses. Here’s where we differ. If we can reduce your annual expenses by eliminating efficiencies that are built into those expenses, just by 1%, that’s $940 and $940 is the equivalent of earning 15.67% on the $6,000 that you’re saving. 

Now, here’s the irony. What does it cost to eliminate an inefficient expense? Well, it doesn’t cost anything. How much risk do you need to take to eliminate an inefficient expense, no risk. More importantly, how much of a reduction in your current lifestyle does it take to reduce an inefficient expense? There’s no impact on your lifestyle. So think about it, no risk, no cost and no reduction in lifestyle. We think that’s what makes us different because we don’t focus on trying to grow your money by taking on risk. We focus on growing your money by eliminating losses. Only two ways to fill up a leaky bucket. The first is to turn up the flow and the second is to plug the holes so that even if the flow is just a trickle, it will still get filled up.