If I Wanted to Make My First $100K in 2026, I’d Do This

AAlex Hormozi
Beginning InvestingAdvertising/MarketingSmall Business/StartupsManagementCredit/Debt/Loans

Transcript

00:00:00$42 million in distributions, a $46.2 million exit,
00:00:05$106 million in a weekend.
00:00:07Most people hear those numbers and think,
00:00:08"Oh, that's probably when he felt the richest."
00:00:11That's actually not the truth.
00:00:12The moment that I felt the wealthiest in my entire life
00:00:15was when I had $100,000 in my bank account.
00:00:17That was the first big unlock for me as a person.
00:00:21And the reason is before that,
00:00:23I was sleeping on a gym floor and doing math
00:00:25on whether I could afford groceries, right?
00:00:27And once I had $100,000,
00:00:28that was when I stopped having to worry about tomorrow,
00:00:31right, about paying rent, about paying dues,
00:00:33about paying my cell phone bill,
00:00:34or paying my car insurance.
00:00:35You can't think about your long-term vision
00:00:37if you're trying to pay rent, right?
00:00:38That's just real.
00:00:39And so in this video,
00:00:41I wanna give you a six-step roadmap
00:00:43as clear as humanly possible
00:00:45to making and banking your first $100,000.
00:00:48If you're a big baller business owner,
00:00:50then you can skip this one.
00:00:51But if you don't have that yet,
00:00:53then this is just a pure give on my part
00:00:55of trying to help you get there.
00:00:57The first step is that we have to cut all costs
00:01:00so that we can take more risk.
00:01:01When I say all costs, I mean all costs.
00:01:04That means you don't need out anymore for anything.
00:01:06And if you're hungry, you deal with it.
00:01:08And if it's not from a discount grocery store,
00:01:10you don't buy it.
00:01:12Clothing, like what you have right now on your back
00:01:16is everything you need for the next two years, period.
00:01:19No exceptions, just keep reusing it.
00:01:21Trade or go to Goodwill.
00:01:23You go to work, you go home,
00:01:25and home is ideally with your family or worst case,
00:01:28with another family also trying to make it in save.
00:01:30And it's gotta be as cheap as you possibly can.
00:01:33And I say this as somebody who lived through this.
00:01:35When I was beginning my journey,
00:01:37I was splitting a bedroom in a six-bedroom house
00:01:40with one guy just in that bedroom.
00:01:42As in like every night, we'd stare at each other
00:01:43and I'd be like, "Good night, John."
00:01:45And he'd be like, "Good night, Alex."
00:01:46And I'd blow out my candle.
00:01:48Everything about that was true minus the candle.
00:01:52And pro tip, if you sleep with a fan on your face,
00:01:56you can't hear anything.
00:01:57So, you know, if you have to deal with it,
00:02:01that's one way to do it.
00:02:02But I had roommates that I was paying
00:02:03like three or $400 a month for a very long time
00:02:06while I was beginning my business
00:02:07and started to actually make real money.
00:02:09And I still stayed there.
00:02:10Now, the next thing is gonna be your car.
00:02:12So if you think about expenses,
00:02:13ideally a paid off clunker is the best way to go.
00:02:17If you can't, you want it to be
00:02:18as cheap as humanly possible,
00:02:20but ideally just pay off your car
00:02:22so you don't have to think about it again.
00:02:24All right, so there comes your food,
00:02:25your car, your shelter.
00:02:26And the reason that this is so important
00:02:28for us to basically stack up this cashflow,
00:02:30'cause you're working and making money,
00:02:32but right now you're probably spending all of it.
00:02:33So it's like we need to decrease it from the downside
00:02:36so we have this cashflow, this fluff,
00:02:39that we can start spending and reinvesting
00:02:41in getting more skills, which I'll talk about in a second.
00:02:43All right, real quick.
00:02:44If you are on this path to your first 100K,
00:02:47I want to make it faster and easier for you.
00:02:49So these books, I had 3.6 million of these books
00:02:52that were donated by other entrepreneurs.
00:02:54These books, I'm personally donating.
00:02:56And so if you are on the path,
00:02:58you can get all three of these books
00:03:00for nothing, basically, for just covering the shipping.
00:03:05So I think it's 16 or 17 bucks all in
00:03:07for all three hardbacks shipped to you,
00:03:09plus a 30-day trial of schools to actually use the stuff
00:03:12and have the tools to apply it in.
00:03:14All right, so it's like the best thing,
00:03:16we call it the business backpack.
00:03:17It's literally everything you need to get started online.
00:03:21I'm not promising you'll be a zillionaire.
00:03:22I'm not promising you'll make $100,000.
00:03:23I'm just saying it's a great way to start
00:03:25and it's one of the most valuable things
00:03:27I could possibly give you.
00:03:28And again, special thank you to all the entrepreneurs
00:03:30who donated the books
00:03:31'cause we're doing our best to give them out.
00:03:33Now we have to cut all of our time costs.
00:03:35Step two is save time.
00:03:36And so if you work a nine-to-five job,
00:03:40this is kind of just the reality of it.
00:03:41Your nine-to-five job is not killing your dreams.
00:03:43All right, so just stop subscribing to that.
00:03:45You're wasting the two four-hour chunks of the day
00:03:47that you do have available to you,
00:03:48which is your five-to-nine in the morning
00:03:49and your five-to-nine at night.
00:03:51So what you wanna be doing is instead of just like
00:03:53mindlessly doom scrolling through life, right,
00:03:56instead you're like,
00:03:57I have four hours before I have to go to work, right?
00:03:59Now, if you work remotely, even better,
00:04:01'cause you'd be more efficient with it.
00:04:01If you're not remote,
00:04:02then it might be three and a half hours
00:04:03or you just wake up earlier.
00:04:04And I also say this to someone who did this, right?
00:04:07The reason that this whole like,
00:04:08I wake up early in the morning became a thing for me
00:04:11was because that was the only time I could get ahead.
00:04:13And so I very much believe in Kobe Bryant's perspective
00:04:16on this, which is like, if everyone else is, you know,
00:04:18going to practice, he's like,
00:04:19well, if I do two extra practices a day,
00:04:21I'm gonna move forward three times faster.
00:04:22And so one is we got our money back.
00:04:25Two, we got our time back.
00:04:26Now that we have our time back,
00:04:27we need to minimize the distractions in that time period
00:04:29because focus is achieved not through addition,
00:04:32but subtraction.
00:04:33When you remove everything else that doesn't matter,
00:04:35focus is what's left.
00:04:37Now, if you happen to be just,
00:04:39if you're on your path right now,
00:04:41so like, let's say that you have, you're not at job.
00:04:44So you started a business,
00:04:45but it's not making as much as you want,
00:04:46and you don't have the 100K in savings.
00:04:48Let me just give you the simplest formula that I had.
00:04:49This is kind of like the 2.0 version,
00:04:51which is a 444 split.
00:04:52So if you're at nine to five,
00:04:53then you got five to nine and five to nine.
00:04:55If you don't have a nine to five during the day
00:04:57that you got to go to,
00:04:58then I like to do four hours of promotion.
00:05:00First thing I do when I get up
00:05:02is let people know about my stuff.
00:05:03Because if nobody knows about your stuff,
00:05:05they can't give you money.
00:05:06The second four hour chunk is delivery.
00:05:09So you give the people that gave you money
00:05:11what you promised them.
00:05:12The third four hour chunk is building.
00:05:15So this is building the future,
00:05:16figuring out what to do next and how to do it.
00:05:18This is a combination of two things.
00:05:20It's going to be the curation of opportunities.
00:05:23Like what are all the things that are out there?
00:05:25I have to see them, find them.
00:05:28And then the second is the prioritization of those.
00:05:30Okay, there's 10 things I could do.
00:05:32This one thing is gonna give me the highest return.
00:05:34This is what I'm gonna prioritize my time and money towards.
00:05:37So big picture, you promote, you deliver and you build.
00:05:41That's what you do with your time.
00:05:42Now, regardless of what job or business you have,
00:05:46if you want to save time,
00:05:47you need to understand this concept,
00:05:49which is understanding whether you are a maker or manager.
00:05:52A maker is when you're in the build mode.
00:05:53This is when you're completely locked in.
00:05:55You're like, no distractions.
00:05:56I have to go learn stuff.
00:05:57I have to go write copy.
00:05:58I have to go edit videos.
00:05:59I have to go make content.
00:06:00I have to go build this template
00:06:02that I'm gonna sell to my customers, whatever.
00:06:04Manager is when you're interacting with other people.
00:06:06Now that could be client calls.
00:06:08That could be team calls.
00:06:09It could be vendor calls.
00:06:09Any kind of conversations that you have to have,
00:06:11Slack messages, whatever.
00:06:13The thing is is that managers,
00:06:15their perfectly productive day is no blank time, right?
00:06:19It's five minute chunks
00:06:20and you're just trying to have as many touch points
00:06:22and decisions as possible.
00:06:23A maker, a perfectly productive day
00:06:25is a completely empty calendar.
00:06:27So I don't know if you're anything like me.
00:06:28When I look at my calendar, I truly have nothing on it.
00:06:30I feel one, this immense sense of relief
00:06:32and two, this huge amount of energy of possibility.
00:06:35Like what big thing can I get done today?
00:06:37And that's when I really move the ball forward.
00:06:39And I'm telling you like that life hack of all hacks,
00:06:42a single habit that has changed my output
00:06:45was having my first four to six hours of my day to myself.
00:06:48So when you're in that maker manager decision mode,
00:06:51I like to block at the micro level,
00:06:53my day is maker time, manager time,
00:06:55and then keep them separated
00:06:57because the biggest killer of productivity
00:06:59is task switching, right?
00:07:00So if you're trying to make and then you're slacking
00:07:02and then you're making and then you're texting,
00:07:03you're screwed, right?
00:07:05So instead, you just have to put the blinders
00:07:07onto your maker period.
00:07:07And then when you're in the manager period,
00:07:08it's like, go for it.
00:07:09Just be distracted and know that that's like
00:07:11the rest of your day is screwed.
00:07:13And I accept that.
00:07:13Like for me, Mondays are my day that I'm a manager
00:07:16and the rest of the week,
00:07:16I try to do my absolute best to be a maker.
00:07:18Now that we have the money saved up
00:07:19and we're still, we got some cash,
00:07:20we drove down our living expenses.
00:07:22We drove down our time expenses so we have free time
00:07:25and we're organizing it well
00:07:26and we're focused and productive during that time period.
00:07:28What do we do with the time?
00:07:29Three, which is research a skill
00:07:31that people already pay money for.
00:07:33And this is a key part.
00:07:34What you want to do, especially if you're like,
00:07:36I need to make more than I am right now,
00:07:38go find what people are already paying for, right?
00:07:41So on a B2C side, it just looks,
00:07:44you look at all the things that a business does, right?
00:07:46So a business gets advertisers.
00:07:48So they make content, they do outreach.
00:07:50There's the funnel building process
00:07:52that's associated with that.
00:07:53All of those things, each of those are skills
00:07:56that on their own, you could go build yourself
00:07:59a million dollar plus business off of.
00:08:00Just one of those.
00:08:01And so that's just on a B2B side as an example.
00:08:04On the B2C side, here's a very easy hack.
00:08:07Just print out your credit card statement
00:08:10or your bank statement
00:08:11and look at what you actually spend money on.
00:08:13So just think when you're selling to consumers,
00:08:15I'm going to give them time back
00:08:17that they otherwise wouldn't have.
00:08:20And for business owners, you're giving them money
00:08:22that they otherwise wouldn't have.
00:08:24But don't get overwhelmed with the zillion things
00:08:26that you can learn there, pick one.
00:08:28And so I have a one-one-one rule,
00:08:30which is you want to sell one product or service
00:08:34to one avatar on one channel until you make $1 million.
00:08:38That's it.
00:08:40So we saved our money, we saved our time,
00:08:44and then we researched the skill
00:08:45that people are already paying for today.
00:08:48That leads us to number four, spend time learning.
00:08:51All right, so first of all,
00:08:52it's important that you understand what learning is
00:08:54if we're going to say what it means.
00:08:55So I say this because a lot of people spend their time
00:08:57trying to learn or sitting in front of a computer
00:08:59or listening to podcasts or whatever,
00:09:00but it doesn't actually change behavior,
00:09:03which ding, ding, ding, that is the definition of learning,
00:09:06which is same condition, new behavior.
00:09:08If you're in the same condition,
00:09:09meaning you're in the same bedroom,
00:09:10you're looking at the same computer,
00:09:11and what you're doing every day is not changing,
00:09:13you are not learning.
00:09:15So use that as a simple slip miss test
00:09:18for understanding whether the content
00:09:20that you are consuming is valuable.
00:09:23If you cannot translate it, or the person who's teaching you,
00:09:25whoever it is, me or anyone,
00:09:27into what do I do now?
00:09:29So there's this big thing Malcolm Gladwell talked about,
00:09:3210,000 hours is this common theme,
00:09:33which is it's not 10,000 hours, but 10,000 iterations.
00:09:36And the reason I like that framing
00:09:37is because it assumes that you will fail,
00:09:39and it assumes that you will get better as you learn, right?
00:09:43It is that 10,000 iterations is a proxy for feedback loops,
00:09:47which means that if you do something, you get no feedback,
00:09:49it's virtually impossible to learn.
00:09:51So when we were doing stuff in the real world,
00:09:53a lot of times the real world will give you a feedback loop,
00:09:55but you post a piece of content, nothing happens.
00:09:56That is still feedback, it's that it sucked, right?
00:09:59But you can still get better.
00:10:00The fastest way to learn skills
00:10:01is to find somebody who's really good and hire them one-on-one.
00:10:03Fastest way to learn skills.
00:10:04I still did this in my early days,
00:10:06even when I barely could afford it.
00:10:07So when I say I learned with first-party data,
00:10:09I give you a handful of examples,
00:10:10but this is a do this instruction list.
00:10:13So number one, you have to do a lot of volume
00:10:15in order to learn, right?
00:10:16I can't just have one sales call recording.
00:10:18I have just one comment that I try and learn from.
00:10:20I have to have lots of comments that I have to aggregate.
00:10:21I have to put them together.
00:10:23Number two is that I analyze the top 10%.
00:10:25So what are the top 10% of sales calls?
00:10:27What are the top 10% of content?
00:10:28What are the top 10 customer service resolution person?
00:10:33What are these top 10% outcomes?
00:10:35What do they have in common that the other 90% don't have?
00:10:39And you can apply this to any subject matter
00:10:41that you're trying to learn.
00:10:41So that is step three, you analyze the difference.
00:10:43Step four is you figure out the most important details,
00:10:45like the eyes, like the feet, like the whatever.
00:10:47And this is where a lot of people struggle
00:10:49is that they don't know which part is important.
00:10:52And that's part of learning is that you're like,
00:10:54there's six differences.
00:10:56I don't know which one was the reason.
00:10:57So you start trying them one at a time.
00:10:59It just is what it is.
00:11:00And so the final step is avoid the mistakes
00:11:03that the 90% is making that are keeping them at the bottom
00:11:06and do more of the stuff at the top 10%.
00:11:08And you just continue to do another hundred repetitions.
00:11:10Look at the top 10,
00:11:11try and make the next hundred look like those 10
00:11:14and do it over and over again,
00:11:15until people are like, man, you're so good at this.
00:11:16You must be a natural.
00:11:17And that is fundamentally how you learn any skill.
00:11:20We saved our money so we could get aggressive.
00:11:22We saved our time so we'd have time
00:11:23to actually do the work.
00:11:25We researched which skills to learn.
00:11:27Then we spent our time actually learning
00:11:29and we walked through exactly
00:11:30what those 10,000 iterations look like.
00:11:32So what do we do now?
00:11:33Step five is you spend the money in the right places.
00:11:36So I think of this in three bigger buckets.
00:11:38You've got tools, you've got implementation help
00:11:41and then you've got trial attempts.
00:11:42So think about that as like,
00:11:44where am I going to spend this time and money?
00:11:46'Cause you actually have to do this in order to get out.
00:11:49Like if you're just like, okay, I'm saving my time,
00:11:51save money, you're not gonna get 100K, right?
00:11:52Like you have to do stuff too.
00:11:54So for tools, that might mean
00:11:56that you might buy a software too, right?
00:11:58That might mean like a CRM or a landing page thing
00:12:01or school, it's nine bucks a month.
00:12:03Like, chill, all right?
00:12:05To get started, right?
00:12:06Because for you to like the alternative
00:12:07is you can try to rebuild the entire thing, yeah.
00:12:10Or you could just like go to grab a tool
00:12:12that's already there, save yourself some time.
00:12:14So that's what kind of tools looks like.
00:12:16Implementation, this is where you can buy courses,
00:12:20you can buy communities on school
00:12:22if you're looking to learn anything.
00:12:24You can get tutoring, which I'm a huge advocate of
00:12:27and for some reason this is like falling out of vogue.
00:12:29But if you can get someone to just give you 101 help,
00:12:31my God, it's so valuable.
00:12:32The next is trial attempts.
00:12:34So that means like, okay, I want to start running ads.
00:12:36Okay, great, well, you got to spend money on ads.
00:12:38Or like, hey, I want to start, you know, making content.
00:12:41You're gonna have to spend money
00:12:42on maybe some of the editing software that goes with that.
00:12:43Like, of course, there are free things
00:12:45and be as cheap as possible,
00:12:46but accept that some of these things
00:12:48are kind of minor investments
00:12:50that will give you huge leverage on your time.
00:12:51So the last step and the whole point of all this
00:12:53is to just increase your active income.
00:12:55People look at the billionaires and they're like,
00:12:56oh, they live on passive income.
00:12:57What people miss is that most billionaires
00:13:00who are self-made made their money from making money.
00:13:03Meaning they had active income,
00:13:05they had monster active income that they could deploy.
00:13:07Like you get rewarded for the risks you take on.
00:13:10You cannot take any risk on
00:13:11if you have no time and no money.
00:13:13So you need to go find that risk,
00:13:15create something that you can put at risk
00:13:18so that you can get rewarded for it.
00:13:19And we do that through increasing our skillsets
00:13:21and our active income.
00:13:22And so you're like, okay, well, those are the five steps.
00:13:24What's the last step?
00:13:25Number six, do not increase your lifestyle.
00:13:27All right, I know guys who were making $40,000 a month
00:13:30and made it for years, great sales guys,
00:13:32and spent every single dollar.
00:13:34I've got multiple friends
00:13:35who didn't start saving money until their 40s.
00:13:38And they were like, oh my God,
00:13:38I can't believe I just like live that way, right?
00:13:41You want to be rich, not look rich, right?
00:13:43This is about 100K in the bank, not 100K in revenue.
00:13:46Everything minus food and shelter is your profit.
00:13:48I say this as once things started working out for my gym,
00:13:51my first gym, I was making about $20,000 a month
00:13:53in income, personal.
00:13:55I was still splitting the room, paying $400 a month in rent
00:13:58because I was like, well, dude, I need to sit.
00:14:00Like my goal was not to stop at $20,000 a month.
00:14:02I was like, I want to go big
00:14:03and I'm going to need all this cash to open a new location,
00:14:06to learn more stuff, to attend more conferences,
00:14:08all of this stuff 'cause I wanted to learn.
00:14:10And so basically the day that you stop spending money
00:14:12on learning is the day you decide
00:14:14that you do not want to make more.
00:14:15And so zooming all the way out,
00:14:18the six steps to getting your first $100,000,
00:14:21you got to stop spending money.
00:14:22So you have money to spend on the right stuff.
00:14:24You got to stop wasting time
00:14:26so that you have time to invest in the right stuff.
00:14:29What stuff do you invest in?
00:14:30Number three is you have to research.
00:14:32You got to pick, you got to look.
00:14:33And the best way to look is not to risk it
00:14:34on something that you don't know,
00:14:36but find stuff people are already spending money on.
00:14:38The fourth is now that we know the thing
00:14:40that we're going to focus on,
00:14:41we're going to eliminate all the other distraction.
00:14:43We're going to spend all our time learning.
00:14:44Number five, the money that you do have,
00:14:46you want to spend on tools,
00:14:48implementation help and attempts, trying it and failing.
00:14:52And then finally, once things actually start working,
00:14:55you'd never get to the 100K in a bank account
00:14:56just by increasing your income.
00:14:57You also got to not let your lifestyle take back over
00:15:00so you can finally bank it.
00:15:01And the reason this is so kind of near and dear to my heart
00:15:04is that when I had the first 100K was the first time that,
00:15:07I mean, I remember looking at Layla and I was like, we did it.
00:15:09I said, we could do nothing and fuck off
00:15:11for three and a half years.
00:15:13And it was crazy 'cause like, I think about that now, right?
00:15:15Two people, $100,000 in savings, three years.
00:15:17And I wasn't thinking about it in terms of investments
00:15:19or anything like that.
00:15:20I just knew that I didn't have to worry about rent.
00:15:22I didn't have to worry about food.
00:15:23And that was when I was able
00:15:25to really start thinking long-term.
00:15:26And so I want as many people as possible to get that point
00:15:29because many of you have bigger dreams than that.
00:15:31But you can't get there until you pass this checkpoint.
00:15:34Like it's Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
00:15:36Like until you're not thinking about food and shelter,
00:15:38it's amazing to want to change the world.
00:15:39But if you've got to pay rent tomorrow,
00:15:41you got to pay rent tomorrow, right?
00:15:42And so this is the plan to help you do that.

Key Takeaway

To reach your first $100,000 in savings, you must aggressively minimize expenses and time-wasters to create a surplus that can be reinvested into high-value skills and business iterations.

Highlights

The first $100,000 in savings is a psychological and financial 'unlock' that allows for long-term strategic thinking.

Drastic cost-cutting on food, housing, and transportation is necessary to create the cash flow required for reinvestment.

Maximizing time is achieved by utilizing 'five-to-nine' blocks and separating 'maker' time from 'manager' time.

Learning is defined as a change in behavior through iterative feedback loops rather than passive consumption of information.

Achieving a $100K bank balance requires maintaining a low-cost lifestyle even after active income begins to increase.

The 1-1-1 rule suggests focusing on one product, one avatar, and one channel until reaching the first million dollars.

Timeline

The Power of the First $100K

The speaker contrasts multi-million dollar exits with the personal impact of saving his first $100,000. He explains that this specific milestone was the first time he felt truly wealthy because it removed the immediate stress of survival. Prior to this, he struggled with basic needs like groceries and rent while sleeping on a gym floor. Once the survival barrier is crossed, an individual gains the mental clarity needed to focus on a long-term vision. This section establishes the 'why' behind the six-step roadmap presented in the rest of the video.

Step 1: Aggressive Cost Cutting

Step one involves cutting all unnecessary costs to maximize the ability to take financial risks. The speaker advocates for extreme measures, such as avoiding eating out, wearing the same clothes for years, and living in shared, low-cost housing. He shares personal anecdotes about paying only $300 to $400 for rent and driving a 'clunker' even as his income grew. By driving down the 'downside,' you create the 'cashflow fluff' necessary to reinvest in acquiring new skills. He concludes this segment by offering a 'business backpack' resource to help entrepreneurs get started.

Step 2: Reclaiming and Managing Time

Step two focuses on saving time and eliminating distractions to accelerate progress. The speaker argues that a nine-to-five job isn't a dream killer, but rather the failure to use the hours before and after work effectively. He introduces the '444 split'—four hours each for promotion, delivery, and building—for those working for themselves. A critical concept discussed is the 'Maker vs. Manager' schedule, where 'maker time' requires zero distractions for deep work. Task switching is identified as the biggest killer of productivity, and separating these modes is presented as a 'life hack of all hacks.'

Steps 3 & 4: Researching and Learning Skills

Steps three and four involve identifying and mastering high-demand skills that people are already paying for. The speaker suggests looking at B2B needs like lead generation or B2C needs by analyzing personal bank statements for time-saving services. He defines true learning as 'same condition, new behavior,' emphasizing that passive listening is not enough. Success is described as a result of 10,000 iterations rather than just hours, relying on feedback loops to improve. To master a skill, one must analyze the top 10% of performers and replicate their specific successful behaviors while avoiding common mistakes.

Step 5: Strategic Financial Investment

Step five outlines how to spend the money saved in the previous steps on tools, implementation, and trial attempts. Investments should be made in software like CRMs or landing page builders that provide leverage on your time. The speaker strongly advocates for hiring one-on-one tutors or joining communities to accelerate the learning curve. He emphasizes that 'trial attempts,' such as spending money on advertising, are necessary to generate active income. Ultimately, self-made billionaires build their wealth through massive active income generated by taking calculated risks.

Step 6: Avoiding Lifestyle Inflation

The final step is to resist increasing your lifestyle even as your income begins to soar. The speaker warns against looking rich versus being rich, noting that he lived in a shared room even while earning $20,000 a month. He emphasizes that the goal is to have $100,000 in the bank, not just in revenue, which requires disciplined profit retention. Saving this amount provides a 'buffer'—in his case, three years of freedom—that allows for true long-term thinking. The video concludes by referencing Maslow's hierarchy of needs, stating that global impact is only possible once basic financial security is permanently established.

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