The psychology of making money

AAli Abdaal
Beginning InvestingAdvertising/MarketingSmall Business/StartupsAdult EducationStocks

Transcript

00:00:00All right, so if you would like to make more money
00:00:01and become financially free,
00:00:02then there are four key beliefs
00:00:04that school and society have taught you
00:00:06that are really, really holding you back.
00:00:08And for each of these faulty beliefs,
00:00:09I'm gonna suggest what you can replace it with
00:00:11to drastically increase your earning potential.
00:00:13If you're new here, hello, my name is Ali.
00:00:14I'm a doctor turned entrepreneur and author.
00:00:16I did really well in school.
00:00:17I went to a fancy university.
00:00:18I became a doctor.
00:00:18It was like, what society respected?
00:00:20But that journey taught me all of the wrong things
00:00:22about how money is actually made.
00:00:24All of these beliefs are things that I had to unlearn
00:00:26through the process
00:00:27of becoming a multimillion dollar entrepreneur.
00:00:28And so if you watch and apply the stuff in this video,
00:00:30I'm hoping it'll save you at least a few years worth
00:00:33of potentially wasted time of mistakes that I made myself.
00:00:36Okay, so the first belief that school instills in us
00:00:40is not something that's instilled consciously.
00:00:42It's something that just sort of seeps
00:00:43into the fabric of school and society.
00:00:46And it's just sort of like the water
00:00:47that we as fish swim in.
00:00:48And that is the idea that having a job
00:00:51is the thing that makes you money.
00:00:52If you ask people, what is the point of school?
00:00:54They'll say things like, you know, making friends
00:00:56and being cultured and like getting an education
00:00:58and stuff, but you feel like, okay,
00:00:59but like, what's the point of getting good grades?
00:01:00What's the point of going to college?
00:01:01What's the point of you going to university?
00:01:03What everyone will eventually say?
00:01:06It's about landing a job, right?
00:01:07Because if you do well in school,
00:01:08you are more likely to land a good job.
00:01:11And what do we mean by good job?
00:01:12We mean a reasonably high paying job
00:01:14that is relatively secure.
00:01:15Those are the things that we mean when we say land a good job.
00:01:17And it's just a general assumption that like, of course,
00:01:19if you wanna make money, you're gonna need a job.
00:01:21If someone does not have a job, people are like,
00:01:23oh my God, how are you making money?
00:01:24Like what's, it's like a really scary thing
00:01:26to not have a job.
00:01:27But this thing like job equals money.
00:01:29Yes, of course it's true to an extent,
00:01:30but it actually misses the bigger picture
00:01:32of how money is actually made.
00:01:34This is the equation of how money is actually made.
00:01:41Money equals value created in something like dollars.
00:01:45So like the currency amount multiplied
00:01:47by value captured as a percentage.
00:01:49Now, one way of executing on this equation
00:01:51is through having a job,
00:01:52but it's not the only way to execute on this equation.
00:01:54And thinking of how much money you make as this equation,
00:01:57well, I promise improve your life
00:01:59and make you way more money than thinking of it
00:02:00as having a higher well paying job equals me making money.
00:02:03So what does this equation mean?
00:02:04All money is simply an exchange of value.
00:02:06In order to make money, you have to create value.
00:02:08What does value mean?
00:02:09Well, generally when you are solving someone's problem
00:02:11or alleviating their pain or giving them what they want,
00:02:15that is considered value.
00:02:16People value those things and it's considered value
00:02:18because they're willing to pay for the thing.
00:02:20So for example, if I was working in sales and marketing
00:02:22and I was able to bring in $200,000 worth of money
00:02:26this month into my company, right?
00:02:28I've created $200,000 worth of value in that context.
00:02:31That one's a very easy example.
00:02:32I would say like when you start getting away
00:02:34from like literally making money,
00:02:35it's harder to quantify the value,
00:02:36but you can in fact quantify the value for everything.
00:02:39This is a bit of a tangent, but even like saving lives,
00:02:41like, you know, I used to be a doctor in case you didn't know
00:02:42and you would think that like, you know,
00:02:44what's the value of a human life?
00:02:45Of course it's priceless, but it's actually not
00:02:47because every single healthcare system in the world,
00:02:49at least the sensible ones,
00:02:50actually does have a dollar amount
00:02:52that they are willing to pay for someone's life.
00:02:54In the UK's National Health Service, for example,
00:02:56last time I checked, it was about 50,000 pounds,
00:02:58so about $65,000 per QALY.
00:03:01QALY means quality adjusted life year.
00:03:02So the NHS, the UK's state healthcare system
00:03:05was willing to pay about $65,000
00:03:07to extend someone's life by one year.
00:03:09And so if a medication is cheaper than that,
00:03:11they will generally pay for it on the state system
00:03:13so you won't have to pay for it yourself.
00:03:14And now like, I don't know,
00:03:15this like super expensive cancer treatment costs $500,000
00:03:18to extend someone's life by a year.
00:03:20The state healthcare system would be like,
00:03:22kind of too expensive, we don't wanna pay for this thing.
00:03:25It feels uncomfortable to us to put value
00:03:27on things like a human life,
00:03:28but people that run the state healthcare system
00:03:30do in fact put a particular value on a person's life.
00:03:32Now let's say you're a doctor in that system
00:03:34and you've managed to save someone's life.
00:03:35You have created a lot of value
00:03:37because the healthcare system and the person
00:03:39would probably be willing to pay a lot
00:03:40to have their life saved.
00:03:41But all that money obviously does not come to you
00:03:43as a doctor.
00:03:44You are only capturing a small percentage
00:03:46of the value that you create.
00:03:47In the context of medicine, this is a very good thing.
00:03:49We probably don't want a system
00:03:50where it's sort of like doctors are more like mercenaries
00:03:52and it's like, well, I saved your life,
00:03:54therefore you owe me X amount.
00:03:55Although apparently that's sort of how it works in the US
00:03:57with private healthcare systems.
00:03:58Anyway, I digress.
00:03:59You create a certain amount of value,
00:04:01but then you only capture a certain percentage of that value
00:04:03and that is the money that goes to you.
00:04:04So our salesperson who brought in $200,000 worth of sales
00:04:07is probably not getting $200,000 worth of commission
00:04:10that month, maybe they're getting $20,000 worth of commission
00:04:12that month because the value captured number here is 10%.
00:04:16They've created 200 grand worth of value.
00:04:18They've been able to capture 10% of that value
00:04:20and therefore they have made money.
00:04:21Now, if that person's job happens to be a salesperson
00:04:24for the company, that's what happens here.
00:04:25As a result of their job, they are creating value.
00:04:28As a result of the relationship with their employer,
00:04:30they are capturing some percentage of that value
00:04:32and therefore they make money.
00:04:33But if that salesperson was working for their own business
00:04:36rather than someone else's business,
00:04:37which is what having a job is called,
00:04:38they still might be creating $200,000 worth of value,
00:04:40but they're now able to probably capture a higher percentage
00:04:43of that value or at least the percentage of value
00:04:46that they capture for themselves or their business
00:04:47is more under their control.
00:04:49Of course, if you've run a business,
00:04:50you're gonna have expenses, you're gonna have staff,
00:04:51you're gonna have overhead, you're gonna have all these costs,
00:04:53you're gonna have to pay taxes.
00:04:54But in general, if you have your own business,
00:04:56you are able to capture a higher percentage of the value
00:04:58that you create compared to if you are an employee
00:05:01working for someone else.
00:05:01That's not to say working for other people is bad,
00:05:03but it's worth understanding the trade-offs.
00:05:04It's worth understanding that the only way to make money
00:05:06is not in fact through having a job.
00:05:08If you are willing to take on more of the work,
00:05:10in particular, the work of like getting customers
00:05:12and the work of like running a business,
00:05:14which in my opinion are quite fun skills to learn
00:05:16and generally more enjoyable than most jobs.
00:05:18If you're willing to take on that work,
00:05:19you're able to capture a higher percentage
00:05:21of the value that you create
00:05:22and therefore you're able to make more money.
00:05:23So my recommendation is that if you are interested
00:05:25in making money, stop thinking of money
00:05:27as being this thing that happens as a result of a job.
00:05:30Instead, think of money as a thing that happens
00:05:32when you create value,
00:05:33you capture some percentage of that value,
00:05:34and then yes, maybe the thing that we call a job,
00:05:36i.e. a single contracted relationship with a single employer,
00:05:39might be your vehicle for creating and capturing value,
00:05:42but it doesn't have to be.
00:05:43There are other ways of creating and capturing value
00:05:46for example, you could be a freelancer
00:05:47working with multiple clients,
00:05:48you could have your own business,
00:05:49working with multiple clients, maybe having a small team,
00:05:51you could build a lifestyle business,
00:05:52which is a business that's designed to facilitate your life.
00:05:55I run an online business school
00:05:56where we teach people how to build those businesses.
00:05:57There's lots of ways.
00:05:58You could build software that you sell to people
00:06:00in your spare time that creates value
00:06:01and you capture some percentage of it.
00:06:02You could write a book that you write in your spare time
00:06:04that creates value and captures a percentage of it.
00:06:06There are all sorts of ways to make money
00:06:08that are not just having a job.
00:06:09And this is the key thing that I wish schools
00:06:12would do a better job of teaching people.
00:06:13Now at the point where you start making money,
00:06:15you're definitely going to want to invest that money,
00:06:17which is where Trading 212 comes in
00:06:19who are very kindly sponsoring this video.
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00:07:30All right, big belief number two
00:07:32that school and broadly society instills in us
00:07:35when we are very young is this idea, sales are sleazy.
00:07:39When you think of the word sales,
00:07:41what is the image that comes to mind?
00:07:42It's probably not something positive.
00:07:44It's probably the image of something
00:07:46like a used car salesman.
00:07:48But let me ask you, have you actually been screwed over
00:07:50by a used car salesman?
00:07:51Most people have not themselves been screwed over
00:07:54by a used car salesman.
00:07:55Most people have just sort of heard
00:07:56that used car salesman like tend to screw people over.
00:07:59When you see films like, I don't know,
00:08:00the Wolf of Wall Street and stuff and you're like,
00:08:01you see this stuff like, sell me this pen.
00:08:03It frames sales as this sleazy adversarial thing
00:08:07where you're trying to like hammer bludgeon someone
00:08:10into like giving you money for a thing
00:08:12that they don't really need.
00:08:13It makes sales, the word sales seem like a scary and sleazy
00:08:16and weird kind of thing.
00:08:18Relatedly in the same sort of genre,
00:08:19there's the general idea that money is bad.
00:08:21And we get this through like things that we hear
00:08:23from our friends and from our family and from TV.
00:08:25There's a guy called Dr. Brad Klontz,
00:08:27who has done a bunch of research published
00:08:29in the Journal of Financial Therapy,
00:08:30which is apparently a journal.
00:08:31That basically looks at the money scripts
00:08:33that we get taught throughout childhood.
00:08:35And he basically showed that like, you know,
00:08:36a lot of the beliefs that we build around money
00:08:38were just, are just sort of unconsciously shaped
00:08:40by stuff that we heard when we were kids.
00:08:41So when you were a kid,
00:08:42maybe you heard something like all rich people are evil.
00:08:45And like the only way to make lots of money
00:08:46is to exploit the people underneath you.
00:08:48We develop this general attitude,
00:08:50this discomfort with the idea of sales
00:08:52and this very clear discomfort with the idea
00:08:54of like talking about money.
00:08:55Like, oh, if you make money,
00:08:56then you must have done something wrong.
00:08:57It's like, it feels weird to like, you know,
00:08:59get a promotion because your friends haven't got promotion.
00:09:01So it feels weird to like talk about money.
00:09:03There's all this sort of discomfort and fear
00:09:05associated with the idea of money and sales.
00:09:06But this is a very, very unhelpful attitude
00:09:09as it relates to trying to make money.
00:09:11And I see this a lot with students
00:09:13in my lifestyle business academy.
00:09:14You know, they're starting businesses for the first time
00:09:15and they're having to sell their product or their service
00:09:18or their coaching or whatever.
00:09:19And they get really, really, really scared about this
00:09:22because they have never actually tried
00:09:24to sell something before.
00:09:25They all earn a decent living, they've got successful jobs.
00:09:27And so the only sales they've ever had to do
00:09:29is like negotiate a raise, which happens once in a blue moon.
00:09:31And so then the thought of like getting on Zoom calls
00:09:33and like, you know, building sales pages
00:09:35and like talking to people in the DMs
00:09:36and trying to sell something like just fills them
00:09:40with this sort of dread of like, oh my God,
00:09:42I can't possibly do this, this is like terrible.
00:09:43I'm a terrible person for trying to sell my thing.
00:09:45But what we try and do, and this is kind of the reframe,
00:09:48which is much more helpful,
00:09:49is this idea that sales equals service.
00:09:54Yes, there are some organizations and people around the world
00:09:57that treat selling as like a sell me this pen, go on then.
00:10:00Like, you know, try and sell me this thing
00:10:01that I don't really need.
00:10:02And it turns into this adversarial relationship.
00:10:04But for the most part, commerce and capitalism
00:10:07and the world, the economy, world economy as a whole
00:10:09functions on the idea that when a sale happens,
00:10:12it is because both parties are winning.
00:10:15Sales is a win-win type situation.
00:10:17Earlier this morning, I went down to the local coffee shop
00:10:19to buy a coffee.
00:10:20There was a sales transaction that happened in that event.
00:10:23I handed over 30 Hong Kong dollars,
00:10:24which is about three pounds.
00:10:26They handed me a cup of nice coffee
00:10:28and both parties were happy.
00:10:29I was happy 'cause I got the coffee
00:10:30and they were happy because they got the money.
00:10:32It is a win-win.
00:10:33I pay my accountants somewhere between 30 and $50,000 a year
00:10:36to do our business accounting and all of that kind of stuff.
00:10:38That is a win-win transaction.
00:10:40I'm happy because the accounting's done
00:10:42and hopefully it keeps me out of jail.
00:10:43They're happy because they've got the money
00:10:44and they've got like a client.
00:10:45If you actually care about trying to make money
00:10:47and trying to improve your financial situation in life,
00:10:49we gotta unlearn this idea
00:10:51that sales is this like scary, sleazy, terrible thing
00:10:53and start thinking of it instead as being a service.
00:10:56Whether you've got a job or you've got a business,
00:10:58you are probably not, I would hope,
00:11:00trying to sell people stuff that they really don't need.
00:11:02You are probably not trying to force people
00:11:05to give you their money.
00:11:06You are probably not trying to coerce them
00:11:08with threats of violence or intimidation
00:11:10to give you money in exchange for a thing.
00:11:11When you are selling something,
00:11:12you are merely making an offer.
00:11:14You're not forcing them.
00:11:14You're just merely making an offer saying,
00:11:16hey, I've got this book available.
00:11:17I spent three and a half years writing this book.
00:11:19It's called "Feel Good Productivity."
00:11:20It'll teach you how to do more of what matters to you.
00:11:21There's a lot of research that's gone into it.
00:11:23And by the way, paperback version was just released.
00:11:25It's literally like somewhere between five and $10.
00:11:27You can get it at Target.
00:11:28You can get it out on Amazon.
00:11:29You can get it wherever books are sold if you're interested.
00:11:30I'm not forcing anyone to try and buy my fricking book.
00:11:32You can buy it if you want.
00:11:33You don't have to, but it's fine, right?
00:12:03Check it out.
00:12:04Was it a negative response, a neutral response,
00:12:05or a positive response?
00:12:06There are gonna be some people watching this video
00:12:08who have a very negative response.
00:12:10If you have a negative response
00:12:12to what I just did with this book,
00:12:13you are probably gonna struggle to make money
00:12:16because you judge me for having the audacity
00:12:19to make an offer and tell you that I've got a book for sale.
00:12:22If you're like, man, I'll leave, that was a fucking sell out.
00:12:23I can't believe he's got the audacity to like talk about
00:12:25his like $10 fucking book
00:12:27that took him four years to write.
00:12:28If you judge me for that,
00:12:29you probably have an attitude that sales is sleazy,
00:12:31that money is bad, and you will completely sabotage yourself
00:12:34if you ever try and make more money
00:12:36because you have this association
00:12:38that someone trying to make money is a terrible thing.
00:12:40If however, your response was neutral and/or positive,
00:12:42then you probably don't necessarily have this.
00:12:44I mean, we all have this to some degree.
00:12:46I still have some level of discomfort when it comes to sales,
00:12:48but it is a pattern I've seen time and time again.
00:12:50The people who judge other people for selling stuff,
00:12:52for the most part, are broke themselves.
00:12:54I have not met a single rich, successful, wealthy person
00:12:57in my life who negatively judges someone else
00:12:59for like making an offer in a nice way for a product
00:13:01that they have.
00:13:02But I've met a lot of people in my life
00:13:03who really want to make money,
00:13:05but also judge other people who are trying to make money
00:13:08in a negative way and end up just sort of staying
00:13:10in this holding pattern of like, oh, sales is sleazy
00:13:12and I want to make money,
00:13:13but I fucking hate everyone else who's trying to make money.
00:13:15And like, it's this whole thing that like really, really,
00:13:17really holds you back.
00:13:18Okay, let's move on to belief/mindset number three.
00:13:22So you know this equation that we talked about.
00:13:23Money equals value created in dollars
00:13:25multiplied by value captured as a percentage.
00:13:27The way we create value is by using our skills.
00:13:32This is not particularly controversial.
00:13:33If you have a job/have gone to school or university
00:13:35or learned any kind of skills,
00:13:36you know that certain skills can create value
00:13:38that can be monetized and you can capture some of that value.
00:13:40That's why you get trained for having a job, for example.
00:13:43But the key mindset shift that I wish more people had,
00:13:46at least people who actually want to make money,
00:13:48is another one of those things
00:13:49that we need to unlearn from school.
00:13:50So what school and society basically teaches us
00:13:52is that if you want skills,
00:13:54you need some kind of formal training.
00:13:57Maybe you need to go to university to learn that skill.
00:13:59Maybe you need to take a course at a local community college
00:14:02and even in classes where they teach you the thing.
00:14:04Maybe you need to hire a teacher in person
00:14:06to teach you the thing.
00:14:07This is how you learn skills, right?
00:14:09No, this is not how you learn skills.
00:14:10This might've been how you learn skills back in the day,
00:14:12but now we have something called the internet.
00:14:14And so if you care about making money,
00:14:16it is far more useful for you to embody this idea
00:14:19that the way you learn skills is through self-learning.
00:14:22You teach yourself skills.
00:14:24Now, I did a video the other day
00:14:25and there was a comment on that video
00:14:27that got lots of upvotes.
00:14:27And then I think the writer of that comment
00:14:29ended up deleting the comment
00:14:30'cause I couldn't find it again.
00:14:31So this video was about like how to get rich on easy mode.
00:14:33And I basically argued in that video
00:14:34that the way you get rich on easy mode
00:14:36is you learn a skill that helps another person make money.
00:14:40So like something to do with sales
00:14:41or marketing or coding or whatever.
00:14:42And there was a comment on this video saying that like,
00:14:44this is completely unattainable for a regular person.
00:14:47What, are you just expecting that a regular person
00:14:50is able to just learn these skills?
00:14:52What if they didn't go to university?
00:14:53What if they didn't go to college?
00:14:55How are they able to learn those skills?
00:14:57Thankfully, there were a bunch of comment replies to that
00:14:58being like, well, yes, because we have the internet.
00:15:00And I'm very thankful to people in the audience
00:15:02for like commenting on that.
00:15:03But that's the thing, right?
00:15:04Like it's not your fault
00:15:04if you think that skills equals formal training.
00:15:06It's the fact that school and society is still structured
00:15:09in a way that teaches us that the only way to learn a skill
00:15:12is to get formal training in that specific skill.
00:15:14But if you care about making money,
00:15:15we've got to unlearn that.
00:15:16We've got to recognize learning skills
00:15:18is a matter of self-learning.
00:15:19You can learn literally any skill that you want.
00:15:21There are very few skills that in order to learn them,
00:15:23it's sort of like gate kept by someone else.
00:15:25Yes, if you want to learn to be a neurosurgeon,
00:15:28you probably cannot just learn that on your own
00:15:30watching YouTube videos.
00:15:31Rightfully, to become a neurosurgeon,
00:15:33you have to go through some kind of formal training program.
00:15:34You have to go through medical school.
00:15:35You have to be called a doctor
00:15:36before they'll even let you into neurosurgical residency.
00:15:38And you're gonna need to practice on real patients,
00:15:40which you'll only do
00:15:41in the context of a formal training program.
00:15:42But that is a tiny, tiny, tiny percentage
00:15:44of the total number of skills that are available to people.
00:15:46Almost all of the others, you can just learn yourself
00:15:49by watching YouTube videos,
00:15:50by taking online courses from people who've done the thing,
00:15:52by reading books about the thing,
00:15:54listening to podcasts about the thing,
00:15:55trying to practice the thing
00:15:56without needing to ask anyone's permission
00:15:58for doing the thing.
00:15:58There are all sorts of ways these days in the modern world
00:16:00to learn skills.
00:16:01Now, I used to be a doctor in case you didn't know.
00:16:04I might've mentioned it a couple of times.
00:16:05And I went to a fancy university.
00:16:06I went to Cambridge University,
00:16:07one of the best medical schools in the world.
00:16:09I have lots of friends who went to Oxford University.
00:16:11I have friends who went to Harvard, who went to Yale,
00:16:13and all of the big name universities you could think of.
00:16:15And have a guess.
00:16:16Where was the biggest place where we actually learned
00:16:19the skills of being a doctor
00:16:20or the knowledge you need to pass the exams?
00:16:22It was not, in fact, through the university lectures.
00:16:24It was not through the university's course material.
00:16:26It was, in fact, right here on YouTube.
00:16:28The amount of stuff you can learn on YouTube these days,
00:16:31it's literally like the best medical physiology lectures
00:16:33in the world are not inside universities.
00:16:36They are, in fact, here on YouTube for free.
00:16:38Even practical skills,
00:16:38like learning how to do a cardiovascular exam
00:16:40or a respiratory exam or taking a stethoscope
00:16:42and being, or doing orthopedic examinations
00:16:44that you learn in med school
00:16:45and how to examine someone's shoulder
00:16:46or how to examine someone's knee
00:16:48for some joint issues in the knee or whatever.
00:16:50Yeah, they teach you those in med school,
00:16:51but where do you actually learn them?
00:16:53You learn them by freaking watching a bunch of YouTube videos
00:16:55where sensible people on the internet
00:16:57have made YouTube videos like going,
00:16:58breaking them down in depth.
00:16:59You watch those videos a bunch of times.
00:17:00You practice it on your friends.
00:17:02You go back to the video.
00:17:03A lot of the people who make the videos
00:17:04also include PDF resources in the description.
00:17:06So you use those and sort of print those off
00:17:08and mark those off.
00:17:09That's how you learn the skills as a medical student,
00:17:11even at some of the best medical schools in the world.
00:17:13You learn through watching a freaking YouTube video
00:17:15and then applying it by practicing it on your friends.
00:17:18Even in that context where you would think medical school,
00:17:20fancy university, formal training, a lot of what you learn,
00:17:23you end up self-teaching yourself thanks to YouTube videos
00:17:25and thanks to the internet.
00:17:26So please, I'm begging you.
00:17:27If you are actually interested in making your own money
00:17:29and becoming financially free, please unlearn this idea
00:17:32that like the only way to learn skills
00:17:33is through formal training.
00:17:34It's really not.
00:17:35You can teach yourself practically anything
00:17:37by just following YouTube videos, taking online courses,
00:17:40reading books, listening to podcasts.
00:17:41There's so many different ways to teach yourself stuff.
00:17:43And if you don't have skills, you don't have skills yet.
00:17:46You have not yet learned the skill of how to sell something.
00:17:49You have not yet learned the skill of copywriting
00:17:51or of coding or of AI automation
00:17:53or of any of these things that are like high income,
00:17:55high value skills in the modern economy.
00:17:57You do not need to do an MBA.
00:17:58You do not need to go to university to learn those skills.
00:18:00You can totally just learn them by yourself
00:18:01in your weekends and in your evenings
00:18:03if you care about growing your skillset,
00:18:05which you can then use to make more money.
00:18:07And finally, key mindset number four
00:18:09that school instills in us is the idea
00:18:12that business and investing are very risky things.
00:18:16On the business front, school and society teaches us
00:18:18that man, if you start a business,
00:18:19you're gonna have to get all this investment.
00:18:20You're gonna have to put all of your own savings into it.
00:18:23And what if things don't work out?
00:18:24You're gonna end up broken, homeless, and alone.
00:18:25And then when it comes to investing, we all have a friend.
00:18:28We all have an uncle, an Uncle Bob, an Uncle Tom Copley,
00:18:30whatever, who made this big investment back in the 1970s
00:18:33and lost all his money because he bet it big on this thing.
00:18:36And so we often associate the idea of starting a business
00:18:39or the idea of investing our money
00:18:41with the idea that we could potentially lose everything.
00:18:44Now, this strikes fear into our hearts, right?
00:18:46Because obviously, money equals security.
00:18:48And the thought that we might be losing our security
00:18:50or gambling our security away
00:18:52for the sake of starting a business or trying to invest
00:18:55just fills us with dread and stops us from taking action
00:18:57on starting a business or on investing.
00:18:59But the truth is a lot more nuanced than that.
00:19:01Yes, sometimes starting a business can be risky.
00:19:04Yes, sometimes investing your money can be risky.
00:19:06But the devil's in the details.
00:19:07When it comes to investing, if your version of investing
00:19:09is like trying to randomly pick one stock
00:19:12that your mate recommended
00:19:14and put all of your money into that,
00:19:15that is obviously a dumb, stupid thing to do.
00:19:17But if your version of investing
00:19:19is what almost every sensible person says,
00:19:21which is invest in an index fund, i.e.,
00:19:23you're spreading your money
00:19:25across like the top 500 companies in the US
00:19:27or the top 5,000 companies in the world,
00:19:30that is not risky at all.
00:19:31It's risky in the sense that if, for example, 2008 happens
00:19:33and then the market goes down by like 40%
00:19:35and then after two years it recovers again,
00:19:37or if like COVID happens or like tariffs happen
00:19:39and then in the short term, the market in general
00:19:42sort of takes a bit of a downturn because people are scared,
00:19:44but then it recovers over time.
00:19:45If you do that and you are dumb
00:19:46and like anytime the market goes down,
00:19:48you're like constantly keeping an eye on your portfolio
00:19:49and you're taking money out
00:19:50because you're worried about losing all your money,
00:19:52then you're dumb.
00:19:53And in that context, yes,
00:19:54you do lose money through investing.
00:19:55But if you take money,
00:19:56you park it in something like an index fund
00:19:58and you just let it be.
00:19:59Historically, if you look at that over the past like 100 years
00:20:01that has generally been a fairly safe way
00:20:03to grow your wealth.
00:20:04Similarly, starting a business.
00:20:05Yes, if you were to take your 50 grand worth of savings
00:20:08and put it into this big moonshot thing where you're like,
00:20:11man, I really want there to be a market
00:20:12for recycled tote bags
00:20:14and I'm gonna bet everything on this one business
00:20:16and I'm gonna try and find a factory in China
00:20:17to manufacture my tote bags.
00:20:19I'm gonna manufacture 10,000 tote bags
00:20:21and then you realize no one wants to buy them.
00:20:23That would be a dumb way to go about building a business.
00:20:25It's not that building a business is risky.
00:20:27It's that building risky businesses is risky.
00:20:29If however, you were to do sensible things
00:20:31when it comes to building a business,
00:20:32like for example, making sure you validated the idea
00:20:35before you put any money into it.
00:20:36Maybe starting with a service-based business
00:20:38where you don't need investment.
00:20:39You can just start off doing a service
00:20:41for someone who's willing to pay you for the service.
00:20:42In that kind of world,
00:20:43starting a business is not that risky.
00:20:44And in fact, I would argue tentatively, if I may,
00:20:47that actually having a job is riskier
00:20:49than starting your own business
00:20:49because when you have a job,
00:20:50you are not fully in control of your own financial situation.
00:20:53Your manager, the CFO, the CEO of the company,
00:20:56like restructuring mergers and acquisitions,
00:20:57all of this stuff is stuff
00:20:58that is fully outside of your control
00:21:00that could drastically change your financial situation
00:21:02for the worst, pretty much overnight.
00:21:04Whereas if you have your own business
00:21:05and you have multiple clients that you're serving,
00:21:06yes, you know, the economy could take a downturn.
00:21:09Your business could, you know,
00:21:10you could get fewer sales this quarter
00:21:11compared to last quarter.
00:21:12But in general, you have a lot more visibility
00:21:14and a lot more control over your financial situation
00:21:17when you are calling the shots,
00:21:19rather than when you are working for someone else.
00:21:20And so if you've gotten to this point in the video
00:21:22and you haven't yet seen my video
00:21:23about how to get started with investing,
00:21:25which, shock horror, is actually not that risky,
00:21:27then you should totally check out this video over here,
00:21:28which will give you a primer on how to get started with it
00:21:31and how you can use relatively safe investing
00:21:33to grow your wealth and make some passive income
00:21:34without taking all of that risk.
00:21:35So that'll be right over here.
00:21:36Thank you so much for watching,
00:21:37and I will see you in the next video.
00:21:38Bye-bye.

Key Takeaway

Achieving financial freedom requires unlearning societal myths about employment and risk while adopting a mindset focused on value creation, self-taught high-leverage skills, and strategic investing.

Highlights

The traditional belief that a 'job equals money' is a limited perspective that ignores the fundamental equation: Money = Value Created × Value Captured.

Sales should be reframed as a form of service where both parties benefit, rather than a 'sleazy' or adversarial transaction.

Modern skill acquisition has shifted from formal institutional training to self-directed learning powered by the internet and platforms like YouTube.

Building a business or investing is often perceived as high-risk, but building 'risky' businesses is the true danger, whereas index funds and validated models provide security.

Having a single job can be riskier than entrepreneurship because it lacks financial diversification and leaves one's livelihood in the hands of a single decision-maker.

Timeline

Introduction: Unlearning Societal Beliefs

Host Ali Abdaal introduces the four key beliefs taught by school and society that limit earning potential and financial freedom. Drawing from his own journey as a doctor turned multimillion-dollar entrepreneur, he explains that academic success often hides the true mechanics of wealth. He emphasizes that the goal of the video is to save viewers years of wasted time by sharing the psychological shifts necessary for success. This section sets the stage by highlighting that traditional respectability does not always equate to financial intelligence. The introduction establishes Ali's credibility and the transformative nature of the upcoming advice.

Myth 1: The 'Job Equals Money' Fallacy

Ali breaks down the first faulty belief that a job is the primary way to make money, introducing the equation where Money equals Value Created multiplied by Value Captured. He explains that value is essentially solving a problem or alleviating pain for others, using examples ranging from sales commissions to the 'quality-adjusted life year' in healthcare. While a job allows you to create value, you typically capture only a small percentage of it compared to owning a business or freelancing. He suggests exploring vehicles like software, books, or lifestyle businesses to gain more control over value capture. This section also includes a brief sponsorship segment for Trading 212, emphasizing the importance of investing the money you earn.

Myth 2: Reframing Sales as Service

The second major hurdle is the societal stigma that 'sales are sleazy,' often associated with images of used car salesmen or 'The Wolf of Wall Street.' Ali argues that this mindset is self-sabotaging because it creates a psychological discomfort with the very act of making an offer. He reframes sales as a 'win-win' service where both the provider and the customer benefit from the exchange of value for money. To illustrate this, he uses the example of his book, 'Feel Good Productivity,' and notes that those who judge others for selling are often the ones struggling financially. By viewing commerce as a helpful transaction, individuals can overcome the fear of 'selling' their own products or services.

Myth 3: Self-Learning vs. Formal Training

Ali challenges the notion that high-value skills require formal institutional training or expensive university degrees. He asserts that in the age of the internet, self-learning is the most effective way to acquire skills like copywriting, coding, or AI automation. Even at prestigious institutions like Cambridge, he reveals that medical students often rely on YouTube videos to master complex clinical examinations and physiology. This shift matters because it democratizes access to 'high-income skills' that help others make money. He encourages viewers to spend their evenings and weekends teaching themselves via podcasts, books, and online courses rather than waiting for permission. The core message is that your current lack of skills is temporary and solvable through free or low-cost online resources.

Myth 4: The True Nature of Risk in Business and Investing

The final section addresses the fear that business and investing are inherently risky activities that lead to ruin. Ali clarifies that while 'risky' businesses (like unvalidated moonshots) are dangerous, sensible business models and diversified index fund investing are historically safe. He provocatively argues that having a single job is actually riskier because it lacks control and visibility, leaving you vulnerable to corporate restructuring or layoffs. By validating business ideas before spending money and using automated investing tools, individuals can mitigate traditional risks. He concludes by inviting viewers to watch his primer on safe investing to start building passive income. The video ends with a call to action to take control of one's financial destiny through these four psychological shifts.

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