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Originally Posted by The Patch
Lots of people listening/reading.
I'll be paying close attention. We've just had a major change in lifestyle this last year and I've got to pay closer attention to our finances/cash flow now. House is paid off. Cars are paid off. 0 debt!!
~$150,000/yr income & $480K in 401K. From that $150K annual we've got to finance my small business I just started and put 2 kids through college beginning in 2 1/2 years. ~13 working years left for my wife Jean and I've got to get the business off the ground.
I wish you'd start a Small Business 101 thread.
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Oh man! You're looking fantastic financially dude!
In 13 years -- you have the chance to have that 401K flip over twice -- so hitting the 1.5MM mark for you!
This should maybe be a separate post but here's what I don't want to see you do…
Do not look at that 401K as your "saving grace" - for college or for your new business. Ditto the house equity. YOU don't have all that much more time to work -- and you need this last little bit of time left to have that 401 to be able to provide for you for the next 30 odd years.
If your new business doesn't do what your plans say it should --- don't let it drag you down. All to often people take everything they've worked for and plowed it all back into a small business. EGO makes them do this because they can't separate themselves from "what they've started". A business needs to be self sustaining -- it is not - and never should be - a financial drain. It isn't and never should be "buying yourself a job". Successful business people know (or have learned) when to cut and run. Brings to mind an old adage -- "your first loss is your best lost" --- and what that means is it's far better to just pack up shop and take that first big loss (whatever that is) than it is to add more to it making it an even bigger loss down the road.
And NO I will not start a Business 102 thread -- hahhahahahahaha. There's just way too many variables in that kind of a discussion.
I'll tell you this though -- and it's like this thread. Remember nothing more than the basics. To wit: SALES come first -- without them you have nothing. All of your effort should be on sales. Everything starts there. The warehouse you don't need if you're not selling something for it to exist.
My old partner always said - three things in business are important. Sell it - ship it - get paid for it.
Pretty much sums it up. Everything else you do is nothing more than SUPPORT for the sales that had to come first.
Quote:
Originally Posted by im4u2nvss
I am so happy for the information in this thread. With a solid 30 working years to go(and for my money to compound), I feel like I have a good chance of success! Reading Investing 102 daily gives me further reason to put my 67 firebird as a "second priority" to saving for the future. A big thanks again!
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Thank you -- and by the way -- TOYS should be the LAST item on a list. You can have all the toys you ever wanted once you can afford them. Affording them does not mean at the expense of something more important or more basic. LIVING in retirement is a pretty basic need. It's not a want - it's a need. Do it right and you can have a couple cars to play with and go on trips with when you not only have the time - but the dough.
You can not "save to spend" -- that is not savings -- that is just a pile to spend. That's okay to do AFTER you've funded the retirement account. Then you can SET ASIDE some money for the hobbies and go spend them. Just know that the sooner you fund the retirement -- and it starts on the road to self funding (the dividends start to become more per year than you could have ever saved) -- then you can start to feel free to "indulge".
Do the math…. if you have 25K right now to go buy a car for a "project"… if you put that away instead - in as little as 7 years - it's going to be 50K - and in as little as 14 years it's going to be 100K… and the next flip it's 200K…
You said you have 30 years…. okay --- we have 200K and that took 21 years to get to - the next flip -- inside your 30 year time frame -- takes that to 400K.
Think about that TIME on your side -- 25K became 400K and you didn't do a thing except invest it instead of spend it. Think about now if you had been adding each year just a couple grand to your nest egg - and now you retire with a cool million dollars in CASH (equities actually). Or you're an even better saver and you retire at 55 instead of 65… Now we're talking!
IF I'VE LEARNED ANYTHING about living in retirement -- it's that the only thing I have of any real value - is my TIME. No amount of money can get it back… and each day another day slips away never to be had again. If I sold all the stuff I have I can't buy it back.