Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Im a Millennial Millionaire. Heres How I Got So Rich
I'm a Millennial Millionaire. Here's How I Got So Rich By any definition, becoming a millionaire by your 30s isnât easy, unless you happen to come from a lot of money. Tips abound on how you can accumulate wealth through saving and smart investments, but unless youâre putting away a lot of cash, a seven-figure net worth at such a young age can seem like a pipe dream. But it is attainable, at least if youâre resourceful, driven, and of course, lucky enough. While millennials have gotten a reputation for being entitled, many in their cohort have proven exactly how flexible, creative, and ultimately successful they can be in the business world. In some cases, theyâre redefining what success looks like, all while pulling in massive incomes. We talked to two millennials who have achieved millionaire status about what it took to get thereâ"and the wisdom they have to share. Find the ideal âside hustleâ Entrepreneurship is highly prized in American society, but it can often seem vague and unattainable. Knowing what it actually involves and forming a strategy can make all the difference. Grant Sabatier, founder of Millennial Money, more or less fell into it. His âaha momentâ came when he started his first freelance project. âI was working full-time at a digital marketing agency and had only been there about three months when I sold my first side-hustle gig,â Sabatier, 32, said. âThe project was building a website for a small law firm in Chicago for $500. I was so pumped to sign my own client, but really realized I was onto something when I sold a $50,000 website to a much larger law firm about 60 days later.â From that point on, Sabatier devoted himself â150%â to building his business, sacrificing much of his free time to do so. âWithin a year I had made almost $300,000 and left my job to become a full-time entrepreneur,â he said. He says he went from having $2.26 to his name to over $1 million in assets in five years. Sabatier recommends that millennials who feel theyâre in a professional rut should look for as many extra revenue streams as possible. Keep searching until you hit upon the gig âyou like the most that makes you the most money.â But you may already know which business you want to target. Taso Du Val, the cofounder and CEO of the freelance talent network Toptalâ"which counts J.P. Morgan and Airbnb among its clientsâ"had a singular vision in mind for his company. He felt secure in his idea when Toptal signed its first deal. âThe ability to scale it, for me, was clear,â Du Val, 32, said. Want it more than anything else Taso Du Val courtesy of Toptal It goes without saying that accruing significant wealth at a young age requires focus, but the sheer amount of dedication can be too much for some to bear. âYou have to really want it. A lot of people say they want, but they donât really want it,â Sabatier said of the effort required in becoming a millionaire. âYou have to cancel your Netflix subscription and stay off Instagram and focus on building a business. You have to be willing to spend your extra time learning and pushing yourself. Read business books, listen to podcasts, or take a free online course instead of watching Netflix. Focus on investing in yourself and your skills. Slowly youâll start seeing money-making opportunities in places youâve never seen before.â That doesnât mean you should drive yourself mad or lose out on worthwhile experiences. Sabatier went âoverboard at times and struggled with finding balanceâ between work and everything else, and it ultimately led to âregrets,â he said. âI was working 80-to-100-hour weeks for a few years in my mid-to-late 20s, so I missed out on a lot of opportunities to hang out with friends and to travel as much as I wanted to.â Value your time. It is money⦠If you feel yourself stagnating in a nine-to-five routine, it may be time to rethink what those hours mean to youâ"and their potential earning power. That was a revelation for Sabatier as he embarked on his new career. âThe biggest lesson for me came from the book Your Money or Your Life by Vicki Robin, which in my opinion is the best book on money ever written,â he said. Among the takeaways is that whenever youâre working for a paycheck, youâre trading large pieces of your life for money. âThis blew my mind and the mindset shift was immediate. I started valuing my own time and tried to make as much money as possible for my time.â He believes in figuring out the right amount of money you need to support the kind of life you want, and aiming for that, so you can free up time to do everything youâve dreamed of. â¦And make money by adding value The key to large earnings often lies in understanding what it is you have to contribute and how itâs received by people in the position to pay you. Simply being young and hungry isnât quite enough. âMoney is a means to add value. You make it by adding value and you spend it on whatâs valuable to you,â Du Val said. âI understood its importance by having little of it and studying every intricate component that adds value to a business.â His keen ability to identify how an innovative talent network like Toptal could serve major companies in new ways propelled his business. Toptal supplies freelance software engineers to clients with fluctuating demands. âWork to invest, not to spendâ Just because you can make a lot of money doesnât necessarily mean youâre good at holding onto it. But saving is essential to seeing more commas in your bank statements. âCommon wisdom is that you should save 5-15% of your income depending on who you ask. But if you can push it to 25%, 50%, or higher you can dramatically cut the number of years it takes to retire,â Sabatier said. âSure, you have to cut back, but you should view saving as an opportunity, not a sacrifice.â And once youâre able to save money, putting as much of it in a diversified investment portfolio as possible is the fastest route to wealth-building. âI was saving at least 60-80% of my income and put literally every dollar I made on the side into investments so it could grow. I worked to invest, not to spend,â he added. Embrace the openness of being a millennial, but also be tough courtesy of Grant Sabatier Being a digital-native generation puts millennials at the forefront of the new economy. And as traditional office schedules slowly fade away, theyâre primed to take advantage of new modes of working. âYou can make money doing tons of different things online from anywhere in the world. Thatâs empowering. We are super scrappy and are figuring it out,â Sabatier said of his age cohort. But Du Val has observed a certain personality quirk among his generational peers that could put them at a disadvantage in becoming self-starters who add value to the world and make a lot of money while doing so. âThey seem to be easily offended,â Du Val said of American millennials. âThis is often correlated with being weak, so I would suggest to improve that.â Part of developing strength, after all, is acknowledging your weaknesses.
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