The Family Finance Show

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The Family Finance Show

The Family Finance Show

@FamFinanceShow

Podcast that helps families make better financial decisions. Hosted by entrepreneur and mom, @dianagranoux in collaboration with @WarrenIngram.

Katılım Mayıs 2020
81 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
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The Family Finance Show
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow·
Do you have big financial goals? By making small improvements in how you manage your money, you will eventually reach your goals and it will feel great! Listen to the podcast at familyfinanceshow.com
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Tim Ferriss
Tim Ferriss@tferriss·
If someone asked me to give investing advice to a 30-year-old today who had just made their first million, I would first point them somewhere else. I’m not a financial advisor and don’t think I’m qualified to give anyone financial advice. The particulars matter too much. But if they insisted, I might say: (1) If you want to play in early-stage tech investing (or anything high-risk, high-reward), ensure you have a plan for developing an ENORMOUS informational advantage. Aim to develop new skills and relationships through portfolio companies so that you can win over time, even if you “fail” with many bets going to zero. Only bet what you are comfortable losing and what you can recoup in other ways. Though my angel investing snowballed, I began with $10K checks and advising for sweat equity. Think of this as tuition for a real-world MBA. Are you willing to move to the hub of activity to ensure the best possible information and deal flow, as I did when I moved to SF lifetimes ago? Or make commensurate commitments or sacrifices to ensure you are in a position to win? If not, I’d suggest choosing a different game. Other people will take the initiatives that you won’t, and they will beat you. Much of early-stage investing is cooperative, but let’s not kid ourselves, a lot of it is competitive, and not everyone will podium finish. (2) For the rest—which could be everything—follow Buffett’s advice. Keep it simple. One cautionary example of doing the opposite: I spotted the COVID curve ball early, and I made a lot of very “sophisticated” (complicated) decisions related to investing, and the associated research, diligence, phone calls, and so on chewed up an unbelievable amount of time and energy. Eighteen to twenty-four months later, I’d done very well but decided to look at how passive S&P 500 returns would’ve added up over the same period, and… they were roughly the same. Of course, you can’t always bank on this outcome, but beware of seeking complexity if you’ve been rewarded for problem-solving throughout your life. Looking back over the last 15+ years, the handful of investment decisions that made all the difference have been simple and were somewhat obvious to me, no major gear-grinding required. (3) Knowing when to buy isn’t enough. Have policies and rules for when you will sell, or the universe will punish you with very bad and very expensive decisions. (4) Don’t discount luck, including lucky timing. I started angel investing seriously in 2008 and hit a golden window of converging trends, cheap valuations (by today’s standards), and an uncrowded playing field. The financial crisis had culled the herd of a ton of investors and fair-weather founders. It was a target-rich environment, even for someone with very little to invest. Micro-VCs were just cracking out of their shells, and the big players hadn’t started assailing the seed stage stuff. In retrospect, it was a wildly rare combo of things. I don’t believe I could replicate what I did in 2008–2012 now. (5) Personally, I’ve largely stepped back from angel investing to double down on writing and the podcast (The Tim Ferriss Show, soon to hit 1B downloads). This comes from a desire for more predictability and less stress. I love the excitement of startups, and I’ve had some lucky wins, but I don’t find it nearly as interesting as developing creative muscles that bring in forecastable revenue year after year. For me, that has compounded more reliably than the all-or-nothing bets. Massive ups and downs in sectors like crypto also take a toll that reduces my creative batteries. In this chapter of my life, I think simplicity is the name of the game (e.g., finding one decision that removes 100 decisions). (6) Over-optimizing is just as bad, if not worse, than under-optimizing. Past a certain point, buying extra Skittles just doesn’t fucking matter. So, a note to self: stop fiddling around with your goddamn spreadsheets and get more interesting hobbies on the calendar. What hobbies? Exactly. (7) If we assume the point of investing is ultimately to improve your quality of life and the quality of life of those you most care about, investments that consistently add stress over long periods of time probably don’t make sense. Money is traded for things or experiences that catalyze certain feelings. If your investments are generating the opposite spectrum of feelings, it might be time to reassess. It’s easy to miss the forest for the trees. Money is a means, not an end. And in the end, most things matter very, very little. Do what helps you sleep at night and wake up with a low heart rate. To me, those are the hallmarks of a world-class investor who gets the big picture. tim.blog/2023/03/03/rev…
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André (Andile) Bothma
André (Andile) Bothma@AndreBothmaTax·
The best funding for a business is cashflow from clients. Equity funding is temporary and debt funding is expensive and puts revenue in an interest jail. Consistent cashflow from clients is legitimate proof that you have a business model that can print cash.
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The Family Finance Show
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow·
I got podcast stats for 2022 from Buzzsprout today. We only published 8 episodes this year as Leopard kept me fully busy. I'd like to do more in 2023 if I have the time, and if our listeners find them valuable. Any ideas for guests and topics?
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Diana Granoux
Diana Granoux@dianagranoux·
It’s been 4 years since I left my corporate job to start @LeopardVoyage. It’s not easy to move from a technology to a tourism company, or to go from being an employee to being an entrepreneur. Here are some thoughts for those looking to leave your job or change industry in 2023:
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The Family Finance Show
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow·
Taking risks pays off, but not immediately. And it was helpful to have solid savings to see me through the tough times. Doing what I love is what financial freedom gave me.
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Ess
Ess@EMukumbo·
What is the best thing money has ever done for you?
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The Family Finance Show
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow·
In case you missed this week's episode with @EMukumbo. If you enjoyed this episode, you might like other episodes on the theme of financial freedom: familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod… familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod… familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod… familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod…
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow

New episode! This week @EMukumbo is our guest. She talks about her journey to financial freedom, managing her family's finances, dividends and more. Not to be missed! Listen here: familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod…

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The Finance Ghost
The Finance Ghost@FinanceGhost·
It is incredible that for months I have fought with @Vodacom to put a company name and VAT number on my invoice. A senior exec has promised it every month now for literally months. I have never met such utterly useless people in my life.
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André (Andile) Bothma
André (Andile) Bothma@AndreBothmaTax·
Can anyone recommend a photographer in Cape Town - one that specialises in portraits / branding? Not a wedding / couples photographer... I need some photos for my personal bio and the Tax Maverick website.
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The Family Finance Show
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow·
In case you missed this week's episode👇 It is the penultimate for the season. Next Tuesday listeners will hear from none other than personal finance queen @EMukumbo and that will be a wrap for season 3. Thanks to all the listeners and guests for inspiring me to keep going🏃‍♀️🙏
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow

New episode! This week we hear from @FinanceGhost about his journey from corporate employee to entrepreneur and all the ups and downs that involves. Listen: familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod… Subscribe: podlink.to/FamilyFinanceS…

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André (Andile) Bothma
André (Andile) Bothma@AndreBothmaTax·
Tax Maverick is officially a year old! The first year in business wasn’t easy, but it was worth it. Stats: Only me to a team of three 210+ tax returns 120+ consultations 500k in tax refunds paid out Over 1mil in taxes saved
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The Family Finance Show
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow·
@mommy_moneyza @EasyEquities Good idea, and I think you should also get your interested teen @beckbessinger book on how to manage your money like a grownup - it covers almost everything they would need to know, and give a solid basis on which to start their saving and investing journey!
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Moms 💖 investing
Moms 💖 investing@mommy_moneyza·
Got teens interested in learning to invest? Why not set up a fantasy stock pick game for your kids? They get to pick a company, help them research it & then load their picks on your @EasyEquities demo account to keep track of returns. Winner gets a prize. Kids love competition!
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Diana Granoux
Diana Granoux@dianagranoux·
I see my small business @LeopardVoyage almost as my third child. I have certainly spent significant amounts of time growing and nurturing it. In this episode, I spoke to another entrepreneur @FinanceGhost about personal finance for entrepreneurs.
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow

New episode! This week we hear from @FinanceGhost about his journey from corporate employee to entrepreneur and all the ups and downs that involves. Listen: familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod… Subscribe: podlink.to/FamilyFinanceS…

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The Finance Ghost
The Finance Ghost@FinanceGhost·
This is as "real" as a conversation gets, with proper insights into what it actually takes to make your side hustle into a reality, along with the risks that accompany the journey.
The Family Finance Show@FamFinanceShow

New episode! This week we hear from @FinanceGhost about his journey from corporate employee to entrepreneur and all the ups and downs that involves. Listen: familyfinanceshow.com/podcast/episod… Subscribe: podlink.to/FamilyFinanceS…

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