The Millionaire Fastlane (17 page)

Read The Millionaire Fastlane Online

Authors: M.J. DeMarco

Tags: #Business & Economics, #Entrepreneurship, #Motivational, #New Business Enterprises, #Personal Finance, #General

BOOK: The Millionaire Fastlane
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  • Manipulate intrinsic value by increasing hours worked.
    (I need to make more money!)
  • Manipulate intrinsic value by changing jobs or adding jobs.
    (I need to get paid more!)
  • Manipulate intrinsic value by going back to school.
    (I need a better career!)
  • Manipulate compound interest by seeking better investment yields.
    (I need better investments!)
  • Manipulate compound interest by expanding investment time horizon.
    (I need more time!)
  • Manipulate compound interest by increasing the investment.
    (I need to save more!)

Each of these six responses is a futile attempt to manipulate the impotence of the Slowlaner's wealth equation. Unfortunately, the limitations of the mathematics cannot be subverted, and doing so results in dangerous cause-effects cycles.

When a Slowlaner wants to make more money, he increases his hours worked, switches to a better paying job, or adds jobs. When a Slowlaner wants to get paid more, he goes back to school, hoping to increase intrinsic value. When a Slowlaner realizes that a 3% investment return isn't building wealth fast enough,
bigger risks
are assumed for bigger returns. When a Slowlaner watches 40% of his nest egg disappear in an economic recession, he goes back to work arguing that five years is not enough to “get back to even.”

You can't overcome the limitations of mathematics. A car that has a top speed of 10 mph will always have a top speed of 10 mph, no matter HOW HARD YOU PUSH THE ACCELERATOR. If you travel across the country at 10 mph, you're going to need 40 years!

The Slowlane is predisposed to mediocrity because the numbers are always mediocre.

The Slowlane is risky because its variables are uncontrollable and leverage is absent. ULL really means “ULL” never get rich. Yet, lifestyle is the one variable Slowlaners can effectively manipulate. Unfortunately, this quickly turns Slowlane life into a stale exhibition of misery. Yes, settle for less.

Wealth Fail: Wrong Equation. Wrong Variable

At some point, the Slowlaner realizes he can't force the stock market to yield bigger returns. He can't force a 200% pay raise. He can't afford an advanced education to raise intrinsic value. Job-hopping offers little incremental pay upgrades. The Slowlaner is enslaved to his equation and resorts to manipulating the only controllable variable,
personal net income
, which is increased by reducing expenses.

Personal Net Income = Intrinsic Value – Personal Expenses

Slowlane gurus praise this strategy. The edicts are clear: Pay down your debt. Dump the new car for an old one. Raise your insurance deductibles. Cancel your credit cards and pay cash for everything. Quit buying $10 coffee at Starbucks. Bag your lunch. Shop in bulk. Spend four hours clipping coupons. C'mon buddy, slash those expenses-some day you're going to be rich! Hilarious!

These tiresome strategies are a classic response to being stuck in the Slowlane.

Lifestyle degradation.

When you're married to a bad wealth equation, this is resistance. This is like getting a divorce by sleeping on the couch. This is like never batting in a baseball game and expecting to win. Since wealth is tied to time and can't be controlled, you're left with kitchen scraps … lifestyle degradation in the form of expense reduction. Yup, become a cheapskate.

Wrong. Hoodwinking expenses does not create wealth. You can't win the money game always playing defense-you must go on offense. Exploding income and controlling expenses creates wealth.

For example, when I routinely earned $100,000 per month, I accumulated wealth fast because I maintained control over my expenses. As my income exponentiated, expenses grew linearly and weren't neglected. If my income increased by 100%, expenses only grew by 10%. I didn't accumulate wealth because of expense dickery.
Income explosion and expense control created wealth.

So what happens when a Slowlaner commits to the expense variable?
Life becomes about what you can't do
. You can't take that trip. You can't buy your kids a decent pair of shoes. You can't own a dream car. You can't subscribe to the movie channels. Yes, the good old “sacrifice your today for the promise of tomorrow.”

You settle.

Slowlane Victory: Fame or a Geriatric Ward

Why invest in a plan that consumes 40 years of your life and fails most of the time? I wouldn't. The dreary reality is that Slowlane failure doesn't happen overnight; failure transpires over the years like a termite-infested woodshed, and when its denizens come to judgment, it's too late. Yes, Slowlane victory is as tough as a truck-stop sirloin.

In a 2002 AARP (formerly the American Association of Retired Persons) survey, 69% of the respondents said they would need to work past retirement age. A year earlier, 45% said they would need to work into their 70s and 80s. We can deduce something disturbing from this data: The Slowlane's failure rate is near 70%. Despite the risks, despite the mathematical limitations, despite the typical five day trade for a weekend, despite all of it, you might stand firm and try your luck. While victory isn't impossible, I need mention a few things: Slowlane winners are usually extremely talented, elderly, or overworked.

How to Win the Slowlane: The “Secret Exit”

The Slowlane can be defied if you find its “secret exit,” its “get out of jail free” card that neutralizes the limitations of Uncontrollable Limited Leverage. That secret Slowlane escape?

Fame.

Fame breaks the mathematical limitations of intrinsic value. Those who defy the Slowlane are the most pervasive in our culture because of fame-the pro athletes, rappers, musicians, actors, and entertainers. If you want to bludgeon the Slowlane's weakness you need to get famous. Why? Fame and notoriety carries a high intrinsic value. People pay extraordinary rates for you and your services. (Even if, like a reality-show star, you have no skills.)

When a 20-year old basketball player leaves college and scores a $30 million contract, you've just witnessed Slowlane defiance. When an actress lands a $15 million lead role in a major motion picture, you've just witnessed Slowlane defiance. When an obese freckly-faced Irish guy ascends from waiter to top finalist on
American Idol
, the limitations of the Slowlane roadmap are shattered because intrinsic value explodes. Suddenly, intrinsic value has leverage because of demand.

Unfortunately, most people who seek wealth do so through Slowlane defiance, not via the Fastlane. Fortune-leading fames are the obvious attack. Why do stadiums breach to capacity for
American Idol
auditions? Fame explodes intrinsic value! You can defy the Slowlane's limitations by becoming so indispensable that your value to society skyrockets. If millions seek you, you will be paid millions. Pro basketball player LeBron James is paid millions because his skills are in short supply. Famous actors and entertainers are paid millions because millions demand their brand in entertainment form. Extreme talent is paid extremely well.

Overworked into Corporate Management

The other highly sought-after Slowlane “secret exit” is good ol' corporate management. No doubt you've heard the Slowlane missive “climb the corporate ladder.”

When a corporate CEO cashes $20 million in stock options, you've witnessed another Slowlane defiance. Surely you've heard about all those overpaid CEOs of large companies raking in the big dough. Have you ever looked at their age? Exclusive of the founders and owners, most of them are in their 50s and 60s.

Obviously, the roads through corporate management don't happen overnight; from mailroom to CEO can take 40 years. And if it does, you certainly don't get there by taking it easy. Nope, you arrive early and leave late. Sorry, I don't have 40 years of patience, waiting for that golden parachute to land in my backyard.

Successful Slowlaners Get Stuck in the “Middle”

I have no desire to be famous or to be a corporate drone-heck, I don't even own a suit or tie, so how would I climb the corporate ladder? If you're allergic to fame and corporate ascension as a road to riches, what's left? Society enforces the Slowlane as your only option. Unfortunately, that strategy leads straight into the “middles”-middle class or middle age.

Every lottery has a winner. Bad odds have winners! “Oldlaners” (Slowlaners who succeed using a Slowlane strategy) who survive the Slowlane road-map eventually become millionaires, but please, don't pop the cheap champagne quite yet. The distinction between a Slowlane millionaire and a Fastlane millionaire is like the difference between a Buick and a Ferrari. When you recognize the difference, you can critique advice properly and assign it to its correct Fastlane or Slowlane box.

Millionaires Are Rich … or Are They?

I recently read an article about a young woman named Callie from the U.K. who, several years ago, won millions in a lottery, only to lose most of it shortly there after. Of course, “lose” implies that the entire bag of cash flew out of the car while cruising down the boulevard in her brand new convertible.

She didn't “lose” it-she spent it. She was just 16 years old when she won the $3 million, and it took only six years for her to blow it: drugs, partying, exotic cars, breast implants, and a jaw-dropping $730,000 in designer clothes. The problem?
Callie thought she was rich and spent like she was rich.
Surely she bought into her title: “I'm a millionaire.” While $3 million is a decent chunk of change, she needed $30 million for her lifestyle.

Which brings us to our famous word, “millionaire.”

When you hear that word, what do you think? Like wealth, you probably have visions of an extravagant lifestyle: boats, helicopters, mansions, and expensive jewelry. For decades, the term “millionaire” has been ubiquitously used to describe someone “rich.”

Except these visions of opulence describe a lifestyle of a millionaire elevated by the Fastlane, not the Slowlane. Slowlane millionaires who don't escape by fame or corporate bastardization live differently. They own homes in innocuous middle class neighborhoods. They drive unassuming cars like Hondas or Toyotas, they vacation infrequently, they limit their dining expenses, they cut coupons, and they max out their 401(k)s. They work five days a week at jobs they most likely hate and diligently save 10% of their paychecks. Others own small businesses, franchises, and retail stores. Several national best-selling books have enlightened us: Yes, these are the “millionaires next door.”

Sadly, in today's terms, a “millionaire” (net worth of $1,000,000) is simply upper middle class. A millionaire is not rich. Five million is the old one million. Depressing, I know.

This hidden truth is why many lottery winners go broke after a few years. Winners envision the lavish lifestyle and live it not knowing that several million dollars won't support it! If you win a million bucks (which after taxes is only $600,000), your lifestyle shouldn't change. If you try to live the “millionaire lifestyle” as shown on television, a fool and his money are soon parted.

Playing the lottery is a symptom of the Sidewalk. So why would it shock anyone to discover that a newly crowned lottery winner goes broke just years later? Lottery winners assign “rich” to the word “millionaire,” so their fortune is fast spent on the icons of wealth, and soon thereafter, they're bankrupt.

The word “millionaire” fooled them.

Millionaire is middle class. To live a lifestyle normally reserved for “millionaires,” you will have to amass far more than $1 million. Having $1 million doesn't entitle you to a lifestyle of the rich and famous. You need at least $10 million for that. So when the media spoon-feeds you the word “millionaire,” determine its perspective: Is it Slowlane and middle class? Or Fastlane and rich?

12 Distinctions Between Slowlane and Fastlane Millionaires

 
  • Slowlane millionaires make millions in 30 years or more. Fastlane millionaires make millions in 10 years or less.
  • Slowlane millionaires need to live in middle-class homes. Fastlane millionaires can live in luxury estates.
  • Slowlane millionaires have MBAs. Fastlane millionaires hire people with MBAs.
  • Slowlane millionaires let their assets drift by market forces. Fastlane millionaires control their assets and possess the power to manipulate their value.
  • Slowlane millionaires can't afford exotic cars. Fastlane millionaires can afford to drive whatever they want.
  • Slowlane millionaires work for their time. Fastlane millionaires have time working for them.
  • Slowlane millionaires are employees. Fastlane millionaires hire employees.
  • Slowlane millionaires have 401(k)s. Fastlane millionaires offer 401(k)s.
  • Slowlane millionaires use mutual funds and the stock market to get rich. Fastlane millionaires use them to stay rich.
  • Slowlane millionaires let other people control their income streams. Fastlane millionaires control their income streams.
  • Slowlane millionaires are cheap with money. Fastlane millionaires are cheap with time.
  • Slowlane millionaires use their house for net worth. Fastlane millionaires use their house for residency.

The Fastlane isn't about becoming the next middle-class millionaire with tiresome mandates about what you cannot do;
it's about what you can do
.

Chapter Summary: Fastlane Distinctions

 
  • The Slowlane has seven dangers, five of which cannot be controlled.
  • The risk of “lifestyle” is the one risk Slowlaners will try to control.
  • The Slowlane is predisposed to mediocrity because its mathematical universe is mediocre.
  • Slowlaners manipulate the “expense” variable because it is the one thing they can control.
  • Exponential income growth and expense management creates wealth-not just by curtailing expenses.
  • You can break the Slowlane equation by exploding your intrinsic value via fame or insider corporate management.
  • Successful Slowlaners not famous or in corporate management end in the middle . . . middle class and middle age.
  • Slowlane millionaires are stuck in the middle class.
  • $5 million is the new $1 million.
  • A millionaire cannot live a millionaire lifestyle without financial discipline.
  • Lottery winners fall into the millionaire trap and go broke because they attempt to live a “millionaire” lifestyle, not understanding that a few million doesn't go very far.

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