Wealth Formula by Buck Joffrey

Buck Joffrey
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Aug 25, 2016 • 31min

015: How to figure out if you are an entrepreneur

Solving the wealth formula is dissociating time from money. In other words, you no longer need to actively work in order to maintain a particular lifestyle. It is important to know that entrepreneurship is not required in order to get to this point. In fact, if you already have a high-paying job, your quickest way for you to gain financial independence may be to keep your job and focus your attention on making smarter investments in cash flowing assets. The way I think about this is that you have to have a “motor”…something that drives lots of cash in your direction. If you already are a high wage earner, you’ve got that covered for the most part. Your time may be best spent figuring out how to use that income generating motor to quickly create ongoing cash flow to replace your current time dependent income rather than learning how to start a business. The reason to be an entrepreneur is because it gets you excited and makes you feel alive. That’s what it does for me but…that’s me. I also love Minnesota Vikings football. Not everyone does. The point is that you are who you are and you have to be true to that. Quickly figuring out whether or not you should be an entrepreneur or stick to cash flow investing is important. If you figure out entrepreneurship is not for you, you can stop buying online courses and seminars that you never finish and start sharpening your investor skills through education and hanging around in the right community (mine!). After listening to this week’s episode of the wealth formula podcast, I bet you will have a pretty good idea in which camp you belong.
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Aug 19, 2016 • 35min

014: What is your dream and WHY aren’t you living it???

I approach everything in life similar to the way I approach business. One of my cardinal rules as an entrepreneur is to avoid working IN a business so much that I stop working ON it. For example, if you have a bakery, you don’t want to be the one who is baking, doing accounting, and sales at the same time. If you do that, you become too busy to do anything else but daily tasks and, as a result, you become extremely myopic. It is important to be able to step out of your business and look into it once in a while. When you do that, some of the obvious glaring weaknesses or areas of needed improvement become obvious. High wage earning professionals are often experts at the details but can’t see the proverbial forest for the trees. They are simply too busy to see anything else other than the next client, the next patient, or the next work day. There is essentially no time for introspection or evaluation of the most important asset than any one of us has: our lives. When was the last time you stepped out of your life for a moment and looked at it critically? What were your dreams when you first started down this journey of “success”? What are they now? Why aren’t you living your dreams? Now I’m not talking about the kinds of dreams that you know, for obvious reasons, will never happen. For example at 42 years old, 20 pounds overweight, and 3 spinal operations, I am pretty sure that I will never play in the NFL. Those are not the kinds of dreams to which I am referring. I am referring to the dreams that I hear all the time from people around me. Some people want to live somewhere else. Some people want a different kind of job or want to start all over in another field. Others simply want to have more time with their children. It simply breaks my heart to see my hard working, high paid professional friends living like zombies with hopes of stockpiling enough cash away for the next 20 years to finally begin “living their dreams” in retirement. Why not take take a moment to look at your own life critically? You may find that with a little introspection and a little bit more courage, that some of those “dreams” you have might be able to come to fruition sooner than you thought with some small but critical adjustments.
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Aug 10, 2016 • 27min

013: Ask Buck

This week’s episode of Wealth Formula features the first of many episodes of “Ask Buck” where you, my fellow professionals looking to transform into entrepreneurs and sophisticated investors, ask me the questions that are on your mind. This week’s topics include questions about cash flow versus cash reserves, topics in real estate LLCs, flipping versus cash flow investing and more. Ask your questions at Wealthformula.com by clicking the tab that says “ask Buck”. I love the enthusiasm that all of you are showing and hope to continue building this new unique community of professional entrepreneur/investors. There are not enough of us out there and we need to spread the word to our colleagues so that they don’t end up like all the other victims of Wall Street!
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Aug 4, 2016 • 29min

012: An engineer turns to turn-key real estate!

Lane is your classic highly educated, high wage earning professional. However, he doesn’t throw his hard earned money into the stock market. Lane uses his money to buy houses and is gradually phasing out his own need to have a boss. At the age of 30, he’s already more than half way to replacing the income generated by his engineering job. The best thing about Lane is that he knew NOTHING about real estate before he started. He is a classic example of someone who understands the wealth formula. He doesn’t have to quit his day job to make it happen. With a little bit of time spent learning about investing in real estate, he has already accumulated 11 homes across the country. Find out how by listening to the latest episode of Wealth Formula Podcast.
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Jul 29, 2016 • 40min

011: Doctor, my portfolio hurts!

In this episode of Wealth Formula Podcast, we talk with Dr. Eric Tait, MD, MBA about his transformation from an internist to founder and president of Vernonville Asset Management LLC. Dr. Tait gives his insight into the economy and ideas about how to invest your hard earned money (hint: NOT the stock market!)
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Jul 22, 2016 • 39min

010: The biological secret to success: repeated failure

We learn to walk by repeatedly falling down. We learn to talk by first making unintelligible noises. We are hard wired to learn through trial and error but are brainwashed by an educational system that teaches us that doing things a different way is wrong and that failure is bad. The reality is that any great entrepreneur or investor must take chances repeatedly to learn and to succeed.
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Jul 14, 2016 • 37min

009: From High Paid Professional to Higher Paid Entrepreneur

Zed Williamson was a high paid professional but was not satisfied. He shed his golden handcuffs and went on to build a company just like the one he worked for…but better. In the process, he gave him self a BIG raise!
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Jul 7, 2016 • 28min

008: What the heck is Brexit?

Implications of the world order on your pocket book.
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Jun 24, 2016 • 21min

007: Kiyosaki’s Quadrant from a Professional’s Perspective

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Jun 22, 2016 • 19min

006: The crash is coming!

Is the stock market about to crash? Is inflation about to take off? What should you do?

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