5
0

Work smarter, not harder?


 invite response                
2023 May 28, 7:13pm   3,402 views  63 comments

by Eman   ➕follow (7)   💰tip   ignore  

I came across this on Quora and thought it was interesting to share.

- Answer to Poor people work hard every day. What's the difference between a poor and a wealthy hardworking person? by Hector Quintanilla

Money is abundant. Money is EVERYWHERE!

The government has money, the banks have money, schools have money, restaurants have money …

You have money, your friends have money!

The rich have money, the poor have money!

Money is EVERYWHERE and always moving. Money is “flying” all around us, ALL the time, 24 hours a day — everyday, 365 days a year!

What’s the difference between a poor, hardworking person versus a wealthy, hardworking person?

The difference is in HOW they ‘catch’ money.

Poor, hardworking people invest their limited working hours ‘chasing’ money, while the wealthy, hardworking people will invest the same amount of limited working hours building an asset that will “catch” money for them.

For example, spiders will NEVER work hard chasing flying insects to make a living. Instead, they will work hard building a spiderweb that will catch abundant flying insects for them.

That’s called an asset. It works 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, catching flying “money” — even while the spider sleeps.

That’s the secret.

Schools won’t tell you this. They will teach you to chase money, which leads to the paycheck formula:

(College degree) x (Time) = Paycheck

Warning: That’s an energy-draining trap!

There’s only one solution: Entrepreneurship.

Stop making excuses and start building your “SPIDERWEB” today!

https://www.quora.com/Poor-people-work-hard-every-day-Whats-the-difference-between-a-poor-and-a-wealthy-hardworking-person/answer/Hector-Quintanilla?ch=15&oid=158123858&share=28755099&srid=hK5Qu5&target_type=answer

« First        Comments 57 - 63 of 63        Search these comments

57   mell   2024 Mar 6, 12:26pm  

HeadSet says


mell says


Haven't seen anything below 4% for months now. Many are 5%. The last 3%er supercheck I cashed in mid last year. During the zirp years there were even a few 0%ers. I doubt you can get am offer with less than 4% fee these days

A local Credit Union here has made an offer to convert any CDs on hand to a one year 5% with no penalty for early termination of the converted CDs. That is. if I have a 3.5% CD with them that still has months left on the term, they will close it without early termination penalty and put the proceeds into a new one year 5% CD. It would seem like this is a money losing proposition for the Credit Union, unless they see rates going up in the near future.


Wondering what the terms of touching the money are. If they can use the money as long as it is in your CD with interest at maturity they will benefit from a higher (sweep) cash position. But no expert in this, never took a CD, I just put my money into my stock trading. Been averaging ~20-30% yearly for the past decade, so sticking with it. Requires daytrading though in addition to buy and hold and is easily a 2nd (part time) job, so there are always tradeoffs.
58   HeadSet   2024 Mar 6, 12:59pm  

mell says

If they can use the money as long as it is in your CD with interest at maturity they will benefit from a higher (sweep) cash position.

The interest is paid monthly but there are penalties for withdrawing before the one year term is up.
60   Eman   2024 Mar 6, 8:32pm  

There’s a $10k cap on the savings account @ 5.5% interest.


61   Eman   2024 Mar 8, 6:39pm  

Came across this picture on X. It definitely belongs in this thread.


63   Patrick   2024 Mar 9, 9:06pm  

That worked for me.

« First        Comments 57 - 63 of 63        Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste