The formula to manage your money

What is the formula to manage your money? Is there any formula?

One of my favourite business philosophers & motivational speakers the legend Jim Rohn left us a great wealth of knowledge and understanding life. Part of that is definitely financial education. Unfortunately at school you will not learn financial education, which is the education of the 21st century. Thanks to people like Jim Rohn, we have the opportunity to learn how to manage your money. He has a simple formula on what you should do with your money to ensure success in your personal finances.

The 70-10-10-10 Formula:

70% – Learn to live on 70% of what you make. Housing, food, car, clothes, gadgets, internet, etc.

10% – Goes to passive investing. This is where someone else uses your money to make more money for you – bonds, stocks, mutual funds, etc.

10% – Goes to active investing. Money goes to start your own business.

10% – Goes to charity. Whether you believe in this or not, Jim Rohn (and many other wildly successful people) strongly believe that you have to send money out in order to get more. Just give that money away & know that the universe will provide more for you. Give it away to your church, food shelter, animal welfare, kids, tip well to waiters, etc.

Formula to Manage MoneyThis also has an effect on our mind where we force our self to live on just 90% of our income – and we can create an abundance mentality by knowing that even if we give away 10% of our money, we’ll be fine.

Of course, you’ve probably heard that Warren Buffett, Bill Gates & a bunch of other billionaires are giving away almost all of their wealth back to society. Andrew Carnegie, the steel magnate & one of the richest men in the world, also gave away all his money. He is the reason we have public libraries!

Use Automation Debits:

Spending all your money & investing what’s left over is a big mistake.

Always pay yourself first.

Set up automation debits so that the 10% automatically gets withdrawn from your bank account & goes to your savings & investment accounts.

Final Thoughts:

All of this is assuming you are debt free (credit card, loans, etc – does not include mortgage). If you have credit card debt, pay that off asap.

Don’t have enough money to follow 70/10/10/10?

You can adjust it to 97-1-1-1 (or whatever else that works for you).

Spend 97%, 1% on active & passive investing. Final 1% on charity.

It doesn’t matter which formula you’re using. Following this formula to manage your money or an other consistent formula to set the right investing mindset habits is what matters.

Did you get Value out of this or did this Help You? If so, I would greatly appreciate if you commented below and shared it on Facebook or other social media.