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Chris Hogan, Retire Inspired
Description
"I don't want you to be a been brother: a would-a-been, could-a-been or should-a-been. Focus, be well-rounded and give your effort at all times."
Chris Hogan received this advice from his Mom. He was bless to grow up with seven or eight parental figures - from uncles and grandparents to teachers and coaches - in a small town in Kentucky.
These role models helped him to dream big and never rest on his laurels. Today, Chris is a husband, father, bestselling author, radio and podcast host, expert on retirement and personal finance and part of the Dave Ramsey speaker team.
Today, Chris shares simple, life-changing financial tips and nuggets of wisdom gleaned from mentors throughout his life.
SHOW NOTES:
- Information that gets applied in your life time and again becomes wisdom.
- Above all else I realize my time spent with my boys is to help them become productive young men in society. Time spent talking about what and how they are thinking so I can share my experiences and they can see that Dad is not perfect, but perfectly capable of improving.
- Dreaming big is necessary but the work you have to put in if you're serious will lead you closer (or on the doorstep) of that opportunity.
- Be open to opportunities. What seems like a detour is actually the new bigger journey connecting you to the end goal.
- Grab the opportunity and avoid the chances. Chances are 50/50. When pursued, an opportunity will lead you somewhere better. - Chris's Grandma
- Failure is when you don't accomplish a goal and you stop. Not succeeding is when you gave 100% but didn't reach the goal. With maturity and wisdom you realize in pursuit of it, you improved, moved down the path.
- Understanding my example speaks louder than my words makes me stay very aware.
- Chris moved from banking to consumer finance when he realized: "Those account numbers had names; those names had faces; the faces had families."
- It's hard to tell how people are doing with money. They can be dressed head to toe in Prada but not have two nickels to rub together.
- If you are 17 or 77: We all need money to provide for our family.
- If you don't have a plan for your money, someone else will. It's 80% effort and 20% knowledge. It's a matter of learning these 3 basic skills:
- Understand and tap into what it is you would ultimately like to accomplish. What are your high definition dreams: Write a check to your college? Build a park? Support your grandparents.
- Triple A: Assess. Acknowledge. Activate. Assess current financial situation. What's working? What isn't? Acknowledge that it can be better! Activate. How can we do this? Do it.
- Get out of debt and you give yourself a raise. Debt is a thief. When you get a credit card, interest is a penalty. When you save or invest - the interest you earn is a reward or bonus. You don't have to ask for a raise or work harder, just focus on getting out of debt.
- Budgeting is crucial. Tell your money where to go, don't wonder where its been spent.
- Don't make excuses, make progress. Regardless of where you are, one step forward is called progress.
- Learn more at ChrisHogan360.com
CHRIS HOGAN'S LIVE INSPIRED 7
1. What is the best book you've ever read? The Power of Positive Thinking by Norman Vincent Peel. I got this from my coach sophomore year of college. He said read it and apply it.
2. Tomorrow you discover your wealthy uncle shockingly dies at the age of 103; leaving you millions. What would you do? I'd find a way to give a large majority away to create and pass on his legacy. It doesn't change what I do day to day. I'd understand it was a blessing and I'd never want to