Are You Taking Care of Yourself Financially?
I’m sure there are great entrepreneurs who are good at three
or four things in their lives, but in my experience, entrepreneurs tend to be
very focused, especially on their businesses. Unfortunately, this means that
most entrepreneurs are terrible money managers for themselves. I think they get
so tied up in running their businesses on a day-to-day basis that they don’t
think about their future financial picture.
One constraint is simply their available time. They just
don’t have enough time, especially if they have families. Financial planning
and management tends to be a long-term consideration, and most entrepreneurs
are just surviving, so they intelligently put their time where it should be --
keeping their businesses alive and profitable.
The other pitfall is that entrepreneurs tend to have a lot
of their net worth tied up in their businesses. In some ways, this is not a bad
thing since it is a tax-free way to build wealth. However, most businesses are
not liquid, and they have huge hidden risks over the long run. The probability
of a good lawn cutting service that has been in business for 20 years going out
of business in the next year might be low. The probability of it going out of
business over five, 10 or 20 years is much higher. The longer that you are in
business, the higher the chance of failure. As a result, keeping a majority of
an owner’s net worth tied up in their businesses is not always sound practice.
I’m sure there is substantial data around my claim, but I have personally seen
this at least a dozen times from entrepreneurs I know.
There is a prescription for this. Every entrepreneur needs a
good certified personal accountant (CPA) who is good at financial planning or
even a financial planner with a good track record. I’m always reluctant to give
advice to people like me who wouldn’t follow it, but it is probably a good idea
to get some good professionals on your side. Pick advisors who are older, who
are risk averse and who you may not even like since they are so different from
you. If you are like me and don’t especially enjoy going to doctors or other
advisors, I recommend that you put away 10 to 15 percent of every dollar of
disposable income that you ever earn. Put it somewhere that you don’t touch. I
prefer safe investments like real estate and indexed mutual funds or even government
vehicles that carry no risk. Since your risk in life is already way higher than
it should be, and way higher relative to other normal people in the world, be
sure that your investments are super boring and conservative. Stay away from
investments in Franklin Mint coins and mint condition baseball cards and oil
wells… and IPOs. Your life is chaotic enough, so you don’t need to add to the
chaos.
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