Who Showed You How to Make Money?
All of us in our lives have been shown by somebody how to make money.
Most of us got this lesson from our parents as a teenager when your independence started equally equating to less things being bought for you.
Getting that first part-time job to pay for your Saturday night at the movies with your friends was the first valuable lesson on how to make your own money and how to spend it.
From that point forward, financial matters slowly started to fall on your shoulders.
Some of us saved up and bought our first car, others became the Chairman of the Board and threw money around buying things for everyone to gain popularity, and a few really smart ones just banked their cash knowing they would need it down the road.
Beyond our parents and grandparents giving us the basics on money management, most of us had to be taught how to make money from some business minded individual.
One way we learned this valuable lesson was to understand that the more skills you acquired along the way the bigger the paychecks usually were.
Moving up the ladder from laborer to journeyman in a construction field, or from a stock clerk to supervisor always showed us the importance of a promotion.
Some jobs we worked at did not materialize into more money over time, and is probably why we are not working there today.
One of the most valuable lessons is that remaining stagnant with your finances is never very good.
Some of us sought out financial advice from professionals to learn how to make money, while others actually decided to become the financial expert to get ahead in the financial world.
Both strategies could pay off if the right decisions are made with their money, and having that extra knowledge of how the big stock markets work and maybe a little insight on when to buy or sell could bring great rewards.
No matter who it was who taught you how to make money, the important thing to realize is that you did the right things to make the money you wanted to, or that you adjusted your thinking properly to make your financial investments a success.
While your grandparents always had your best interest in mind, they may not have been experts when it came to money market accounts, annuities, or stocks and bonds.
Learning the right things for the times in which you live is a big step to your financial success
Most of us got this lesson from our parents as a teenager when your independence started equally equating to less things being bought for you.
Getting that first part-time job to pay for your Saturday night at the movies with your friends was the first valuable lesson on how to make your own money and how to spend it.
From that point forward, financial matters slowly started to fall on your shoulders.
Some of us saved up and bought our first car, others became the Chairman of the Board and threw money around buying things for everyone to gain popularity, and a few really smart ones just banked their cash knowing they would need it down the road.
Beyond our parents and grandparents giving us the basics on money management, most of us had to be taught how to make money from some business minded individual.
One way we learned this valuable lesson was to understand that the more skills you acquired along the way the bigger the paychecks usually were.
Moving up the ladder from laborer to journeyman in a construction field, or from a stock clerk to supervisor always showed us the importance of a promotion.
Some jobs we worked at did not materialize into more money over time, and is probably why we are not working there today.
One of the most valuable lessons is that remaining stagnant with your finances is never very good.
Some of us sought out financial advice from professionals to learn how to make money, while others actually decided to become the financial expert to get ahead in the financial world.
Both strategies could pay off if the right decisions are made with their money, and having that extra knowledge of how the big stock markets work and maybe a little insight on when to buy or sell could bring great rewards.
No matter who it was who taught you how to make money, the important thing to realize is that you did the right things to make the money you wanted to, or that you adjusted your thinking properly to make your financial investments a success.
While your grandparents always had your best interest in mind, they may not have been experts when it came to money market accounts, annuities, or stocks and bonds.
Learning the right things for the times in which you live is a big step to your financial success