Category Archives: jobs

Why Your Goals Don’t Work

Yesterday, I assigned my students a voluntary overnight project. We had discussed goal setting in class and I wanted to impress upon them the importance of writing down and prioritizing their goals. As I generally find in my classes, only a small number did the whole exercise.

I already know why many of my students failed to follow through on this well-established method for getting what we want out of life. It is the same reason many of us fail to follow through. We say we want to achieve great things, but in the end, we would really rather stay in our comfortable cocoon of low-level misery.

We know from well over a thousand studies that goals work–that is, they lead to high performance. If you want to lose weight, make more money, or achieve anything else quantifiable, goals are the way to do it. Yet we all know how easy it is to get distracted while working on a goal. Why is that?

In my view, there are two major reasons we find it difficult to achieve things. The first stems from what I call a “mind-split.” On the one hand we want to accomplish what we set out to do. On the other, we are afraid that we just might succeed. If we succeed, we show ourselves and the world that we really are capable. It renders null and void all the excuses we used before, and by implication, the excuses we may want to use in the future.

The second hindrance to goal achievement is having the wrong goals. High performance does not necessarily lead to happiness and personal fulfillment. I see this in “achievement junkies,” people who crave the next chunk of conspicuous wealth or yet another trophy in a sport they have grown to despise.

Learning the mechanics of goal setting takes twenty minutes. Learning to set the right goals may take twenty years. As you set out on the great journey that is entrepreneurship, remember that getting what you really want is scary and that getting what you think you want may make you miserable.

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Filed under economy, entrepreneurship, financial crisis, investing, jobs, money, retirement, wealth

What is an Asset?

Accountants, financial advisors, and the popular press talk constantly about “assets.” Most people have only a vague notion of what an asset really is. My favorite definition comes from the book Rich Dad Poor Dad. An asset puts money in your pocket. A liability takes money out of your pocket.

Let’s think about that a minute. What kinds of things take money out of your pocket? Well, that bass boat sure does. Unless you make a heck of a lot of money fishing, more money goes into the monthly payments and upkeep than comes out in the form of income. If you are like most of us, you don’t expect any money to come your way on account of that boat. That, friends, is a liability.

This is not being judgmental, by the way. If you enjoy fishing, buy that boat by all means. As long as you have the money, live it up. In the case of a pleasure boat, no one really expects to make money. But what about your house? Haven’t you always been told that it is an asset? The truth is, it takes money out of your pocket too. Even if you have paid it off, you are still spending money on upkeep, utilities, and insurance. That makes your house a liability. But don’t you make money when you sell? Try that about now. And even if you could sell it, where would you live?

The only thing that truly counts as an asset is something that puts money in your pocket. Assets are money machines. When you put some amount of money in an asset, you expect to receive more money than you put in at some point in the future. There are two ways to accomplish this. One is for the asset to throw out a stream of money like, say, a savings account. (I know. It’s not much of a return, but stay with me.) As long as you keep that money in the account, you earn money. Another example is a stock that pays a dividend.

The second way for an asset to make money for you is appreciation in value. Imagine buying a Silver Eagle coin for $15 and selling it six months later for $20. This type of asset makes you money, but you have to sell it to realize the gain. House flipping was a popular form of this type of investing until the housing market crashed.

A successful business is a tremendous asset. By building a business, you can realize both kinds of return. A business creates an income stream as long as you own it. If you build it the right way, you can also sell it at some point for much more money than you put into it. Another great thing about building a business is that you can put much more than just money into it. You can put your know-how, your time, your social network, and your creativity into it. The bank does not care what I know or how hard I am willing to work when I open a savings account. I park some cash and it works for me for the rate determined by the bank, end of story. A business gives me an opportunity to capitalize on things other than money.

It all comes back to value. All businesses operate on the principle of creating value that other people are willing to pay for. Many times, we vastly underestimate how valuable we are to others because we are stuck in the J-O-B trap. Chances are, you have much more potential value than you realize. Next week, we’ll take a look at some ways to tap that hidden value.

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Filed under business, entrepreneurship, financial crisis, jobs, new business