Creating Wealth: Part 3 | Myron Golden

1 year ago
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Creating Wealth Part 3
| Myron Golden |
0:00 Introduction
The first part we talked about was valuing time more than we valued money. And the reason that's important is because that's what we need to understand. We need to understand the difference between cost and value. I'm gonna tell you, there are two ways to create wealth, and I'm gonna share with you what those two ways are. I want you to focus more on value than you do on cost.
0:58 The Two Wealth Formulas
If you want to create wealth, there are two ways to do it. You can either do H Va x L Vo = W, or you can do L Va x H Vo = W. The reason people like Gates or Zuckerberg or Jobs are able to create massive amounts of wealth in a very short period of time is because they're applying one of these two formulas, or both of them.
1:47 High Value, Low Volume
H Va stands for high value. High value x low volume. You have a high value product and you sell a few of them. For instance, people who sell airplanes for a living only need to sell two or three of 'em a year, and they make a very, very good living. That's high value x low volume.
When you want to get into really high values, you could go to some of these new TV shows they have where they're selling million dollar homes, like Million Dollar Listings, which is a real estate agents who focus on all of their energy on selling higher end homes because there's more commission in it. These are people who understand high value x low volume. They may not sell as many houses as the person who's selling a hundred thousand dollars houses, but they're making more money because it's a higher value.
2:52 Low Value, High Volume
Sam Walton became the richest man in American history and he did it by the other formula, which is L, low value times high volume. Sam Walton had a motto that he only wanted to make 30% profit on any product that he sold. And if he got a better deal buying the product from one of his vendors, he would pass that savings on to his customers.
And Sam Walton built the biggest retail chain in the world based on low value, high volume products. Neither is right or wrong. They are just what they are and you need to pick one.
3:37 Using Both Formulas
You could say, "I want to do low value, high volume products on the front end, and then do high value, low volume products on the back end." If you don't know what that means, you'll learn what that means as you continue to follow my videos, it'll make more sense to you.
So I'm gonna do one or two of these or I'm going to do both. And eventually you might get to a point where some of us have gotten where we've had the ability to do high volume on high value products. When you can have a high value product and then sell lots of them, man, that is a really great place to be.
4:07 Valuing Your Time
The reason these formulas are so important is because this is how you value your time. Instead of just, "I'm gonna trade an hour of my time for somebody else's $25, I'm gonna trade an hour of my time for somebody else's $50, or I'm gonna trade an hour of my time for somebody else's $100," when you figure out how to bring value into the world and you understand the concept of value, it will give you the ability to create more wealth. One of the reasons people don't make much money is because they are doing work in a job that is low value. And I don't mean it's low value, that it's not important.
I'm not saying your job's not important, I'm just saying it's only worth what the job it pays and has nothing to do with you or your particular skills. See, you are a genius. You are already worth millions. But the fact is your boss hired you to do a job, and that job is only worth $15 an hour, $25 an hour, $45 an hour, whatever it is you're making, that's a low value proposition.
And so you're selling your time to the boss so that while you're at the office, the boss can be at the golf course. And this is just how this works. I'm not attempting to make anybody feel mad at their boss or anything. I'm just telling you this is how, it works. Now, I'm gonna ask you a question as we end this module: and that is: is it easier to get $20 from somebody, or is it easier to get $20,000 from somebody?
It's not a trick question, it's easier to get $20. Well, guess what? What if you could figure out something that could create $20 worth of value for somebody, and you do that for a thousand people, that's $20,000.
Instead of trying to fulfill a job that pays $20,000 a year, and now you're trying to get $20,000 out of one person and that person is your employer.

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