Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Chicken Soup for the Souls Jack Canfield My Biggest Money Mistake
Chicken Soup for the Soul's Jack Canfield My Biggest Money Mistake Jack Canfield is best known for his inspirational work as the author of multiple New York Times best-selling books, including the Chicken Soup for the Soul series and The Success Principles, now celebrating its 10th anniversary. I recently interviewed Canfield on my daily podcast, So Money, about his biggest financial mistake, the principles that helped him bounce back, and how he ultimately went on to build a multimillion-dollar empire. Hereâs what he had to say. His Biggest Financial Failures âI made some big investments that didnât work out, when delving off into projects that started with, âHey, Jack, thereâs this really cool idea, we can make a lot of money really quick doing thisâ¦.â I got involved in some multi-level marketing companies, didnât realize how much work it was, and lost money because I bought a lot of product and didnât have any people to sell them to. The other failure was deciding to create a portal, kind of like AOL. We had no business doing that. We didnât know enough about it. AOL was cleaning up everywhere. For years, AOL was putting free CDs and DVDs inside of magazines just to build their base. We didnât have the money to do that. We lost $30,000. I did another thing where we invested $300,000 in an infomercial. I didnât know that business well enough to be playing. What He Did Wrong I invested in companies I never should have invested in because I didnât know them. You know, the richest people in the world tell you, âDonât invest in a business that you donât fully understand.â And I didnât do the due diligence I should have done. So, there were lots of $50,000 and $100,000 investments that turned into nothing. I donât do that anymore. Whatâs Different Now I actually have one person who manages my money with me, and he knows more than I do. He used to work at Deutsche Bank and is an extremely brilliant guy, so I let him do what he knows how to do. He runs everything by me and I usually say, âWell, what would you do if it was your money?â Weâve had a great run. One of the chapters in The Success Principles [says] success is a team sport, and you need to surround yourself with a team of expertsâ" bankers, accountants, investment advisersâ"people that know what theyâre doing, and then work with them on a regular basis. It has to be a consistent touch point. Donât try to be an expert in areas youâre not an expert in. Instead, use the experts. What Heâs Learned I think most of my financial failures came when I tried to do something that wasnât aligned with my purpose. My purpose is to inspire and empower people to live their highest vision in a context of love and joy. Whenever I was working on that, whether it was writing books to developing audio programs, running seminars, doing coaching programs, I was always making money. Every day, MONEY contributing editor Farnoosh Torabi interviews entrepreneurs, authors, and financial luminaries about their money philosophies, successes, failures, and habits for her podcast, So Money, which is a âNew and Noteworthyâ podcast on iTunes.
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