馃攳
RICH DAD'S CASHFLOW QUADRANT (BY ROBERT KIYOSAKI) - YouTube
Channel: The Swedish Investor
[0]
Did you ever hear this while growing up?
[2]
"Just go to school! Get good grades, so you can get a secure and well-paid job!"
[8]
I bet that 95% of you have been raised to believe that this is THE road to financial success.
[13]
I know that I was. And this path might be the most suitable for some people,
[18]
but definitely not for everyone. In Rich Dad's Cashflow Quadrant,
[23]
Robert Kiyosaki explains that there are 4 different paths to become wealthy, but some of them are more efficient than others ...
[31]
Takeaway number 1: The cashflow quadrant.
[34]
The cashflow quadrant is a simple model that explains that wealth can come from 4 different sources.
[40]
Which quadrant you belong to depends on where most of your income comes from.
[45]
The 4 different quadrants are:
[47]
E - the employee
[49]
S - the small business owner or self-employed. B - the big business owner and I - the investor.
[58]
The employee strives for security.
[61]
He achieves financial success by climbing the corporate ladder, and you might find him say something like:
[67]
"I'm looking for a secure job with nice colleagues and great benefits."
[72]
The small business owner or self-employed, on the other hand, strives for control.
[77]
He achieves financial success by becoming highly
[80]
specialized in a demanding field, and you might find him say something like: "I'm looking for a job where I can be compensated well for
[86]
my skills and time where I am in charge."
[91]
The big business owner strives for freedom.
[94]
He achieves financial success by creating a profitable business
[97]
system, and you might hear him say something like: "I'm looking for people that are smarter than me to run my business for me."
[105]
The investor also strives for freedom,
[108]
but he does this through allocating money to where it has the highest expected return.
[114]
You might hear him say something like: "I'm looking for a place where my money can work for me in the most profitable way possible"
[123]
Take away number 2: OPT and OPM
[127]
The number one difference between the left side of the cashflow quadrant and the right side is OPT and OPM.
[135]
OPT stands for other people's time, and OPM for other people's money.
[140]
A person from the B quadrant
[142]
uses opt and OPM when he is designing a business system where he can hire people from the E and S quadrants,
[148]
while using money from people of the I quadrant.
[152]
Typically, he also invests a lot of his own time to kick-start the business,
[156]
but in the long run this is not essential, and becoming a more passive owner of the business is possible.
[162]
A person from the I quadrant uses OPT to generate income from his money alone.
[167]
And if he's skilled enough, he can typically apply other people's money as well as his own money to scale his investment profits.
[176]
Herein lies the big difference. People from the E and S quadrants never get to use OPT or OPM.
[184]
Therefore, the more successful they become in their quadrants, the more money they make, but at the same time - their workload increases.
[194]
Takeaway number 3: The pros and cons of the quadrants.
[200]
E- the employee
[201]
Pros: Reduced financial uncertainty, paid vacation, health insurance (and other benefits) and colleagues.
[211]
Cons: Success means more work and less free time.
[216]
Your performance is often higher than your salary (if you are not a slacker that is).
[221]
Colleagues - especially bosses!
[225]
S - the small business owner or self-employed.
[229]
Pros: You are your own boss.
[232]
You're paid according to performance.
[235]
Cons: Success means more work and less free time.
[240]
And financial uncertainty - you might lose money on this.
[244]
B - the big business owner.
[247]
Pros: OPT and OPM.
[250]
Financial freedom can be achieved very quickly.
[253]
And a greater portion of your profits goes to you (in other words you pay less tax).
[259]
Cons: Financial uncertainty - you might lose money. It requires a different set of skills than what school teaches.
[268]
And you'll have to manage people.
[271]
I- the investor.
[273]
Pros: OPT and OPM.
[276]
Financial freedom can be achieved quickly. A greater portion of your profits goes to you (in other words less tax)
[283]
And it can be passive.
[285]
Cons: Financial uncertainty - you might lose money.
[292]
Takeaway number 4: Breaking the addiction - moving to the right side.
[298]
So there are pros and cons with all the quadrants, but the right side is where financial freedom can be achieved the fastest.
[306]
Therefore we might ask ourselves: "How can we move to this side?"
[311]
Money has an addictive power - much like sex or drugs.
[315]
Therefore, when you earn money through a specific quadrant, you'll be addicted to that quadrant.
[320]
If you earn money as an employee for a large company, for instance, your brain will associate that type of work with a cash reward.
[328]
Switching from one quadrant to another becomes more difficult because of this.
[333]
Moreover, if you've been raised in a family where degrees, job security, paid vacation and
[340]
governmental pension has been highly valued, you might have a difficult transition to make.
[345]
Here are some potential mental obstacles for the conversion:
[349]
"Argh! You are taking too many risks!"
[351]
"You might fail!" "Money can't buy happiness anyways!"
[356]
As if this wasn't enough, our educational system is built so that it rewards those who make the least number of mistakes, and
[363]
punishes those who make the most.
[365]
In the B and I quadrants you must act in the complete opposite way.
[370]
People who take action will also make the most mistakes, but in the long run,
[375]
these people will learn more and achieve more as business owners and/or investors.
[381]
Thomas Edison was criticized for making 1014 mistakes before creating the electric light bulb.
[388]
In response, he said:
[389]
I did not fail 1014 times!
[392]
I successfully found out what did not work 1014 times.
[396]
The transition won't be easy,
[398]
but a great start is to surround yourself with people who have made the journey before, and learn from those that are already successful
[405]
in B and I quadrants.
[410]
Takeaway number 5: The five levels of investors.
[414]
According to Robert Kiyosaki, there are 5 different levels of investors. Starting from the bottom, we have:
[420]
1. The zero-financial intelligence level.
[423]
At this level, we have the people who have nothing to invest at all.
[428]
Each month, their expenses are higher than their income - often because they forget to pay themselves first,
[432]
which is the most fundamental strategy for wealth building taught in the classic The Richest Man in Babylon.
[439]
2. The-savers-are losers level.
[442]
Placing hard-earned money under a mattress or in a low-interest bank account, will put you in the top 50% of people financially.
[449]
But that doesn't mean that it's a solid personal finance plan.
[453]
Why?
[454]
Because of inflation.
[456]
Between 1980 and 2017 the value of the Swedish crown was reduced by 69%, for instance.
[464]
3. The I'm-too-busy level. A lot of people are simply too busy with their careers,
[470]
family, friends and vacations to dedicate time to investing. They therefore hand over their money to someone else to do it.
[477]
The problem with this approach is that such a person will never learn how to invest.
[484]
4. The I'm-a-professional level.
[487]
This is the do-it-yourself investor. He uses his own money and takes his own decisions.
[493]
He is educating himself in the subject, but hasn't evolved to the last level yet.
[498]
As you are watching this channel, I expected you already are at this level (or higher!) or that your intentions are to get here.
[506]
5. The capitalist level.
[508]
This is an investor who comes from the B quadrant and has learned how to use the concepts from there in his investing.
[515]
For example, he is not investing alone.
[517]
He has advisors that help him gather information about the markets, and in that, using OPT.
[524]
Furthermore, he uses OPM as well as his own money.
[528]
He has also learned how to use corporations to reduce taxation levels of his capital gains.
[534]
The level 5 investor is the person who will reach financial freedom first among all of the investors.
[540]
What level of investor are you?
[544]
Here's the recap:
[545]
There are four different roads to financial success.
[548]
You may succeed as the employee, the self-employed, the business owner and/or the investor.
[555]
The right side of the cashflow quadrant uses OPT and OPM.
[559]
There are pros and cons with each of the quadrants, and
[562]
depending on your personality and goals in life, one might be more suitable than the others.
[567]
if you wish to move to the B and I quadrants,
[570]
you must learn to accept risks, make mistakes and surround yourself with others that have achieved what you wish to do.
[578]
There are five levels of investors, and the greatest profits goes to the level 5 investor, who has learned how to implement
[584]
business concepts in his investing approach.
[588]
Thanks for watching everyone! See you next time!
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





