Authors: Steve Shipside
A firm opponent of dogma, Franklin nonetheless firmly believed that faith in (a) God should accompany every aspect of life. It is telling, therefore, that in
The Way to Wealth
he specifically says that
‘In the affairs of this world men are saved not by faith, but by the want of it’.
An extraordinarily capable man, Franklin (inventor, physicist, musician, writer, politician) clearly believed that we are responsible for our own endeavours and encouraged those around him to organise themselves to make their lives better. That’s as clear from his actions as from his words, since he is seen as the founding father of both the first fire-fighting organisation and the first hospital in the US.
DEFINING IDEA
…Every business and every product has risks. You can’t get around it.
~
LEIACOCCA, AMERICAN INDUSTRIALIST
By urging us to rely on a lack of faith he is highlighting the risks involved in trusting your health and wealth to heaven, fate or blind optimism. It’s a risk that particularlyaffects entrepreneurs who tend to be notably dynamic and (over) optimistic. In your excitement about your own business and wealth creation, then, you can be saved by not trusting to fate. Here are some things I bet you haven’t taken into account…
Death marks the end of your own personal way to wealth, but if you’re the principal breadwinner have you got life insurance in place for your dependants? Even if you have, the chances are that you haven’t invested in disability insurance because a) you’re too busy trying to make money to spend it on insurance, and b) you just don’t want to think about it. Do consider it. You don’t have to work with industrial machinery or have a risky occupation to wind up disabled; a stroke or heart attack will do just as good a job of incapacitating you.
Death and disability
Irreplaceable others
If you’ve chosen co-workers and employees carefully then you should have at least one you see as being invaluable. Which is great while their qualities are working on your behalf, but what if they leave? What happens to your business if a key employee has to move on? Do you have clients who are entirely dependent on a single relationship with one person? How much business would you lose if that individual went to a rival company? Entrepreneurs tend to live their business and often forget that it is far less all-consuming, satisfying or attractive for their staff than it is for them.
Globalisation and rivals
You’ve got a great idea and a great team to put it in place, so what can possibly go wrong? How about a rival in Taiwan coming up with the same thing using cheaper labour and selling their product directly into your market via the web? Don’t trust that your brilliance will keep you ahead of the game or that this year’s good idea will last for ever. Someone, somewhere will build a better mouse trap.
HERE’S AN IDEA FOR YOU
…Got an employee worth their weight in gold? Appoint them as a mentor to someone else and have that person shadow your wunderkind. In particular have them work as a team with clients so the shadow becomes seen as the apprentice and heir apparent to the star.
51
DON’T STOP BECAUSE YOU MAKE IT
The Way to Wealth
isn’t just about pointing yourself in the right direction; it’s about keeping up the momentum on the way. Or as Franklin puts it:
‘He that hath a calling hath an office of profit and honor; but then the trade must be worked at, and the calling well followed, or neither the estate, nor the office, will enable us to pay our taxes.’
DEFINING IDEA
…It’s never enough until your heart stops beating. The deeper you get, the sweeter the pain. Don’t give up the game until your heart stops beating.
~
SHELLSHOCK, BY NEW ORDER
I once had a conversation with a venture capitalist about entrepreneurs in the UK. He explained that essentially they had two waves of entrepreneurs—the driving young types determined to prove themselves and make their mark, and then the second-time-around types. The latter were older men and women who had already ‘made it’, become millionaires and drifted into semi-retirement, only to find that they were bored and looking for a challenge.
Franklin’s advice was set against a backdrop of less general affluence than today, and his point was that you must continue to work on your skills and abilities if you want to get the most out of your work life as well as pay your bills. What he didn’t stress for his audience in the 1750s is that this advice holds true for those who have achieved success, as well as for those still struggling to find it.
You might think that you work your way to wealth because you want to achieve a certain level of comfort, kudos or satisfaction. What you will find is that once there you will (indeed, should want to) set new goals to continue your personal momentum. Otherwise you stagnate.
Goal setting is the key for this. Breaking down major tasks into more manageable goals is important, yes. What is equally important for your personal and business momentum, however, is to ensure there is always another, bigger goal out there on the horizon. Keeping a list of your goals is a great help, since looking back on what you aspired to two years ago helps you focus on what you have achieved since then and on what remains to be done. Setting goals without recognising your achievements en route can turn the way to wealth into a treadmill.
Don’t fall into the rut of thinking that new goals simply means more of the old goals. Try to think laterally about what you might achieve differently. Don’t be bashful about thinking big and putting your wildest dreams onto your list. If you are stuck for ideas about how wild your dreams should be, then try brainstorming with co-workers and friends about just how high you could all go. It doesn’t matter that the wild dream is too big a goal to go for right now, just that it’s in the picture and you’re keeping that dream alive.
You can work out steps to break down the dream into more easily digested chunks as you go.
HERE’S AN IDEA FOR YOU
…Mentoring is an excellent way of maintaining momentum because it freshens up your ideas with someone else’s fresh start, makes you think about new problems in new ways, and increases your networking reach. Think about signing up as a mentor yourself.
The very last message of
The Way to Wealth
is a very human one, namely that Franklin knows full well what people are like and how much notice they tend to take of good advice about thrift and hard work. After his ‘harangue’ is done he notes that
‘The people heard it, and approved the doctrine, and immediately practiced the contrary’.
DEFINING IDEA
…If you’d have my advice, I’ll give it you in short, for a word to the wise is enough.
~
FATHER ABRAHAM—AKA BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
We are all like the crowd in
The Way to Wealth
—we hear plenty of good advice, nod our approval and promptly ignore it. We know it doesn’t make sense to have large credit card balances but we still use them as stop-gap loans. We are fully aware we buy things we don’t strictly need, but the new i-Thingy is sooo bright, sooo shiny. Whatever advice Franklin gives us we will still be suckers for bargains, and we will still be tempted to keep up with our peers. As sure as tomorrow follows today, we will put off unpleasant jobs and will inevitably splash out on luxuries to reward or compensate ourselves for making it through the daily grind.
Franklin recognises that; in fact, his final point is that while the audience completely ignores the advice the one person struck by it, almost shamed by it indeed, is himself.
‘I resolved to be the better for the echo of it’
, he promises,
‘and though I had at first determined to buy stuff for a new coat, I went away resolved to wear my old one a little longer.’
Having heard his own advice spoken back to him, he has at least decided to make one little concession and keep his old item of clothing for a while longer rather than replace it right then. It is a small step but, as he notes repeatedly throughout the treatise, such small steps add up to great savings if repeated and multiplied.
His final promise to us can therefore be seen as being at the same time very modest and very hopeful:
‘reader, if thou wilt do the same, thy profit will be as great as mine,’
he says, knowing that the ‘profit’ in question is a short-term saving on a new coat, and an attitude that will stand you in good stead for life.
So don’t go away thinking that Franklin’s wisdom is all very well but barely workable. He himself concedes that while ideally you should go to bed early, work harder than everyone else, borrow nothing and purchase nothing but necessities, life isn’t so straightforward. Instead if you take just one little tip from his ideas and apply it to your life that will be precisely the kind of small step that leads towards wealth. Or, to put it another way: one good idea can change your life.
HERE’S AN IDEA FOR YOU
…If you don’t have time to put in practice all the ideas and themes of
The Way to Wealth
then go to Idea 8,
To Thine Own Self be True
(p.17), and begin by working out your finances. If you did that and nothing else you would be on the path to prosperity.
A
AA (Automobile Association)
Accenture, survey by
accountants
accreditation
advertising on websites
advice
financial
how much do we take?
learning to take
from a mentor
Allen, Woody
Amazon
‘ambush marketing’
appraisal of self
arrogance
attitude
attrition
auditing your debts
Augustine, Norman R.
B
balancing income, and outgoings
bankruptcy
banks
bargains
seeking out
temptation from
Barnes and Noble
Barton, Bruce
Bezos, Jeff
Bierce, Ambrose
blacklists
Boone, Louis E.
Boren, James H.
boss, being your own
brain training
‘brand equity’
Branson, Richard
breaking down large jobs
British Accreditation Bureau
Brookner, Anita
budgets
business evolution
buying on impulse
C
Callcredit
Carphone Warehouse
cars, cost of running
cashflow
change, embracing
communication between business and
customer
commuting
comparison websites
complaints, acting on
computers, the advent of
confidence
consultancy
Consumer Credit Counselling Service
consumerism
Coubertin, Pierre de
credit, taking other people’s
credit cards
late payment charges
new cards with 0% deals
credit rating
creditors
CRM (Customer Relation Management)
systems
cultural differences in work ethic
customer retention
D
D’Angelo, Anthony J.
Davies, Robertson
deadlines
death
debt
assessing
balancing
short-term relief from
delaying difficult tasks
delegating
depreciation of cars
Dinges, David
disability
Domeyer, Diane
downshifting
downtime
dreams, realising
E
eBay
‘elevator pitch’
email
frequency of checking
time wasted on
emergency plans
employees, irreplaceable
endorphins
entrepreneurs
Epstein, Robert
Equifax
Executive Hammocks
exercise
for the brain
expenditure
expenses, ‘unexpected’
Experian
F
failure in small businesses
Father Abraham
Ferriss, Timothy, The 4-Hour Work Week
‘fighting fund’
financial advice
first impressions
fitness
flexible working
‘founderitis’ (Founder’s Syndrome)
4-Hour Work Week, The
France, time management in
frugality
fuel costs
further education
G
Germany, time management in
globalisation
goals, constantly resetting
Gotti, John
H
Hammocks, Executive
‘harangue’
Heraclitus of Ephesus
Holiday, Billie
holidays
home, working from
Hoover, Herbert
hosting companies
How Old is Your Brain?
I
I Iacocca, Lee
immune system
impulse buying
independent financial advisers (IFAs)
Inland Revenue
insolvency
insurance
interest rates
on debts
on savings
Internet Lite
investment in property
IQ
ISAs
IVAs
Izza, Michael
J
job descriptions
Juran, Dr
K
Kaupthing Edge
Kawashima, Dr
‘keeping up with the Joneses’
Kiam, Victor
L
late payments, charges for
Lauder, Estee
laziness
learning
for business advancement
new trades
leisure
lenders
lifestyle, downshifting
lists, of things to do
Lloyds TSB
loans
loyalty schemes
Lubbock, John
luck
lunch breaks
luxuries
M
‘make do and mend’ approach
management
managing big tasks
market research
marketing yourself
McEldowney, Ken
McLuhan, Marshall
memory, improving
mentoring
micromanagement
minor expenses
modernisation
mortgages
motivating others
Motley Fool, The
moving away
mp3 files for napping to
N
napping
NASA
National Debtline
negotiating a pay rise
networking
New Order
Nintendo, How Old is Your Brain?
O
Office of Fair Trading
old age
organising time
outgoings
outsourcing
overconfidence
overseeing projects
P
Packer, Kerry
parental control, online
Pareto Principle
pay rises, negotiating
pensions
people management
Peters, Tom
physical fitness
plagiarism
positivity
power-napping
praise
offering
receiving
pre-owned purchases
price comparison websites
prioritising
procrastinating
progress in business
project management software
property investment
R
rainy day funds
‘rate tarts’
relaxation
remote learning
repayment dates
research
resistance to change
retail therapy
Riley, Pat
risks
rival businesses
Roberts, James
Rockefeller, John D.
Roosevelt, Eleanor
Ruskin, John
S
salary checkers
sales pitch
Saunders, Richard
savings
accounts
Scott, Sir Walter
second hand purchases
Secrets of Consulting, The
self-belief
self-discipline
self-employment
annual appraisal
selling yourself
Shakespeare, William
Sharma, Robin
siesta
skills
increasing
teaching to staff
sleep
small print
SMEs (small and medium enterprises)
Smith, Adam
social networking
spelling in websites
sport
staff, irreplaceable
staff management
standing costs of cars
stress
success in business
supervising workers
Syrus, Publilius
T
Talmud, The
task dumpers
tax
on savings
for self-employed
team leadership
temptation from bargains
time
management
thieves
wasting
zones
to-do lists
trade, learning
triage
trouble-shooting for business
Twain, Mark
U
Uhlich, Karin
unique selling point
unsociable hours
V
Virtual Private Networks
visual cortex
W
waiting
web filters
websites, quality
Weinberg, Gerald
well-being
Whitehead, Alfred North
Wood, Victoria
World Wide Web
work ethic, cultural differences
working from home
worst-case scenarios