Justin Prince



We had a great guest speaker in Financial Literacy. Justin Prince shared with the class some very important thoughts about how to prepare for and manage your life. Below are some of the highlights, as captured by the students in attendance.  If you missed this opportunity or even if you were there but found it difficult to "drink from the fire-hydrant" here are some key points to review:

Secret to getting rich... Pay Yourself First
10% Charity/Tithing
10% Saved
10% Invested (The #1 investment is yourself! Learn new skills.)
70% Spend 

Elements of Success:
1. Ambition
Always do more than what you’re paid for as an investment for future
The marketplace is your employer
The market place will pay you what it thinks your worth
We are paid by the value that we bring into the marketplace
Dream big

2. Mentor
Give your mentor permission to hold you accountable.
Have multiple mentors. Pick mentors that are the best for each facet or your life.
Surround yourself with great people, those who believe in you
Learn from the mistakes of others OR learn from your own.
It's far better to learn from the mistakes of others.
Drive Time Learning: Use this time to read/listen to great information
You tend to earn the average of your five closest friends... choose well. 
Apply what you learn, this is what truly makes you extraordinary

3. Opportunity-
Life is the challenge to become more than ordinary.
NET: No Extra Time
It's he that doeth the deed that hath the power.
Do the thing you fear the most and the death of fear is certain. (If you don't like checking skyward/checking account, then you must check it often and the fear will go away.)
Never quit on a bad day
Make words physical. Live your life so that your words are meaningful
Maximize the potential of every opportunity

You are paid what the marketplace believes your worth. The more you demand of the marketplace the more the marketplace demands of you. Are you worthy of the price you demand? Can you become worthy of the price you desire? You absolutely can be worth what you want from the marketplace.

How to be successful… 4 ways to increase your value in the marketplace
Read Rich Dad Poor Dad, Miracle Morning, Richest Man in Babylon
Listen to good things
Surround yourself with great people
Apply what you learn

How to shake hands:
Look them in the eye
Give a sturdy grip
Say, "Hi, I'm (use your full name)" - With confidence
Ask, "How are you doing?"

There is no power in mumbling. If you’re going to say something, say it and own it!

When you’re hungry you want to grind up your grain seed to make flour to eat. But if you grind your grain you will have no seed to plant for the future. You've got to give up the thing you want now for the thing you want most. If you plant some of the grain seeds now you will have food for your future. 

The Poor use their income to pay expenses.
The Rich use their income to buy assets that are used to pay expenses.
Assets = Investments or Business's 

For more information or to connect with Justin:
     Enter code: 564914 to receive $10 off your purchase.

Poor, Car

Purchasing a used car is like the Iliad of old. The young and inexperienced picking a fight with the strong and unyielding. You see, an average person will buy something like 20 cars (1.5 cars every 5 years from 20-75) in their lifetime. However, a car dealership will buy/sell something like 20+ cars a month. If your feeling a little bit like an underdog, your right.

So lets try and level the playing field and see if we can't keep your Achilles heel intact.
First, do not attempt to finance a car with bad credit. No credit history is better than bad. So if you have some dings to your credit, take the necessary time and drive "cash-only clunkers" until you get your credit score fixed (700 or higher).

Here is why this is so important:
I was talking to a sales rep at Ken Garff West Valley a while back. Ken Garff corp. is a great supporter of secondary education in Utah through their Keys to Success program. While speaking with the sales rep. he related a few stories from different customers who they were trying to help, despite their bad credit situations.

One type of situation sounded particularly desperate:
Customers come in looking for another car because their previous one has been repossessed (taken back by the bank/dealership because the owner wasn't making payments anymore). This is a major hit to your credit score; and typically, repossession is a symptom of other bad debt/bill payment issues. So, generally speaking, repossessions results in credit scores near the 300 minimum. In other words, you have a proven history of NOT PAYING FOR CARS.

As a result, the interest rate of your new auto loan will be around 24%. However, if you make on time payments for a year, then trade it in, you can finance into another car with a better credit score and a lower rate. This can be a great way to fix a bad credit situation. Except... you have a proven history of NOT PAYING FOR CARS!

According to this sales rep., most people who have these low-score high interest rate loans don't make the on time payment consistently for one year in order to qualify for the better rate. Why? Because they haven't fixed their bad debt/bill payment habits and therefore couldn't get our of their bad situation.

There was one more, very telling, outcome of this situation. As we walked around the car lot looking at the inventory, one thing was very noticeable, the cars at this particular lot were dirty, and many had dents, scratches, and other blemishes. It was obvious that this location catered to a low income, low credit score, low financially educated population. Cars that looked like they had been repossessed and the dealer expected that they would be repossessed again from their next owner.

I can't think of a better metaphor when buying a used car. The car you buy will reflect the condition of your financial education/credit score...
If you have "dirty" credit with some "dents" "dings" and "scratches" your car will too!

How to Clean Your Room


Cleaning your room can be a monumental undertaking. All the different toys and all the pieces of toys can make the proposition of cleaning your room seem overwhelming. "A problem so big and unfix-able why event start?" - Right? The other thing about a messy room is how quickly it can become messy. Often times the room was clean just a couple of days ago and now look, its a mess again.

Here's how to clean your room. 
Organize all of the different toys into categorizes based on the number of pieces. For instance, stuffed animals, dolls, accessories, building blocks, cars, action figures, books, clothes, unmade bed. Pretty overwhelming list. And, some of these items consist of many parts and pieces.

Arrange the toys according to the number of pieces the toy has.  There is only one bed so its first on the list. The building blocks/doll accessories contain many small pieces so they are last on the list.

Attack the list by first maintaining the amount of mess from the other items (don't get distracted and begin playing with the other toys). You will feel a sense of accomplishment with each "easy" victory. This will motivate you towards completing the ever-increasingly larger chores. But soon, you will have a clean room again.

Debt is a lot like a messy room. Lots of different types of debt and lots of different amounts and its amazing how fast the debt can grow. Soon the amount seems so large and unfix-able "why even start?" - Right?

Paying off debt is much the same as cleaning your room... enter, the Debt Snowball.

The Debt Snowball is a method of debt management where you organize all of your debts smallest to largest, by amount. While paying the minimum amounts on all debts, you put all of your excess funds into the smallest debt first. Once the smallest amount of debt is payed off you take the money that was going to it and roll it into the next largest debt. You continue this process of rolling ever-increasing amounts of money into the next largest debt until all the debts are paid off.



There are more effective methods to paying off debt, but I believe more personal satisfaction comes at a quicker pace through the snowball method than any other option.

Lastly, while the Debt Snowball is usually used for credit card debt, the principles can be applied to all debts. For instance, your credit cards may be the smallest debts so they would be paid off fist, but then, continue the process for your car loans, students loans, and even your home mortgage. Paying the smallest amount of debt to the largest. Within a few years you can be totally debt free!!