Episode #187: “We’re worth $87M, Why are we arguing over credit card bills?”
David (36) and Victoria (35) have been married for two years, yet their finances are largely separate. David is a startup founder—cash strapped and optimizing his monthly take home pay. Victoria is a wildly successful entrepreneur who struggles to appreciate her accomplishments. Despite their immense wealth, David and Victoria’s money psychology is holding them back. Can they ditch their old money mindsets and embrace their rich life?
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Show Transcript
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[00:01:24] Ramit: On today’s episode–
[00:01:25] This is by far the biggest net worth ever seen on this show.
[00:01:30] Meet David and Victoria.
[00:01:32] David: I’ve learned how to save and not how to spend.
[00:01:34] Victoria: I am not allowing myself to enjoy life.
[00:01:37] Ramit: David is 36, and Victoria’s 35. They’ve been married for two years, yet their finances are largely separate.
[00:01:44] Victoria: We feel like we’re just roommates sharing joint expenses on groceries and utilities.
[00:01:51] Ramit: David is a startup founder. He’s cash strapped. He optimizes his monthly take home pay leaving him with little cash
[00:02:00] David: There’s been times where she’s requested a Venmo from me, and I’m like, “Crap, I don’t have that in my checking account.”
[00:02:06] Ramit: Victoria is a wildly successful entrepreneur who struggles to appreciate her accomplishments.
[00:02:12] Victoria: I don’t take enough time to look back on where we are and what we have achieved. It’s toxic, huh? It’s my Korean DNA to torture myself.
[00:02:24] Ramit: Now despite their immense wealth, David and Victoria’s money psychology is holding them back.
[00:02:31] David: There’s always this fear that tomorrow may not come or tomorrow may not have what we have today.
[00:02:37] Ramit: Can they ditch their old money mindsets and embrace their Rich Life?
[00:02:41] Victoria: There’s definitely a scarcity mindset and some extension of frugality that was taught and that was instilled in our upbringings both together. So I think that’s definitely pulling us back.
[00:02:55] Ramit: Let’s meet David and Victoria.
[00:02:57] Welcome to the Money for Couples show. This is a special episode sponsored by our partners at DeleteMe. Victoria and David reached out for help, but their privacy is very important. You’re going to see why. They have by far the highest net worth we have ever seen on this show. And in the past, she’s been burned financially by business partners. We partnered with DeleteMe on this episode to keep them completely anonymous, and you should know that privacy is important to me.
[00:03:25] I have personally used DeleteMe for years to get my personal data removed from search results, and I’ve even signed my friends and family up for it now. Even if you don’t have an immense net worth like David and Victoria, you don’t want your personal information out there for anyone to find. I want to thank DeleteMe for sponsoring this episode. You can check them out at joindeleteme.com/ramit. I highly recommend them. I use them myself. Again, joindeleteme.com/ramit.
[00:03:55] All right. I’ve got David and Victoria CSP in front of me. I’m getting ready for our conversation. Check out what I noticed.
[00:04:01] Victoria and David, “As entrepreneurs, my husband and I lead busy lives. I own a skincare brand that generates 20 million in annual revenue, and I’m the sole owner. In addition, I have supplemental income from influencer work. He runs an advisory firm, which is at its building phase. He has a trust and some real estate holdings that aren’t immediately accessible so I tend to cover our travel. I feel resentment or annoyance when I see him use our joint credit card for things like Uber trips while I’m using my own credit card for the same.”
[00:04:33] Let’s take a look at the CSP. What? Oh, assets, $84,830,000. I’ve never seen a number this big in any CSP on this podcast. this is amazing. $84 million in assets. That’s obviously business. Investments, 1.4 million. Look at that ratio. Savings, $809,000, and debt is 174,000.
[00:05:07] Let’s take a total look at the total net worth. $87,216,874. Wow. But I can already estimate that they have some interesting dynamics with so much of their net worth locked up in businesses. This often means that somebody like me is like, “Oh my God, you’re incredibly wealthy.” But they’re like, “Not really. It’s all locked up in my business or in real estate, and it doesn’t necessarily mean I have the cash flow to support it.”
[00:05:36] Now, there are lots of ways to take money off the table. I’m almost certainly going to talk about this with them, especially with her. But just overall, I just want to say this is incredible. It’s amazing. Let’s take a look at the rest. Gross monthly income is $35,000. Okay, so they’re making $425,000 a year.
[00:05:56] I noticed that she makes about three times what he makes. Okay, fine. She mentioned that he’s starting his business up. What’s interesting is that he actually has more liquid cash than she does. If you look at their holdings, he has $1.5 million. She has $712,000. What a fascinating dynamic.
[00:06:16] She makes more than he does on a monthly basis. He has more cash or even investments, but then she “trumps” it all with an $80 million valuation on her business. Wow. Now, the cool part about this is that as a team, they are incredibly successful. What I can see from their application is that they might be treating things separately.
[00:06:44] And in fact, within their fixed cost of 32%, she’s paying 25%. That’s because their income is so high, and he’s paying 47%. So you can start to see that they’re not quite working as a team. I don’t understand why they haven’t simply combined their money.
[00:06:59] Overall, this is a very fascinating conversation, and if we’re going to talk to some wealthy people, let’s just talk to somebody who has an 80-million-dollar business. I cannot wait to learn more about her business, about his business, and about the way that they interact with their money together.
[Interview]
[00:07:18] Victoria: We’re both entrepreneurs, and we never got to talk about how should we combine our finances, or what should we be spending and what should we be saving on. There’s definitely a little bit of discomfort knowing that we haven’t really had a chance to properly sit down and map out our entire financials together. We only have one joint credit card that’s basically used for utilities, so I think we just lived very individually within one household as a married couple.
[00:07:49] I’m not really allowing myself to also spend on things that matter to us or that are better off delegating to other people or freeing up my time per se. I would love to unleash whatever restrictions or limiting beliefs that I have with my conservative spending habits. So that’s why we wanted to start a conversation about what do we want out of our financial goal and what does that mean to us, and what kind of Rich Life do we want to live together, and how much would that take to live that Rich Life. So that’s why I applied.
[00:08:24] Ramit: All right. I’d like to know where you are financially. What do each of you do? And let’s get a very high-level how much you make per year and how much you have. Let’s start with you, David.
[00:08:41] David: I am the founder and CEO of a company. It’s bootstrapped 100% owned by myself. It’s north of now at least 1.4 million annual revenue per year. My salary started off with me just writing off every expense that I could in ’20 to ’21, and it slowly moved up to roughly 120,000 give or take before tax.
[00:09:04] Ramit: Your holdings, give me the high level.
[00:09:06] David: If you include the valuation of my company plus a property that I own, about close to $5 million; investments of 1.2 million across 401k to private equity angel investments; savings of about 300,000, and a slight debt from that investment property of 174,000. But it’s offset by my cash in my mortgage loans.
[00:09:32] Ramit: How’d you get all that money?
[00:09:33] David: I started off in corporate, and I remember saving every dime to basically invest into my first property. And then additionally to that, a small amount of trust from my parents which I then invested into stocks, private equity, and different instruments to be a steward of that money.
[00:09:50] Ramit: Got it. Okay. Great. Okay. Thank you very much. That’s very helpful. Victoria, same numbers from your perspective.
[00:09:59] Victoria: I basically have two large income stream, one being a content creator, and then on top of that, I do have a skincare brand. All in together, my yearly salary before tax would be around 350,000. In terms of the liquid cash and investments that I have that I can liquidate immediately would probably be around 700k. And then I guess everything else is tied with my business. So if I were to sell my business tomorrow, I think the valuation would be around $80 million.
[00:10:38] Ramit: Wow, that’s amazing. So here you are both having succeeded growing large businesses, and both being on here shielding your identities. I’m curious about that. Why are we not seeing your full identities today?
[00:10:57] David: I’ve always taught to be humble, not flaunt things, and so for me particularly, owning this story doesn’t need to be done in a, this is me kind of standpoint. I’m still coming to terms with this idea of being well off, even if mentally it doesn’t show up that way. And so I do try to reconcile those two, but struggle a bit.
[00:11:18] Ramit: You are struggling with the idea of being well off, although you do have millions of dollars?
[00:11:25] David: Yeah.
[00:11:27] Ramit: Would you agree that objectively you are financially well off?
[00:11:31] David: Yes and no. We are both immigrants here in the United States, and we’re both on visas. We had to fight our way to get here. I spent every dollar in my bank account to start my company, and it’s been a grind running a bootstrap company with no investors.
[00:11:46] Yes, we’re great now, but I think I’m still living the trauma of just focusing on the salary of what’s incoming right now that I can see and forgetting about all this great investing that I did in the past, feeling like it needs to be tucked away as a nest egg and not used. I think I’m slowly coming to that terms now that my salary is a bit more reasonable. And I think why I’m also here is to learn how to repurpose my full wealth in a way that I feel is healthy and comfortable. And I’m struggling with that a bit.
[00:12:16] Ramit: Just so you know, David, most people get their information and feelings about their financial status literally from their checking account. And that is essentially what you’re telling me. You’re like, “Hey, put aside the $1.5 million that I invested and saved. Oh, that doesn’t count. That’s play money, but it’s my salary that determines how well off I am.”
[00:12:44] Of course, that’s completely wrong, the logical, self-protective, some would say delusional. But the good news is a lot of people do that. And there are ways to help give you a full picture of your finances. Victoria, what about you? Why are we not seeing your full picture today?
[00:13:03] Victoria: I feel conflicted because I think on one side I can show how everyone can be self-made because I didn’t come here just by luck. But on the flip side, I think there’s a certain relevancy that I want to maintain. So I think that’s the part that is holding me back on becoming fully transparent about the situation. The relationship that I built with my audience is so special that I do not want to compromise by introducing to a new certain lifestyle that I suddenly have.
[Narration]
[00:13:38] Ramit: It would be easy to dismiss David and Victoria as rich people who are out of touch. Boohoo. That’s the easy narrative that we follow in America, which I find ironic because American culture loves wealth, but as soon as someone achieves it, they are not allowed to talk about their problems. Notice layers here.
[00:13:58] David has considerable wealth himself, but he says he’s “still coming to terms with being wealthy.” We have the cultural issues of being raised Korean and being from different countries. We have gender issues, and we have the very real issue of Victoria’s immense wealth, most of which is locked up in her company. Listen closely as I ask her about her 80-million-dollar valuation.
[Interview]
[00:14:26] Victoria: It doesn’t feel real. It feels like a virtual number because the company hasn’t been sold. There wasn’t a transaction at all. So it’s just a number that you can only imagine, but it’s not really there, and it could totally flop next year. And I think because of that, I am trying to be as conservative as possible and try to save as much as possible too to future proof myself financially.
[00:14:51] Ramit: Okay. That’s a bit of an odd response for someone who has an 80-million-dollar business. Everyone here is like, “If I had a big business, I would be so happy.” Not once did you use the word proud. You’re just like, “Yeah, it could all go to zero.” My life could be [Bleep] horrible. Anyway I don’t if I’m going to end up in a ditch one day. How long did it take you to grow this business?
[00:15:14] Victoria: Seven years and counting.
[00:15:16] Ramit: What the [Bleep]? That’s amazing. Do y’all talk about the fact that you have achieved this?
[00:15:23] Victoria: Rarely, to be honest. I think for me, I have a tendency to be always thinking about tomorrow. And I don’t take enough time to look back on where we are and what we have achieved. It’s toxic, huh? I should do a better job to acknowledge what it has become, but it is really hard for some reason.
[00:15:46] Ramit: Do you know why?
[00:15:47] Victoria: I really don’t know why.
[00:15:49] Ramit: Did you ever see your parents model gratitude, taking a second, give yourself a pat on the back for how far you’ve come? Did you ever see that growing up?
[00:15:58] Victoria: To be honest, I think we were in a household where we had very little words of affirmation and acknowledgement. So I think that definitely influenced the way that I express things or acknowledge things for myself and for David as well.
[00:16:17] Ramit: Yeah. Is this a Korean thing too?
[00:16:19] Victoria: Generally speaking, just looking at a lot of my Korean friends, they are super hardworking, and they’re very hard on themselves, and I think the mentality of Koreans definitely is like hustle and bustle, just like grind, grind, and grind with there being no looking back, no regret, but just like looking forward and thinking about like, where should we move next.
[00:16:42] Ramit: Yeah. In a way, it’s very constructive. It’s very adaptive. It allows you to succeed. My Korean friends are almost all very hardworking, very successful, technically defined. But you can also see that the cultural parts of that can become a weakness. Like what are we doing this for? Let’s just grind and grind and our kids grind, and then their kids will grind. What’s the point? David, you’re over here nodding too. What do you think?
[00:17:14] David: Yeah. It’s interesting to hear it from her perspective. Both my grandfathers were successful entrepreneurs, but lost their businesses several times. And so I think there’s a trauma in my family where it skipped a generation. My parents saw that, were very, very discouraging of me starting a business.
[00:17:30] I’m still slowly coming to terms with what that means for myself personally. So slightly different, but I can appreciate this feeling of it’s a house of cards. It can topple over. It’s not mine anyway. And so what’s that going to mean for how I live a life that’s intentional, ethical, but is right for myself and for Victoria?
[00:17:51] Ramit: And that is what I want to talk about now. How does money work in your relationship?
[00:17:58] David: We are very independent on our finances. We are pretty much 50-50 split on things like rent, our groceries, whatever you think about. The two things that are joint with us is a joint credit card, and we also have a joint savings account.
[00:18:11] Ramit: It’s a given month. Who is handling money on a day-to-day basis? How often are you talking about it? What do the account setups look like? Walk me through it.
[00:18:20] David: So the joint savings account, we both have $1,500 per month from our salaries that come into that. So $3,000 a month. We have a joint card that Victoria pays off that fee and then Venmo is me, the 50% of what we spend.
[00:18:38] Ramit: How long have you been married for?
[00:18:41] Victoria: Almost two years.
[00:18:43] Ramit: Why are you doing this? This Venmo [Bleep], it’s like–
[00:18:45] Victoria: We have a long of Venmo transaction history.
[00:18:49] Ramit: Okay. All right. So you have a 50-50 split on expenses. You have a joint savings account. Victoria, you are paying off the credit card and then getting Venmo-ed from David. And then what about bigger things, taking a vacation, etc? How does that work?
[00:19:11] Victoria: I tend to pick a destination and then pick a hotel, then pick the logistics of flights or car rentals and go from there. It can be costly because I do have a certain quality or a standard that I would like to stay in terms of Airbnb or a hotel. We have been able to smartly use our cash plus credit card points enough to fund our vacation so it doesn’t break our bank or it doesn’t really make a dent in our savings.
[00:19:43] David: Victoria has many more points generally than I do, and so therefore tends to prioritize comfort over cost. And so even in our London trip that we went to recently, she actually flew business class whilst I flew coach.
[00:19:59] Ramit: What? Hold on. Let’s set the scene. So she’s already seated in business class, and she’s got the big headphones on and a huge scarf, and she’s just sitting there drinking champagne. And then what happens? You walk past her?
[00:20:14] David: I literally walk past her and then wave and then have a bit of a smile and then walk down to coach.
[00:20:21] Ramit: Do you guys think of this? It’s interesting.
[00:20:24] David: Well, I’m actually quite okay with it if I don’t feel like I’m getting a good deal on the flight. I don’t really see the problem in flying coach. Okay.
[00:20:33] Ramit: I’ll never sit here and tell someone you have to spend more on something you don’t care about. I’m curious the way that you both talk about flying and taking vacations. There was an assumption that you have to use points. Why is that?
[00:20:47] Victoria: I don’t feel super comfortable spending over 1,000 or $2,000 a night for four seasons in Hawaii if it is just pure cash. I do feel like I’m missing out if I don’t utilize that system enough to be able to partially fund my vacation.
[00:21:06] David: I think our financial principle is that we both like to find deals. That generally is the case in a lot of our decisions. We tend to want to make sure that our money is used in a way where we feel like we are getting a good deal.
[00:21:19] Ramit: Where do you think that comes from?
[00:21:20] David: It definitely came from my upbringing of my first-generation immigrant family. My mom and dad were not very financially well off until basically I was growing up and instilled that in us. So we’d always see my parents, I guess, try to find the best deal possible. And so for me, I think that still is instilled in the way that I make decisions.
[00:21:41] Victoria: My upbringing also was middle class. My dad was the only breadwinner of the family, and my mom was raising my brother and myself. And we were always short on money, so I didn’t get to have the sneakers that my friends were having in school or the polo t-shirts, and those are the things that I desired, but it was only given if we passed a certain grade.
[00:22:06] And I think money was more of a reward and a compensation. It wasn’t a given for me. So I think naturally just having that instilled in my upbringing, allowed me to cherish money a lot more. And I think that is probably something that I’m still carrying on, where I only get to spend money if I had a really tough year or if I had a really stressful period. Then I can reward myself with a fancy vacation or something else.
[00:22:37] Ramit: Okay. That makes sense to me. Who brings up money in conversation? Either of you?
[00:22:45] Victoria: We don’t really talk about it, huh.
[00:22:46] David: Not really. Yeah.
[00:22:49] Ramit: You ever fight about it?
[00:22:51] David: There’s been times where she’s requested a Venmo from me, maybe it’s a couple of months delayed because we don’t get to our life admin. And then I get shocked by that amount because I’ve optimized my accounts and then suddenly I have to pay $1,000 in a month. And I’m like, “Crap, I don’t have that in my checking account.” Or, “I need to adjust things.”
[00:23:10] And so that ended up happening about a year ago where I started to get really annoyed by that. And then she’s like, “Why are you getting annoyed about it? Why?” And then I had to just grapple with this delusion that I had, that my checkings account is my only area that I can spend on.
[00:23:31] Ramit: Okay. All right. That’s pretty honest. Victoria, what do you say? Do you remember these conversations?
[00:23:36] Victoria: Oh, totally. I even remember where and when it happened.
[Narration]
[00:23:40] Ramit: Let’s first notice the commonalities between David and Victoria and so many other couples. They split expenses 50-50, even though Victoria makes a lot more money. In other words, their money dynamic is not carefully based on the most fair setup, but likely whatever they used to do years ago, which leads to them transferring money back and forth as a married couple.
[00:24:05] They don’t talk about money a lot, like most couples, and they make financial decisions based on the way they were raised like most of us do, including me. But I also notice that they’re wealthy, and yet they still operate as if they are not. And you can see this bleeding into hilarious and frankly, weird dynamics like Victoria sitting in business class while David trudges past her to economy.
[00:24:31] When we come back, Victoria’s going to tell us about their Venmo fight.
[00:24:36] Welcome back. Let’s keep going with this special episode sponsored by our partners at DeleteMe to help keep our high net worth guests private.
[Interview]
[00:24:45] Victoria: David doesn’t really check his Venmo account that often, which is why he is getting shocked by accumulated amount of requests of three months of the joint credit card bills that I charge him every single month. And we were in Mexico City for our friend’s wedding, and casually, David would check in his Venmo for some reason, and his face would just start to get really upset.
[00:25:13] And then he asked of what the credit card line items were. And I started basically posting all the Amex bills so that he has full visibility, and he would sometimes question, “Oh, what was this for? And what was that for?” And I felt a little bit of offended by how he started questioning all of the transactions. And he then goes, “When you go to Target or Trader Joe’s are you putting your meal plan on our joint saving or joint credit card?”
[00:25:47] And we had to basically come to an assumption that we should only be putting the credit card to the grocery purchase that benefits both of us. And I think the other day when David shop from Trader Joe’s, he buys me a bouquet of flowers and then he says, “Oh, by the way, I used my own credit card on those.”
[00:26:13] Ramit: Hold on. This is the most romantic moment on this show I’ve ever heard. Not the place, it’s not even about the flowers. He doesn’t go, “Smell this beautiful bouquet. It reminds me of when we met in Rome.” No. He goes, “Babe, I just want to let you know, I put that on the 6486 card. That’s my personal card. Got it?” Wow. Let the romance flow, everybody. Money for Couples. David, everything accurate in what Victoria said?
[00:26:41] David: It’s accurate, and one thing I think I want to get better on is that we were operating on assumptions. We’re culturally from different countries, and one of the things that we always try to do is figure out how to communicate. I’m a very words person. Victoria would answer questions, but she’s not a very verbal person.
[00:27:00] One thing I love about Victoria is that she has no problem sending me Venmo transactions. Just saying it as it is, she’s very honest, very direct. I grew up in a culture that’s a bit more indirect and maybe sometimes doesn’t get to the point. And the second thing is, I think by talking, whereas Victoria needs time to process and then get to her conclusions, then have a response.
[00:27:23] And so when it came to things like talking about money, I first of all didn’t feel comfortable bringing it up with her. Now we know that I can just bring it up and it’s fine. She may not have the answer now, but I just need to be able to get that response from her once she’s been able to process it.
[00:27:40] Ramit: I hear a couple of things. First off, I hear some conversations that my wife and I have had, and I want to acknowledge them because if you have a high-income couple, especially a couple where there’s a disparity in incomes or net worth, you’re going to have assumptions. I personally like to stay at nicer hotels than my wife does. It’s not really her thing.
[00:28:09] For me, I love it. I want it, and I’m willing to spend on it. So I can hear that there are some conversations and agreements that the two of you need to have. And it sounds like you’ve started with things like where you sit on the plane and hotels and things like that. But the second thing that I hear is, being on a beautiful trip in Mexico City for friend’s wedding and letting a small dollar amount intrude over the beauty and experience of that trip.
[00:28:43] We are literally talking about a rounding error. We talking about you making that much money in interest in a week. This should not even be a conversation. And so what I hear there is letting your past stories actually intrude and detract from what would otherwise be a connective experience.
[00:29:08] And that’s what I want to change for you. You two are too successful to be allowing money to be intruding on what should be something bringing you together. How does that sound to you?
[00:29:22] David: Yeah, absolutely. It’s legitimately why I am here. I think after that moment I just came to this realization that what was I annoyed about? And my mindset is just stuck in the past, maybe stuck at that point where I was struggling, looking at my checkings account, and not actually looking at the holistic picture.
[00:29:42] Ramit: Right. And Victoria, what about you, the fact that you felt put on the defense being asked questions?
[00:29:48] Victoria: I definitely didn’t feel good because I think compounding to that, I am normally the planner of most vacations. So it’s not just about the money, but perhaps me doing and spending more time on planning the entire vacation together for us to enjoy, only to be questioned. That definitely puts me in a spot to just be pissed about it, to be honest.
[00:30:12] Ramit: What I hear is a combination of psychology and systems. The psychology part is, we need to save on everything. We need to only use our points. Spending less is better than spending more. Just these deep things that run through. But then I also hear systems, such as why is this couple Venmoing back and forth? That’s a systems issue.
[00:30:38] Why does this couple have one partner planning everything and then getting questioned? That’s a systems and agreements issue. David, you mentioned that you have something like $1,000 in your checking account, and it actually causes you a ton of problems.
[00:30:55] You should probably have 20, $30,000 sitting in your checking account. And if you calculate the math on how much you’re gaining by putting it in a high yield savings, it’s nothing for you. But it causes you all things that could be eliminated with a systems change. Okay?
[00:31:10] David: Yeah.
[00:31:10] Ramit: All right. Victoria, any comments on what I just said to David?
[00:31:14] Victoria: Yeah, I think that’s definitely one of the root cause of where all these emotions are stemming from.
[00:31:19] Ramit: Yes. It shows up. It’s like the fingerprints are the loudest in the checking account. And for wealthy people, and David, you are wealthy, it actually tells the story. Scarcity, over-optimization, would rather deal with recurring financial freakouts than something smooth and calm, and most importantly of all, connective with your wife. So we’ll fix the mechanics, but actually what I really want for the two of you is for you to start seeing your money together.
[00:31:51] Okay. I want to ask a couple of more questions about spending. We talked about travel. What about lifestyle stuff? Is there any spending disagreements on those kind of expenses?
[00:32:03] David: There used to be a spending disagreement because I love to clean. I actually do love to clean. It’s my meditative exercise. And I think I used to get annoyed that Victoria didn’t want to clean. But we were able to resolve that by her saying, “I want to contribute. I would rather a cleaner come in and deep clean.”
[00:32:20] Initially, I was against it, but then I saw what that deep clean can do. And especially as a time constrained founder was appreciative of that, and it’s being put in our joint account. But the flip side of it was that she talked about my inability to plan. I don’t actually enjoy planning. She enjoys the process.
[00:32:41] And so actually the solution was to use my executive assistant, who then actually helped plan a lot of other things, including trips that actually helped to solve that problem around the planning side. So we’ve had ways that we can work around these disagreements.
[00:32:59] Ramit: That’s healthy. That’s what money’s for. All right. Okay. What do they say? If you have a problem that money can solve, you don’t really have a problem. That’s great. All right. Victoria, what about for you? Whoa, whoa. Hold on. What was that reaction? Victoria?
[00:33:12] Victoria: I just had a very similar lesson from my dad who said the exact same words. That’s in my early 30s or late 20s when I was just going through a co-founder breakup of my business. Just causing a lot of emotional and mental struggles, difficulties. There was one thing my dad told me, that he was saying that if money can solve a problem, it is not a problem.
[00:33:41] Ramit: Whoa.
[00:33:42] Victoria: So I certainly believe that there is something to that quote that I’ve been carrying through with my business since then.
[00:33:51] Ramit: I love that.
[00:33:52] Victoria: I I think that’s why I feel like the net worth, the valuation of the company, or even the cash balance that the business has is all volatile. There could be a legal suit. There could be business partnership ending that requires you to buy someone out at a large sum of cash.
[Narration]
[00:34:12] Ramit: When I hear scarcity, there’s usually a reason. The most common reason is people grew up with parents who were scarce with money. Victoria’s founder breakup is an extra reason beyond that upbringing. It’s one of those pivotal moments that can affect our relationship with money forever.
[00:34:30] On page 25 of my new book, Money for Couples, I talk about these pivotal money moments that affect your relationship with money forever. If you go through the list, I will bet you will learn about why you treat money the way you do. You can get a copy of my new book at iwt.com/moneyforcouples.
[00:34:54] Now, back to the show.
[Interview]
[00:34:55] Ramit: Can we talk about an area of your life where you’re having a financial challenge right now, where money might be able to solve it?
[00:35:03] Victoria: I don’t have an assistant. David does have an assistant. I’m someone who is really creative, very spontaneous. But since I started my business and since my time has become this most expensive currency out of my entire life, I started trying to maximize all of my time, including my vacation. So when I am going to Mexico City, I need to see A, B, C, D. I need to do all these stuff. I need to go eat at all these beautiful restaurants.
[00:35:33] So I think that FOMO mindset or trying to maximize and trying to get the most ROI possible out of my time had made me become a planner, and I don’t actually really, really enjoy that process. And this of realized when David actually planned the most recent trip to Acadia National Park from start to end. I don’t know if he had the assistant’s help or not.
[00:36:04] But he planned it perfectly, and I just got to enjoy the entire experience just on a passenger seat. And it was the most amazing thing ever. And so maybe perhaps delegating that process to an assistant would allow me to free up my mental space to focus on more creative work, more content work. I think that would be awesome.
[00:36:30] Ramit: I love that. It sounds like you have identified the problem, sounds like you’ve tasted success, and it sounds like you could make it happen. There’s nothing holding you back, right? Is there anything?
[00:36:42] Victoria: The only reason why I don’t keep an assistant is the added responsibility of taking care of another team member when it comes to the work process of a content creation and a creative flow of how I work. I tend to be the most comfortable when I’m alone, without any distractions, and sometimes when I had assistants in the past, I had to work for my assistants, meaning I felt like I need to create work for the assistant.
[00:37:10] Ramit: How much did you pay your assistant in the past?
[00:37:12] Victoria: $20 an hour.
[00:37:14] Ramit: That’s your answer. You need to be having an assistant that makes 100 to 200 a year, full-time, benefits, all of it. These are executive assistants, and they don’t bug you. They’re running your life, personal and professional if you want. What I can tell you right there, that is such an interesting example because you’re right there. You know that you need an assistant. You feel what it’s like to be taken care of.
[00:37:46] Victoria: Yeah.
[00:37:47] Ramit: And it’s that one subtle thing which has led to your poor experience in the past, and that is just not paying enough.
[00:37:54] Victoria: Okay.
[00:37:54] Ramit: Value. Always trying to get value. Sometimes, as you know, you could get a better value at a hotel from a Marriott. That’s a better value. And you’re like, “I don’t want value. I want the best.” You can apply the same thing to the important things in your life, your relationship, your time, your health. Sometimes it’s the best money you can spend.
[00:38:16] Victoria: Yeah, yeah.
[Narration]
[00:38:17] Ramit: Okay, listen, I get so many people who follow my material, save and invest, they accumulate some money, and they finally go, Ramit, I’m ready to live my Rich Life. So they try a nice hotel for the first time, or they hire somebody to clean their house, or they hire a stylist or a tour guide, and it’s a total letdown. The cleaning person doesn’t fold their clothes the way they want.
[00:38:39] The hotel’s nicer, but it’s not worth three times the price. And they go, “What? That’s it. All that money, and this is all I get?” Guess what? The first time you try something new, it might not be what you expected. You might have chosen poorly. You might not even know what to look for. This is why I wish when I was in my 20s, I had someone to show me around and teach me how to appreciate a nice restaurant, or show me how to think about traveling in a different way.
[00:39:09] Because spending money meaningfully is a skill. If you try something new and you don’t love it, my simple recommendation is you give it one more shot. Maybe the waiter wasn’t great that night. Maybe you hired someone you didn’t get along with. But don’t give up. Spending money meaningfully is a skill. Now I need a quick favor from you. If you’re enjoying this show, please hit that Subscribe button. It helps my team and me grow this channel.
[Interview]
[00:39:37] Ramit: Let me ask a couple of rapid-fire questions just so I understand your full financial picture. You have about $800,000 in joint savings. What’s that for?
[00:39:47] Victoria: To buy our first house together.
[00:39:50] Ramit: Does 800k represent a 20% down payment or more, or is it just, let’s get as much as we can in that account?
[00:39:58] Victoria: The price range that we’re looking at for our first home is around 1.3 to 5, so I would say more than half.
[00:40:06] Ramit: Okay, great. You have 50-50 split on expenses, but income is not the same. In fact, I think Victoria, you make a lot more, right?
[00:40:23] Victoria: Yeah.
[00:40:23] Ramit: Almost three times more.
[00:40:24] Victoria: Is it three times more?
[00:40:25] Ramit: Yeah.
[00:40:26] Victoria: Yeah, yeah.
[00:40:27] Ramit: How is it that you make almost three times what he makes, Victoria, but the expenses are split 50-50?
[00:40:32] Victoria: What is the other way around? Is it just contributing proportionately to our income size?
[00:40:38] Ramit: Proportionally could work. Or what’s more common is couples combine everything and then they take a certain amount for individual no-questions-asked money for themselves. You look very happy hearing this, Victoria. What’s going on right now?
[00:40:55] Victoria: I just never have thought about it, I guess, in that way. I think it definitely would relieve a lot of the menial conflicts between the Venmo transactions and all of those very, very little things and very minor things.
[00:41:12] Ramit: Yeah. No more Venmo transactions. That would be my new 12-month philosophy.
[00:41:19] Victoria: I’ve got to unfriend David.
[00:41:24] Ramit: Truthfully, one of the things that I want to help you do is to think bigger. So we have to elevate. We have to elevate in two areas. One, we have to master our money psychology. Two, we have to know our numbers and make sure that our accounts and systems follow it. Okay?
[00:41:42] Victoria: Mm-hmm.
[00:41:43] Ramit: A couple of more questions I have for you. Do you have a prenup?
[00:41:46] Victoria: We do not.
[00:41:47] Ramit: Okay. Was that a discussion topic?
[00:41:49] Victoria: I actually have brought it up, just knowing that we individually have our own businesses, and David coming in with some of his trust fund and family money, I thought it would be just easier for us to make an agreement to split things in our own terms, not by how the state determines. So that’s a topic that I brought up but never came to a fruition.
[00:42:14] Ramit: Oh. How come?
[00:42:16] David: It’s not that we didn’t want to do it, but it was very hard to find someone or a couple that had done it and what it took. Well, when we did talk about couples where it did happen, we heard more horror stories and nightmare stories of lawyers getting involved and the process being elongated.
[00:42:35] And we know that there’s online platforms, so on one hand, we would be totally open to a postnup, which I hear is a bit more airtight. It just hasn’t come up, I guess, as we’re still pretty nascent in our financial communication journey together.
[00:42:49] Ramit: Okay. I did it. My wife and I went through the process. Actually, it was pretty hard, I’ll tell you that. It was pretty hard. It was challenging and the lawyers get involved and all that stuff. But with the premarital assets you’ve both brought and the fact that there’s businesses involved, which has inherent complexity, I think a postnup would be something really smart. You have the means to be able to get lawyers, get your own lawyer. And this is a very typical common thing. So yeah, I actually would encourage it because it just gives you a clear set of rules. Right now, you’re not even talking about money at all, much less even talking about rules.
[00:43:33] Victoria: Yeah, yeah.
[00:43:34] Ramit: So with this amount of nebulous numbers, and there’s this business that might sell, who knows, we need to put some rules around it. It just feels so much better.
[Narration]
[00:43:43] Ramit: It’s interesting that Victoria did not know there was any other way to combine incomes without splitting it 50-50. And they also haven’t gotten around to signing a prenup. Her business makes $20 million a year, and David is a millionaire too. What do you take away from this?
[00:44:03] I notice that just because you know how to make money does not necessarily mean you know how to manage it or spend it. Those are three separate skills, making money, managing money, and spending money. I also noticed that nobody who makes this kind of money should use lack of time as a reason to not get around to something. You can literally buy back your time. I’m going to show them how, but first I have to help them get more connected over money.
[Interview]
[00:44:31] Ramit: The theme of your relationship that I see from a financial perspective is separate.
[00:44:37] Victoria: Yeah.
[00:44:38] David: Yeah, that’s fair.
[00:44:38] Ramit: She goes on different airline seats than he does. She plan. He’s the passenger. She sets up the spending plan. He questions it. She feels resentful. He, she, she, he. The only time that I hear us as it relates to money is– can you guess?
[00:45:02] David: Our joint savings account.
[00:45:04] Ramit: That’s correct. One joint savings account with a large amount of cash for a house, which is a great goal, at some point in the future with a very wide range. That’s it. But I hear inklings of what could be.
[00:45:23] Victoria: I’m totally with you on that assessment. We feel like we’re just roommates sharing joint expenses on groceries and utilities.
[00:45:34] Ramit: Beautiful. Can I ask? If you made no changes today and you continue the separate paths that you’re on, what would happen?
[00:45:43] David: I think our spend will be limited to whoever at that season of life is earning the least and maybe focused on just what we’re bringing in at that point in time.
[00:45:54] Ramit: Okay. That’s an interesting insight. So you would be playing to the lowest common denominator?
[00:45:59] Victoria: You’re checking account balance.
[00:46:01] David: Yeah, exactly. So that could definitely change if we changed our perspective.
[00:46:07] Ramit: What else would happen if you continued living separate financial paths? Victoria?
[00:46:12] Victoria: I think we would have a lot of assumptions and resentments when it comes to bigger purchases, like home. David could feel like I can contribute more because I am earning more. Or if you look at the amount of investment that David has, he definitely has more investment, so I could resent David by not putting in more proportionately. So I think it would definitely continue to snowball unspoken conflict and just assumptions and resentment within us.
[00:46:48] Ramit: I agree. Anything else? Fast forward. Think about 10 years, 20 years, 30 years from now and what would be happening on a day-to-day basis.
[00:46:57] David: Worrying over the small things that actually become even smaller, but we’ve just kept that habit.
[00:47:02] Ramit: Yeah. And what’s the implication? What would happen in your relationship?
[00:47:06] David: I don’t know if it would really grow. That’s something that’s just on my mind. It may stay stagnant because both of us are achievers, and we want to unlock our gifts to their fullest attention for the greatest good. And I think this would actually hold us back.
[00:47:19] Ramit: Mm-hmm. Okay. All right. Can we take a look at the CSP? This is easily the most fascinating CSP I’ve ever seen. Victoria, why don’t you go ahead and read off the word in bold and the number in full next to it, please?
[00:47:41] Victoria: Net worth, assets, 84 million– I don’t know how to even read this. 84, 830,000.
[00:47:54] Ramit: Take as long as you need. We have to hear this full number.
[00:47:57] Victoria: 84,830,000.
[00:48:01] Ramit: Absolutely amazing. You should be incredibly proud of yourself, and I know that you are anonymous here for everyone to see, but I see you, and I see what you’ve accomplished with this business, and I am in awe. Well done.
[00:48:16] Victoria: Thank you.
[00:48:17] Ramit: Let’s continue on. Go ahead, Victoria. Investments?
[00:48:22] Victoria: 1 million 400.
[00:48:25] Ramit: 1.4 million. That’s good. Savings?
[00:48:28] Victoria: 809k.
[00:48:30] Ramit: Okay. And debt?
[00:48:32] Victoria: 174k.
[00:48:35] Ramit: All right. What’s the total net worth?
[00:48:37] Victoria: 87,216,874.
[00:48:47] Ramit: What’s it like to see these numbers, Victoria?
[00:48:51] Victoria: It didn’t feel real because it’s not tangible, to be honest. I think it still feels like it’s not mine.
[00:49:00] Ramit: It’s quite an interesting dynamic that the two of you have. In many ways, you’re at the absolute cutting-edge of being financially sophisticated, both of you. However, you can see that you have a very strong weakness on the money psychology side. What a tragedy if you end up being worth tens of millions of dollars and you’re not able to go to a nice hotel, and you’re arguing over a tostada. It just doesn’t make any sense.
[Narration]
[00:49:30] Ramit: Okay, is her business worth $80 million? I don’t know. How much is your house worth? You could look it up on Zillow. You have a general idea, but you never really know until you try to put it on the market. What we see here is actually a very similar analogy with Victoria, who has this immense wealth on paper, and a lot of Americans who have the majority of their net worth in an illiquid asset, which is a house.
[00:49:58] So this is actually somewhat similar. We can all relate to it. It’s just that she has a lot more zeros at the end. So is her business worth 80 million? That would be a 4X multiple on her revenue of 20 million. 20 million times four. I asked her, and she confirmed that’s what her VP of Finance told her. Maybe it is, maybe not. But whether it’s 20 million, 40 million, or 80 million, it’s still a very successful business.
[00:50:22] More on their CSP in a second. Right now, let’s take a quick pause to support our sponsors.
[00:50:27] Now back to the conversation.
[Interview]
[00:50:29] Ramit: Let’s continue moving along on this CSP. David, read off the combined monthly income here.
[00:50:36] David: $35,443.
[00:50:39] Ramit: Great. So that’s $425,000 a year that the two of you are bringing in. And did you both know that number?
[00:50:47] Victoria: No.
[00:50:48] David: Yes.
[00:50:49] Ramit: Okay. 50%. Love it. Love it. I love statistics. Okay, cool. Your salaries. I’m really curious about this. So David, you make $9,443 a month. Victoria, you make $26,000 per month. Okay. How did you choose your salaries?
[00:51:12] Victoria: I went with the market rate, and for me, that was around 250 from my business.
[00:51:23] Ramit: And you’ve upped it a bit. You pay yourself about 312 or so now, right?
[00:51:28] Victoria: That’s mixed with my YouTube income.
[00:51:32] Ramit: Oh. Oh, so from your business, your salary is 250?
[00:51:37] Victoria: Yeah.
[00:51:38] Ramit: Got it. Okay. And what about for you, David?
[00:51:40] David: Two things. One, the relative revenue that we generate as a business because we still need to stay profitable. I’m by no means at the 20 million mark. The second thing is what I felt was fair. However, I also need to compensate myself, so I’m trying to move to that as we get hopefully more profitable in our top line.
[00:52:01] Ramit: Those are both very good answers. You have your rationale for it. I will say, I’m a little surprised, Victoria, at your salary only being 250k because you’re based in expensive market. 20 million, I think you own the entire business. Correct?
[00:52:16] Victoria: Correct.
[00:52:17] Ramit: Seems a bit low, right?
[00:52:19] Victoria: Does it?
[00:52:19] Ramit: People at that level should be making, ballpark, depending on how you benchmark, 500. Maybe more if you wanted to. It makes no difference. It’s your business. What do you think about that?
[00:52:32] Victoria: Yeah. But for me to take that as a founder, it does feel like I’m taking advantage of my own company for some reason. So yeah, I never felt comfortable because I know there are a lot of other founder friends who take way, way, way less.
[00:52:48] Ramit: Do you have any founder friends who take more?
[00:52:50] Victoria: No, not in my immediate network.
[00:52:53] Ramit: What does that tell you?
[00:52:55] Victoria: That I need more founder friends who are way bigger than my business.
[00:52:59] Ramit: The lesson I would take away is you diverse founder friends. Because founders are very good at being martyrs. They martyr themselves into running a business for 10 years and then they end up with nothing.
[00:53:13] Victoria: Yeah, yeah.
[00:53:14] Ramit: And being an effective founder, as a founder and the face of the business, I will tell you that psychologically I had to get comfortable with the idea that a lot of this business depends on me. Like you business depends on you. Of course, I have an amazing, very talented team, but this business means I have to be happy. I have to be energized. And if I’m not, everybody’s out of a job.
[00:53:43] So that means maybe I’m going to find a way to feel really good about traveling to beautiful places that inspire me. Maybe I’m going to feel really good about having an assistant who’s absolutely top-notch and runs my life, and paying. In your case, I would see no problem with you increasing your salary. You’re the face and the founder of the business.
[00:54:05] Victoria: Yeah, that is true.
[00:54:08] Ramit: None of these decisions are about the individual money. You have plenty of money. But the psychology of getting there is actually what makes you more effective with money. Right now it’s playing small in lots of ways. It’s like, oh, well, my friends take less than me. And I’m like, “Why are you comparing yourself to your martyr, entrepreneur friends?” I don’t want that. I’d rather you compare yourself to your friends who have a sweet business and an awesome lifestyle.
[00:54:36] Victoria: Yeah, yeah.
[00:54:36] Ramit: Talk to me about them. Let’s just quickly go through these numbers. So the fixed cost number is 32%. Now, I want to point something out. It’s one of the lowest numbers I’ve ever seen. That means you’re living very conservatively. Investments are at 7%. Fine. And I’m sure you’re doing some pre-tax stuff, right? 401Ks, etc.
[00:55:01] David: Yeah.
[00:55:01] Victoria: I’m not.
[00:55:02] David: I am.
[00:55:03] Ramit: Why not?
[00:55:04] Victoria: We’re both on a work visa in US. We don’t know if we’re going to retire in the US, so I am not really sure if I should be putting money into–
[00:55:15] Ramit: Okay. That’s a pretty good answer.
[00:55:17] Victoria: Retirement plan. Yeah.
[00:55:18] Ramit: Savings are at 30%. So that’s a lot. That’s going towards a house, vacations, an emergency fund. I don’t know that you guys need to save more for an emergency fund considering you have $809,000 in savings. But who knows? Maybe you like to be conservative.
[00:55:41] And then finally, the biggest lie of all on this CSP is that you spend $6,900 a month on guilt free spending. We all know that’s not true. No way. Come on. Let me guess. You spend 2 to 3k a month. You have extra money, which ends up just getting saved at the end of every quarter or a year. How did I know?
[00:56:03] Victoria: Accurate.
[00:56:05] Ramit: Yeah. Wow. I wish I had a better skill. You know those people who look totally unathletic and then they go and hustle people at a gym or something like that and they can make a lot of money?
[00:56:14] David: Yes.
[00:56:14] Ramit: My only skill is being able to guess what’s actually -going on with your finances down to the freaking dollar. But what am I supposed to do with that skill? I can’t go to a bar and hustle people. I freaking wish. Okay. First of all, what do y’all think of this CSP just looking at the numbers?
[00:56:31] Victoria: That’s very little of us spending compared to our gross income monthly.
[00:56:36] Ramit: Yeah. Agreed. What else?
[00:56:39] David: And it seems to be split pretty close as 50-50 for the cost, which by design– yeah.
[00:56:45] Ramit: So your burden for your fixed costs, David, is 47%. That’s still really low, still. But Victoria’s is 25%. Now I want to point out the fact that if you wanted to, you could keep this up. Both of you are still way underspending. I do think sometimes, especially in a marriage, there’s something more important than the precision of getting dollar to lineup. And that is connection. Because in a relationship, if we are connected, then the dollars are details. But if we are always starting with the dollars themselves, then we will struggle to build that connection.
[00:57:38] Victoria: Hmm.
[00:57:40] Ramit: Put the numbers aside. What would it look like and feel like if the two of you were connected with money?
[00:57:51] Victoria: For me, I think it’ll alleviate a lot of stress of caring about menial things and trusting with each other that we are here to spend money on the Rich Life that we designed together. So I think having that innate trust as a foundation does make me feel connected to David a lot.
[00:58:18] Ramit: I love that. That feeling of, I have a teammate. I know that he’s always right here by my side. If something happens, I know he’s right there, and I know that we’re propelling each other together. And what about for you, David? What would it look and feel like if you were connected with money?
[00:58:37] David: Yeah, I agree with what Victoria said. The reason why it’s 50-50 split is that I’ve never wanted to take advantage of my wife’s success. I think what she does is so wonderful, and in fact her success drives my success. However, I would feel uncomfortable initially knowing that she would be proportionately spending more or contributing more, just from a psychology standpoint.
[00:59:02] I love my wife so much that I never want to feel like I’m taking advantage of the success that I think she earns, and she deserves it. But I think then in the longer-term, if we actually come to a healthier relationship with money, I would actually feel much more rich, to be honest, if I just took away the numbers and didn’t think about it.
[00:59:25] And for us to just have a joint account of which we’re thriving together, I feel would feel much more free, much more happy in order just to enjoy the things that we collectively want to do and not get so hung up about the specific numbers.
[00:59:40] Ramit: What do y’all think? You both shared a beautiful vision. You want to talk about how each of those visions made you feel?
[00:59:47] Victoria: The first point that you pointed out was very interesting because I have never thought about it that way. I also subconsciously had a mindset where the male in the household needs to provide. Therefore, I think for me, I was okay living this 50-50 split for the longest time just knowing that I deserve to be cared for by my husband. Although our income is not at a place where it is just or fair to split 50-50.
[01:00:24] So I think hearing that from you definitely made me feel like you shouldn’t be worried about that. And I think out of this conversation, hopefully we can a more abundant relationship together financially and just spend on things knowing that we trust each other.
[01:00:46] David: I can learn how to have a growth mindset in that psychology to allow for that to happen as long as you feel comfortable with it as well.
[01:00:56] Victoria: Yeah, 100%.
[01:00:59] Ramit: It’s pretty beautiful to hear. You know what I really loved hearing the two of you? Was seeing this shift from transactional to connective. That is such a deep transition. Because consider that right now when you’re in the transactional phase, it is built so that you question each other. However, when you move to connective, it’s totally different.
[01:01:28] The idea is, I love you. I trust you. And by default, I know that you are going to do the right thing. It infuses its way into every decision you make about money. Let’s go back now to the CSP. If we took this ability to go from transactional to connectedness, what would change in the CSP?
[01:01:57] David: The fixed costs can change by proportion of salary. Perhaps that can increase what we end up spending together, and maybe rather than just a single joint savings account, we can actually have more joint vacation, joint other things that can insert into our ability to spend.
[01:02:15] Ramit: Yes, 100%. Yes. Let’s go through each because this is where you actually get to design your Rich Life. First of all, do you know what your Rich Life is? I know you want a house. What else?
[01:02:27] Victoria: That house is going to be renovated by an award-winning architect.
[01:02:33] Ramit: Nice. I love it. Okay, great. Keep going.
[01:02:37] David: I would fly business class with my wife and enjoy that and experience it.
[01:02:43] Ramit: Whoa. Okay. Love it.
[01:02:45] Victoria: And then because we are immigrants her, I think that allows us to be also open to an idea of having one house in each continent. So one in UK, Europe, one here in New York, and one in Korea, and one in Australia. I think that would be amazing.
[01:03:05] Ramit: It’s powerful. I love that. Okay. Give me something more day to day.
[01:03:11] David: Why don’t we sign up for a more expensive gym membership that allows us access to a pool or a personal trainer?
[01:03:19] Ramit: I love that by the way. I like that it’s individual. And maybe Victoria joins along or maybe not. That’s up to you. But I like that you’re picking something individual, David. Is there something together? Rich Life on a weekly basis.
[01:03:31] Victoria: Having a meal prep service that’s made by nutritionists that knows our body. I think outsourcing that would definitely save hours and hours weekly for us.
[01:03:44] Ramit: Love that. Anything else?
[01:03:47] Victoria: We love hosting people at our house, and one idea that came to my mind recently was bringing in a private chef to really wine and dine our community and our friends to really nurture and develop that relationship and deepen it.
[01:04:04] Ramit: First of all, very telling that your idea for a Rich Life is bringing people together. I think that’s awesome. I think what I’m seeing both of you do is to break the shackles that you have put upon yourselves. And they’re not real. They’re not real. If I want to have friends over for dinner once a month, we could do that.
[01:04:26] Victoria: I think there’s definitely a scarcity mindset and some extension of frugality that was taught and that was instilled in our upbringings both together. So I think that’s definitely pulling us back.
[01:04:41] Ramit: If you are not frugal, then who are you?
[01:04:47] Victoria: I think she would’ve already bought a house, designed a house, and orders Whole Foods online without questioning. And brings in Marie Kondo cleaning consultant to organize her closet and have a cleaner come in every single week instead of once a month.
[01:05:09] Ramit: Keep going.
[01:05:09] Victoria: And have a nutritionist to build out her entire meal plan to nourish our body and have a personal trainer to optimize her fitness and physical health. And have an awesome executive assistant who takes care of most of the admin things in life, makes her life so much easier.
[01:05:32] Ramit: I love this. This is so good. And what about with David?
[01:05:37] Victoria: With David, I imagine our day-to-day to be more free from actually work because we were able to spend money to delegate a lot of our responsibilities that we don’t enjoy taking on. And we would be only spending time on things that matter the most with our own businesses and with us.
[01:05:58] Ramit: How’d you feel saying all that?
[01:06:00] Victoria: It was very ecstatic in some ways to be able to just describe the Victoria who was living that Rich Life already. And I want to be her, and I want to have that life with David together.
[01:06:16] Ramit: I think you’re this close. I think you are her. You just can make a few changes and the rest of that stuff can come into your life. David, what did you think hearing Victoria paint that picture?
[01:06:31] David: I could see a weight falling off her shoulders, just allowing her to openly speak about what she wants. Again, these aren’t surprises. She’s mentioned these here and there, but there has been things that have held her back. And I think part of that might be myself, in the way that I want to be 50-50.
[01:06:50] And so if I change my psychology to that connectedness, not transactions, and see our collective income together, I think that will be great to experience that together. Psychologically, we’ve always had this fear of living beyond our means. And you’ve clearly shown that our means are much larger than what we’re living. That’s what I wanted to know, was that it’s okay to do this and we’re not going to suddenly become indebted.
[01:07:19] And especially as immigrants here, there’s always that fear having seen our parents almost lose it all that I think it traumatically just is instilled in us that there’s always this fear that tomorrow may not come or less so, tomorrow may not have what we have today.
[01:07:36] Ramit: I think it’s really beautiful to watch the two of you talk about your joint Rich Life together. We started separate, and now we’re talking together. And part of building something bigger together is actually starting with yourself. The two of you have worked really hard, and there is no virtue in living a smaller life than you have to. Can I share a story?
[01:08:04] Victoria: Yeah, please.
[01:08:06] Ramit: My wife and I went on a long honeymoon, and on the last day of our honeymoon, we were in Thailand. We had this beautiful resort, watching the sunset. And my wife said, “At the end of a trip like this, I would usually be sad. But now I know if we want to come back, we can just come back.” And I felt so good because she was so abundant
[01:08:32] What I learned as an entrepreneur was, when I surround myself with beauty, I get inspired. When I stay at beautiful places, they tend to be expensive. I see all these other people staying there for weeks, sometimes months at a time, and it forces me to remember there are a lot of people out there who are happy to pay for great products and services.
[01:08:54] I come back, I’m not trying to discount. I’m trying to create amazing value, and my students or customers are happy to pay. Am I just justifying staying at a nice hotel? Maybe. But I’m also taking lessons from my personal experience, and I’m channeling that as an entrepreneur. How does that strike you?
[01:09:17] Victoria: That is the missing piece in my life. Thinking about treating yourself is not spoiling yourself, or it’s not discounting the value of the company. In fact, it could add more value to the company because you’re in a–
[01:09:32] Ramit: Wait a minute. Don’t you run a skincare business?
[01:09:35] Victoria: Yeah.
[01:09:36] Ramit: Isn’t the whole point treat yourself well?
[01:09:38] Victoria: Wellness.
[01:09:40] Ramit: What am I doing right now?
[01:09:42] Victoria: I know. Wellness does not exist in my life.
[01:09:45] Ramit: This is so funny because you hear all these like athletes who have the perfect nutritionist and they track their macros and stuff and then sometimes there’s a story about the absolute top athlete, LeBron or whoever just eats hamburgers all day. And you’re just like, “What? This isn’t fair at all.” Is that not what we’re seeing right here? You’re all about wellness except for yourself.
[01:10:06] Victoria: Yes.
[01:10:07] Ramit: Oh, okay. Amazing.
[01:10:10] Victoria: It’s my Korean DNA to torture myself.
[01:10:14] Ramit: Actually, as an entrepreneur, you have beautiful way to justify it, which is you can enjoy life. You will see your business do better because you’re going to show up rejuvenated, energized, positive. And eventually you’ll start to see those connections. I know I did. There are a few things I would do to just tidy all this stuff up real quick. Can I share?
[01:10:38] Victoria: Please.
[01:10:39] David: Yes.
[01:10:40] Ramit: If I had an 84-million-dollar business, I would be taking some cash off the top. Solve my financial problem forever. You don’t want an entrepreneur to be sitting around worried about their first house when they run an 80-million-dollar business. It just makes no sense. Wow. Look at the body language right now, Victoria, what’s going on?
[01:10:57] Victoria: I think there is definitely a financial struggle related to the first home purchase or the certain design that I want to pursue. And also, I have never taken any distribution out of my company. And only started taking salary in the past four years. And all the salaries that I get, I actually pay in taxes, so I’m not really left with a lot of things. Right now, I do worry about my first home purchase a lot, but I think I shouldn’t be, and the business that I built should solve this problem for me, so then I can run the business.
[01:11:39] Ramit: Honestly, the way you talk about your house, you told me you have this architect in mind, this sounds like something that would be a major point of pride for you. And if that is the case, then I can think of no better way to leverage the success you have created, pay yourself an amount that would solve this problem forever. My guess is it would have no material impact on your business. And if it’s going to make you really happy, then you should do it.
[01:12:07] Next, I would get clear together, both of you, what is our Rich Life? There are some questions that I think the two of you probably have not gotten clarity on, such as if we continue on the path we’re on, investing the amount we’re investing, how much are we going to have? The answer, of course, is a ton of money. Even if this business goes to zero tomorrow, you’re still going to have millions and millions and millions of dollars.
[01:12:33] And we’re not even talking about the $80 plus million. All right. Whatever. The point is, you’re going to have a lot of money. That allows you to take the fear away of like, hey, anything less than X dollars, we should not be worrying about.
[01:12:51] Victoria: Sweat. Yeah.
[01:12:51] Ramit: I call it a worry-free number. It’s a number below which we simply do not worry about. Like when we were kids, it was like a pack of gum. 0.25, whatever. What’s the number for you right now?
[01:13:04] Victoria: 1,000.
[01:13:05] David: I also agree.
[01:13:08] Victoria: Okay.
[01:13:09] Ramit: Let’s play this out. Let’s say you go to a nice restaurant and, you see an extra appetizer you want to get, but it’s 30 bucks. Are you both just like, yeah, let’s just get it? No question. Don’t even think about it. Get it.
[01:13:21] David: Yeah, 100%.
[01:13:23] Ramit: I think that this worry-free number is a good guideline. My suggestion is you try it for six months. Really go all in. And after six months, you can adjust it. If you find that you’re spending $1,000 a day, which is never going to happen, then you can adjust it. If you find that you checked off all these boxes and you’re like, “Hey, I want to actually up this number,” you can also up it.
[01:13:50] But a good way to make decisions is let’s pick an approach and stick with it. Both of us have to exercise these muscles, and after six months, we’ll take a look and review it. Okay. Couple of other I would change. I would set your accounts up using the approach in my book. I have it in chapter 9, and that is all the money comes into one joint account.
[01:14:12] You can a joint checking. You have a joint savings. Your bills are paid primarily because your future is together. So most of your bills are going to be joint. Of course, you each have a no-questions-asked individual checking and individual savings account. You do whatever you want with no questions asked.
[01:14:33] You would have multiple savings accounts, roughly up to five, and those would be for specific things. I actually think this is where the two of you could talk about your Rich Life and then start to put the money aside.
[Narration]
[01:14:44] Ramit: Sometimes when I’m talking to a couple, I ask if I can just tell them what I would do in their situation. And I had to speak up here because I see so much of myself in them, and I also know that a few small changes could make a major difference to them. When I was starting my business, deciding how much to pay myself, it’s like, what?
[01:15:09] You never grew up being able to change your own salary, so I had no idea how to think about that. And then as my business grew and I became a little bit more savvy, and I had more advisors who could give me advice, I learned, oh, here are the trade-offs when it comes to how much you pay yourself. I also saw a lot of entrepreneurs who pay themselves almost nothing, and I realized I don’t want that for myself.
[01:15:33] I want to have a healthy salary so that I can run my life. Sure, I’d like to take some distributions because of the business structure that I’m in. But it’s really important not just to grow your business, but also to take care of your personal finances. And having done that over 20 years and really built up a cadence, tried different things, I’ve come to find the area that feels good for me.
[01:16:00] Every founder’s different, but I wanted to share. For example, Victoria increasing her salary and taking some money out of the business could change the way she feels about her finances. She’d feel more secure, more safe, while massively de-risking her financial position. David and her deciding on a Rich Life vision together and then making that happen, starting with something small, would really help them connect over money.
[01:16:26] In other words, this business is great. It’s doing fantastic. Let’s not cause anything to harm that. You can also have a very successful business and plant the seeds in your own personal and financial relationship. And finally, a monthly money meeting. Notice the reaction here.
[Interview]
[01:16:44] Ramit: What am I noticing from the two of you smiling right now? What’s going on?
[01:16:49] Victoria: I don’t know. It feels simple and doable, and it’ll bring a lot more joy than I would’ve imagined because I think there is a fear, discomfort, about the topic of just money and combining money together. But it does feel so easy, and that should be done, and it would better our life together. I’m looking forward to it. That’s why I was smiling.
[01:17:17] David: And I’m just surprised that she’s looking forward to it because a lot of times she doesn’t like things to feel like work. And I think we’ve had to be a bit more spontaneous with communication. That’s why I’m surprised, but also looking forward to it because that’s very much my vibe, which is, let’s sit down periodically and just talk about it.
[01:17:37] Ramit: I love that. One of the best in a marriage is to discover surprise about your partner. What a beautiful feeling. This meeting, you can have so much fun with it. So you can imagine, one of your first questions before you even have the meeting would be, “Hey, how could we make this meeting magical?” It might be that you each alternate planning it.
[01:18:02] One of you might plan it at a beautiful quiet cafe. Another one could plan it outside in Central Park, whatever. It’s up to you. And of course you want to give yourself the space to sit down. You might want to have a computer or a phone, but this is an experience.
[01:18:19] And yes, we will get to the nuts and bolts, but actually the most important thing of these meetings is, how do we want to feel afterwards? Do we want to feel that we got to the second decimal place? Maybe. Or do we want to feel connected that we are team mates and partners? I think that’s the one.
[01:18:40] And when you do all those things, when you get specific with your company about taking some off the top, when you combine your income, when you have your Rich Life vision, when you run your numbers and you have your multiple savings accounts and your account set up, guess what? You’re not going to be Venmoing back and forth anymore. It’s just eliminated.
[01:18:59] You’re not going to be talking about random transactional costs. That’s going to be gone. You’re not going to be critiquing each other because you’ve set the structures upright and got your money psychology working to improve every month. That’s how we do it, whether you have $50,000 or 80 million plus.
[Narration]
[01:19:22] Ramit: I want to thank David and Victoria for sharing their inspiring story. When was the last time you heard a couple worth $80 million talking about money? Never. This kind of stuff only happens behind closed doors. That’s why I love bringing all kinds of people on my podcast– people who are in hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt, people who have tens of millions of dollars, all of it. Because we don’t shine a light on this. We only have caricatures of what poor, middle-class, and rich people do.
[01:19:51] I want you to see how they actually talk, and more importantly, how they actually feel. Now, what’s interesting is their unique perspectives, their cultural upbringings, the gender dynamics, the fact that they are entrepreneurs. I want to congratulate you on your success. What excites me about this is that, clearly, the two of you love each other.
[01:20:11] You clearly respect each other. You have the financial means to live a very Rich Life. And with a little tweaking, you can actually have so much more fun along the way. This was such a fun episode to do. I want to thank DeleteMe for partnering with us on this very special episode and making it possible to protect David and Victoria’s anonymity. Let’s check out their follow-up videos. First, Victoria.
[01:20:35] Victoria: One of the biggest surprise was definitely me feeling really ashamed about my wealth. I don’t know why there’s like an inkling in me that want to hide that away from my YouTube audience or from my direct network, even though I’m following a lot of people who self-made themselves and they are open and transparent about how they build wealth. And I take so much insight, knowledge, and lessons from those people.
[01:20:59] A little change that I personally made was ordering grocery online and ordering organic groceries without just seeing the cost incremental. And then jointly we’re exploring options to merge our finances together. And I think next step will be looking for a postnup process and get some lawyers involved to draft an agreement and set some rules, boundaries, and values, of course. So I think that’s something that we’re really excited to go into.
[01:21:30] Ramit: And now, David.
[01:21:32] David: Since the podcast, I have learned what it would take psychologically and physically to make a transition from individual transactions to connective financial decisions. It doesn’t have to be 50-50 to feel equitable and respectful. And I think what surprised me the most was that I can be more abundant in my thinking and actions just by making very small changes and how limiting our lives were by joining our relationship together, but not our finances.
[01:22:00] So I’m really looking forward to that next date night that we have, which is coming up, where I’m going to make it a whole experience and call it our Rich Life Date Night, where we can talk openly, but really enjoy ourselves. And in terms of specific changes, I personally am topping up my checkings account to have more than $1,000 on it for guilt-free spending because I can do it, and I should do it. And for us is to really stop these Venmo crests, setting up our shared values, defining what our Rich Life is, and starting to set up these joint accounts for our Rich Life together.