Financially Incorrect

Financially Incorrect

Money doesn't have to be intimidating. The Financially Incorrect Podcast is a fun and informative way to learn about personal finance. Host Barrack Bukusi debunks money myths and reveals the truth behind common misconceptions. Join him with a different guest every week as he helps you achieve your financial goals.

  1. 1 HR AGO

    How I quit Corporate to Start Blooming K| Becky Kibe

    Corporate paid her KSh 140,000 per month. She quit to sell flowers.In this episode of Financially Incorrect Business Edition, Becky Kibe Mureithi, founder of Blooming K, breaks down the real numbers behind building a floristry business in Kenya.In just two years she has sold over 700 bouquets and gift packages, opened a physical shop on Kimur Road, generated KSh 350,000 in one Valentine’s Day, and also lost KSh 60,000 in a single day from spoiled flowers and delivery chaos.We unpack how florists actually make money, why events and classes outperform daily bouquet sales, and how underpricing cost her more than KSh 100,000 in her first year. Becky explains flower price volatility, where stems can range from KSh 20 to KSh 130 plus, the hidden costs most creatives ignore, and how she used short term credit to finance large wedding orders.Now targeting KSh 2 to 3 million in annual revenue and planning expansion to Mombasa, she shares the systems, staffing decisions, and cash flow discipline required to survive in a seasonal product business.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc⁠💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC⁠🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    1h 17m
  2. 4 DAYS AGO

    How I Built My Career as an Architect in Kenya & the U.S | Henry Musangi| Henry Musangi

    Architecture looks glamorous from the outside. Towering buildings, real estate booms, billion-shilling developments. But how much do architects actually make in Kenya? In this episode, we sit down with Henry Musangi, architect and Managing Director at Planning System Services Limited, to unpack the financial reality of building a career in architecture both in Kenya and the United States. From earning $50,000 a year in the U.S., surviving the 2009 global recession, and returning to Kenya with limited savings, to restarting his career and eventually leading a firm with over KES 100 million in annual operating costs.Henry shares the long game behind professional success. We discuss graduate and senior architect salaries in Kenya, how architecture firms actually make money, why projects can take five to ten years from concept to completion, and why real estate booms don’t necessarily translate into wealth for consultants. Henry explains the financial pressures within the industry, the cash flow challenges of running a professional services firm, and why managing director compensation depends entirely on value creation and firm performance. The conversation also touches on building collapses in Nairobi, developer pressure, and the shared accountability across the construction ecosystem. Beyond the numbers, Henry reflects on humility, financial discipline, credit card lessons, prioritising staff over personal income, and the cost of ambition on personal life projects.Access all our links in one place: https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye📊 Try a demo account: https://shorturl.at/izDMc💸 Open a live account: https://shorturl.at/Od2ux

    1h 38m
  3. 16 JAN

    From Makanga to Working In Insurance | Eliud Matheri

    Eliud's money story didn't follow the usual script. Before insurance offices, boardrooms, and BIMA TV, there were matatus, fruit crates, daily cash, and survival decisions. In this episode, Eliud opens up about the uncomfortable middle. The phase where income grows but discipline slips. Where loans feel like progress until they don’t. Where mistakes teach harder lessons than success ever could. Access all our links in one place: https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc 💹 Ready to start trading? 🔍 Who is FXPesa: https://shorturl.at/rWFqC 🎓 Learn how to trade: https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye 📊 Try a demo account: https://shorturl.at/izDMc 💸 Open a live account: https://shorturl.at/Od2ux Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction02:40 – 2025 Wins & Financially Incorrect Decisions04:35 – Early Money Lessons & Childhood Hustles06:20 – Entering the Insurance Industry08:30 – Hawking, Makanga Life & Surviving Nairobi12:40 – Choosing Stability Over Fast Cash14:30 – Makanga Side Hustle & Early Investments19:10 – Career Growth: From Filing Clerk to Insurance Professional26:30 – How Insurance Really Works (Claims & Mistakes)34:30 – Career Acceleration: Underwriting, Jubilee & Big Business38:15 – Costly Financial Mistakes & Loan Lessons41:30 – Money Mindset Shift & The Birth of BMA TV44:50 – Marriage, Family & Financial Responsibility47:25 – Happiest vs Saddest Money Moments49:15 – Advice to His Younger Self51:15 – Final Reflections & Outro

    52 min
  4. 9 JAN

    Why Being an A Student With an Oxford PhD Still Wasn’t Enough | Dr Gladys Ngetich

    What happens when you do everything right and life still doesn’t follow the script? In this episode of Financially Incorrect, we sit down with Dr Gladys Ngetich, a Kenyan engineer, Rhodes Scholar, Oxford PhD graduate and former MIT postdoctoral researcher, to talk about the parts of success people rarely admit out loud. Gladys grew up in Kuresoi South, excelled academically at JKUAT, graduated with one of the strongest first-class records in her class, and went on to secure some of the most competitive academic opportunities in the world, including a PhD at Oxford and a postdoctoral fellowship at MIT. On paper, her story looks flawless. In reality, it wasn’t. She opens up about graduating top of her class and failing to find a job, being rejected repeatedly after Oxford, discovering how automated hiring systems quietly filter out even elite candidates, and why networking mattered more than merit in moments that shaped her career. We also talk money. The scholarships that gave her more cash than she knew how to manage. The years of reckless spending. The moment she finally learned to save. The Uber cars and Airbnb investments she made back home in Kenya. The books she self-published that quietly earned more than some salaries. And the decision, at 31, to walk away, travel across 13 countries, and sit with a mid-life reckoning most people postpone. This is a conversation about ambition, detours, financial literacy, burnout, and what it really means to build a life beyond credentials. If you’re a student, a high achiever, or someone questioning whether success is supposed to feel this confusing, this episode will stay with you.--------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye📊 Try a demo account: https://shorturl.at/izDMc💸 Open a live account: https://shorturl.at/Od2ux 🔍 Read more about Gladys here: 👉 https://www.gladysngetich.com/about--------------------------------------------------------------------Timestamps00:00 Introduction & Context06:56 – Meet Dr Gladys Ngetich: Oxford, MIT, and the life behind the CV09:14 – Her 2026 money goal and why intentionality came late10:44 – What her PhD was really about (in plain English)14:38 – How she joined a PhD project and patented research15:06 – Growing up in rural Kenya and learning that money was scarce17:30 – Unpaid labour, family sacrifice, and early money beliefs20:07 – Why she chose engineering and life at JKUAT24:02 – Chasing A’s, ignoring business, and living for grades26:35 – Scholarships, excess cash, and reckless spending34:33 – Graduating top of her class and still not getting a job37:52 – Online writing, first real income, and lifestyle inflation39:17 – The banking detour that taught her more than engineering46:28 – Discovering the Rhodes Scholarship and applying anyway52:19 – Life at Oxford: money coming in, none staying55:20 – Skipping a Master’s degree and going straight into a PhD59:38 – Post-PhD rejection, SpaceX dreams, and reality hitting again01:01:37 – Landing MIT, earning six figures, and moving to the US01:03:02 – Visas, pressure, and limits of working abroad01:04:05 – ATS systems and why great CVs get rejected01:10:08 – Turning 31, quitting suddenly, and a 13-country reset01:25:35 – Writing books, passive income, and unexpected leverage01:27:22 – Why she paused academia to learn money and business01:28:18 – Final reflections and closing

    1h 28m

About

Money doesn't have to be intimidating. The Financially Incorrect Podcast is a fun and informative way to learn about personal finance. Host Barrack Bukusi debunks money myths and reveals the truth behind common misconceptions. Join him with a different guest every week as he helps you achieve your financial goals.

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