Money Unplugged with Chris Hill

Chris Hill

Save, Spend, Invest, Stocks, Real Estate.  Everyone has a relationship with money.

  1. I Fell for a Ponzi Scheme in My 20s. Here’s What It Taught Me About Investing. (Laura Adams)

    1D AGO

    I Fell for a Ponzi Scheme in My 20s. Here’s What It Taught Me About Investing. (Laura Adams)

    Getting burned on a bad investment early in life can do one of two things: swear you off investing forever, or teach you exactly what kind of investor you want to become. For Laura Adams, it did the latter. Host of the Money Girl podcast — one of the longest-running personal finance podcasts in the world, with more than 1,000 episodes — Adams  grew up in Charleston, SC, in a household where money was never discussed. That silence may be exactly why she became obsessed with it. Her earliest money memory involves sorting coins into paper wrappers for her father's business. Her first checking account came at age 12, when she begged her mother for one just so she could balance it. Chris Hill talks with Laura about: - How falling for a Ponzi scheme in her twenties turned her into a committed index investor who doesn't look back - Buying a struggling flooring business with her husband knowing nothing about flooring — and selling it four years later at a profit - The 2-year plan she and her husband made to eliminate their credit card debt as newlyweds, and why paying it off felt better than she expected - Why the money rules that help you build wealth can actually work against you when it's time to spend it What is something you bought that makes you happy? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com. Want to find the best stocks and speed up your investing analysis? Try TIKR for free at tikr.com/unplugged Opening clip - "Succession"

    32 min
  2. Why Hating Your Job Might Be the Best Thing That Ever Happened to You (Alison Fragale)

    MAR 6

    Why Hating Your Job Might Be the Best Thing That Ever Happened to You (Alison Fragale)

    The best job is one you love. The second best? One you hate. Organizational psychologist Alison Fragale learned this the hard way — trading a McKinsey consulting career she couldn't stand for a Stanford PhD and a calling she never would have found otherwise. A professor at UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School and author of the bestseller Likeable Badass, Fragale grew up in Pittsburgh shaped by a father who made sure his daughter never had to think twice about what she put in the grocery cart. That early imprint on money followed her through Dartmouth, into consulting, and eventually into a career spent studying how people earn power, status, and influence. She talks with Chris Hill about: - Why the people most stuck in their careers are neither miserable nor happy — and what to do about it - A financial concept she didn't encounter until her late thirties that completely changed how she thinks about giving - Why she bought the car she'd wanted for decades, immediately regretted it, and refuses to get rid of it anyway - The one habit she believes is both the most generous thing you can do for others AND the most strategic thing you can do for yourself Check out Alison's book Likeable Badass at alisonfragale.com. What's the last thing you splurged on? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com. Go to ilovemarmar.com and use the promo code “MONEY” to get 10%. Opening clip – “Heist”

    34 min
4.9
out of 5
99 Ratings

About

Save, Spend, Invest, Stocks, Real Estate.  Everyone has a relationship with money.

You Might Also Like