- All right, so in this video, I'm gonna summarise some of
the insights from this book, The Millionaire Fastlane. I thought that this
was gonna be really bad when a friend recommended it to me. And then this friend said, "No, trust me. Ignore
the click-baity title, The Millionaire Fastlane, and read the book because
it's genuinely really good. And it is genuinely really good. This is probably the single
best book I have ever read on how to build a
business that makes money. And so in this episode of Book Club, which is the series where we
distil and discuss highlights from some of my favourite books, we're gonna be breaking down
five key lessons from the book. And also, the five commandments
of building a business that MJ DeMarco talks about. How to get rich quick. Now, the first important
lesson in the book is that we want to avoid the slow lane. And the point that our
friend, MJ, makes in the book, is that "get rich quick" is often seen as, like, a scammy thing. Oh, it's a get-rich-quick scheme. But actually, it's not
get-rich-quick that's a problem, it is get-rich-easy. Like it is very possible
to get rich quick, and that is why we're talking about The Millionaire Fastlane. It's very possible to get rich quick, but it's not at all
possible to get rich easy. And so, if someone is trying to sell you that it is easy to get rich, that is a scam and you should avoid it. And one of the interesting
things that he talks about in the book is the idea that there are three paths through life. There's path number one,
which is the sidewalk. This path to the slow lane, and path number three, the fast lane. The sidewalk is basically where people who are living paycheck to paycheck live, people who don't have a lot of money. I'm not gonna talk about it too much. It's a bit disparaging. It's very American style. Sort of very brash way of
describing it that he does. Like, you know, "If you're
living on the sidewalk, then you're living paycheck to paycheck." And like, "Your life is screwed because you believe that the government is screwing you over," all that kind of stuff. We're not gonna talk about that too much. There are a few bits like that in the book where you have to kind of read or listen to it with a
little pinch of salt. But I think the second path through life, the slow lane, is interesting. Because if you follow the slow
lane, you can still get rich. And the slow lane is generally,
if you're watching this, probably your parents' generation
stood by the slow lane. The idea of the slow
lane is that, you know, you go to school. You get good grades. You get a decent job. You work your way up
the ladder in your job, whatever your job is. You save some percentage of your paycheck. You put that into investments, maybe in the stock market,
if you're particularly rogue. But probably, you know, you should invest in
property and real estate because property is a good investment. And over time, eventually, you will have enough of a nest egg such that when you retire, then you will be rich. And you can enjoy your retirement at the age of 65 when
you have osteoarthritis in both of your knees. That is, basically, the
idea of the slow lane. And he talks about how
there are three traps that we can fall into, which will end up keeping
us on the slow lane. The first trap is that life in the slow lane looks
like it's pretty safe. You can think that, "Okay,
once I get this job, then my life is pretty safe and I'm pretty sorted." But if the pandemic
has taught us anything, and if, you know, the way
the world is at the moment, A: it's actually not that safe. You actually could lose your job. If you're, fine, if you're a
doctor or something like that, where you're unlikely to lose your job, that's still pretty safe. But even so, what he says
is that there are a tonne of other unexpected events
that happen in life. Like if there's a market
crash like there was in 2008, or if you have kids, Or if you get divorced. Or if you have a health problem and you live in a stupid
country, like America, where that could potentially bankrupt you. There are all of these fairly
common, unexpected events that can happen in life that make life in the slow lane not
actually as safe an option as it might've been for
our parents' generation. The second trap that
Slow Laners can fall into is this idea that if we build our intrinsic
market value enough, then we will get rich. So, for example, these
are the people who think, "Okay, I've worked my job for two years. Now I'm gonna go and get an MBA and pay like however many
tens of thousands of dollars to get an MBA. Because then once I have that degree, then I will be worth more
to my future employer." But the problem with
that style of thinking is that it's not really
the fast lane approach to building wealth. It is still, ultimately,
trading your time for money. And yes, fine. If you get you that extra degree, if you get that extra qualification, your time will be worth more. A little bit more, maybe even significantly more, but ultimately, you're still just trading your time for money. And that is a very slow-laney way to approach building wealth. And the third trap that
Slow Laners can fall into is just not even believing it's
possible to get rich quick, unless you're super
lucky or super talented. But, as MJ says, even if
you can't get rich easy, which is not a thing, you can get rich relatively quick, if quick is 10 years. 10 years is the definition
of quick, which to be honest, it's pretty quick. But a lot of us, when we think "get rich quick", we're thinking a few weeks. That is not a thing. What he's arguing for is a process that will take
probably around 10 years to get rich quick. And that is actually quick, in his book. And that brings us on
to lesson number two, which is to work the process. Now in the book, he talks
a lot about how wealth is not an event. Like, getting rich is not
this sort of binary thing where one day you're
living paycheck to paycheck and the next day suddenly
you've got millions in the bank. It is a longer drawn-out process that takes usually many years to do. But the problem is that the
media often reports wealth as being an event, and those are the stories we latch on to. One of the stories he talks about is this guy, John Darius Bikoff, who founded Glaceau Vitamin Water in 1996. 11 years later he sold the company to Coca-Cola for $4.1 billion. And in that 11 year long story, the thing that people
remember is the event. But what they forget is
the process of 11 years that took so long to get to that point. Therefore, wealth
building is not an event, it's a process. And it's exactly the same thing with building a creative business, building a YouTube channel. You know, it's easy to see creators and their overnight
successes, and all that jazz. But you don't see the five
years they spent making videos that no one was watching
to get to the point where they could then have the "event" of the overnight success. All right, so lesson number three is to build money trees. Now we've all heard that phrase that money doesn't grow on trees. But what he says in the book is "Money does actually grow on trees, provided you build a
tree that grows money." So what does this mean? He says in the book that, "Money trees are business systems
that survive on their own. They require periodic
support and nurturing, but they survive on their own, creating a surrogate for
your time for money trade." Basically what we're doing
is we're building a business. We're building this money tree where the amount of wealth we can
generate is not directly tied to the amount of time that
we're putting into it. This brings us onto the next question, which is how do we actually
build a money tree? And he talks about, there's
like four or five different types of money trees that
we could potentially build. The first one is that we
could build a rental system. And a rental system is basically anything that involves renting out
something that you already own. So if you have a bunch of
real estate properties, and you rent them out,
that is a rental system. The problem is it's very
hard to get to the point where you have a bunch of
properties to rent out, 'cause you're already
probably rich at that point. The other way of building a
rental system is by licencing. For example, if you're a musician and you want to licence your audio that other people can use. In a way, they're paying you rent for this thing that you own. Secondly, what you could do is you could build a distribution system. Now this is basically a system that connects people who want something with the people who are
supplying that thing. So for example, Amazon
is a distribution system. It connects buyers with sellers and Amazon is the middleman. And therefore, if you build the middleman, if you build a distribution system, you can get really, really, really, really rich. Now interestingly, one really
great distribution system is a company like AppSumo, who are completely coincidentally
sponsoring this video. AppSumo is run by my friend, Noah Kagan. It's ridiculously great company, and what they do is that they give you the best deals in software. Their model connects
people who want software, people like me and you probably. If you're watching this, you're interested in
software just as much as I am with the people that want to sell software that have software that they want to sell. And they give you that software
in a way that's either free or just, like, amazingly well-priced. Every week, there's new
deals added to the website. And it's not just software,
it's also online courses, It's also education. And so if you want to learn anything in this how-to-build-a-business sphere, AppSumo probably has it covered. And the whole vibe of AppSumo is that it's very like indie hackers, start-upy kind of vibes. They do have a couple of tools that are suited for enterprises. Mostly it's aimed at individuals
and small businesses, which is probably the
type of business you want to make if you want to
get rich quick using The Millionaire Fastlane. And I'm even recording
this to you from the future to tell you all about their
Black Friday giveaway. So last year on Black Friday,
they gave away a Tesla, which was pretty cool. But this year, they're giving
away a million dollars worth of stuff to entrepreneurs, not who buy their product, but who list their own product
on the AppSumo marketplace. So if you have a product
that you want to sell on the AppSumo marketplace and you list it somewhere between now and November 17th, 2021, then the first 400 people,
just to list a product, will get $1,000 of free money from the AppSumo team. And the next 2,000
people to list a product are gonna get $250 completely for free. You don't even have to make
any sales of your product. You will just get that
free money in return for just listing your
product on the marketplace. That's pretty cool. And then everyone who
enters of those 10 people will be lucky dipped to get $10,000, which is also pretty sick. So if you've got any
kind of digital product and you want to stick it on AppSumo, you can check out the marketplace to see what things you want to buy because they're all discounted. But you can also sell
your thing on AppSumo and it's pretty easy. You just submit your product, you go live with it, and then you get paid. So again, if you list your
product on AppSumo marketplace up until November the 17th, 2021, then you can grab your share of the $1 million giveaway fund. And you might be one of
10 people lucky enough to win a check for $10,000. If that's up on your street, hit the link in the video description, you can check out all the products. And you can potentially
sell your own things. So thank you, AppSumo,
for sponsoring this video. All right, thirdly, when it
comes to building a money tree, we have a software system, But it is five o'clock and I
have a Zoom call to attend. So I will be right back.
(claps hands) All right, we're back. We've got a slight change to the lighting, but the third type of system that you can make to make this money tree. I'm so glad. I'm so glad that worked. I really hope this is
gonna work in the edit. Anyway, the third type of money tree we want to create is a software system. Now, that's pretty standard. You make the software once and then you can charge
people for the software or for the digital product. And then you can make money multiple times because
the cost of distribution and the cost of replication
is effectively zero. I've made a bunch of
software products in my time when I was in med school. I built something called
BMAT and UCAT Ninja, which was like a software platform that helped people get into med school by helping them prepare for the
med school admissions exams. One of my YouTuber friends, Oliur, managed to make $9,000 in a single week by selling icons that he designed. So that's a digital asset. He puts the work into creating it once and it's sort of like a software system whereby other people
can just buy the thing because it is, ultimately, software. And the fourth system that
our friend, MJ, talks about is my favourite kind. And that is the content money tree, the content system, where basically the idea is you create content. So if you write a book,
or make a YouTube video, or write a blog post,
or make an online course that you can sell, ultimately, this is all content. It takes an investment of time and effort to write the book or
create the content once. But then you can sell
it to multiple people further down the line. And similar to the digital stuff, it has basically zero cost of replication and distribution, assuming
it's on the internet. And if it's a book, well then, there are some
costs associated with it. But it's still broadly
a way of making money that's not tied to your own time. For example, like two years ago now,
a year ago, or something, I made a Skillshare class
about how to study for exams. And that class brings in about
$10,000 every single month in pure passive income. And I don't do it- I basically do nothing to promote it. By the way, if you have exams coming up, check out my Skillshare class. It'll be linked for free
in the video description if you want to check it out. But it's amazing how
you can just do the work to make something once. Although, in fairness, I was creating study-themed
content on YouTube for two years before I made that class. So again, it wasn't a
get-rich-quick scheme. It wasn't a get-rich-easy scheme. But it was like a money
tree that built up over time and has now helped pay
the mortgage on my house. So we've talked about
the four different types of money tree, but what MJ says in the book is that, and what's obviously true, is that it's not that easy
to build one of these. You don't just magically
have the ability to do that. And one of the ways that you
can is lesson number four, which is switch from being a consumer to being a producer. Now from a young age,
society broadly teaches us that we should be consumers. And we should be thinking
about what to buy, you know? Our parents are like, "Johnny, what do you
want for your birthday?" "What are you gonna
buy when you get that-" Or you know, "What would you buy if you had a million dollars,
if you won the lottery?" It's all very much based
on being a consumer. But, as MJ tells us in the book, this consumer mindset
is never gonna help us to actually build wealth. Instead, we need to think
to a producer mindset. And this genuinely changes the way that you approach the world. Like if you think in
the eyes of a consumer and you see some cool- I was in the Samsung store earlier today. It's fairly close to where
I live. It's really cool. I'm thinking as a consumer like, "Bloody hell, there's all these phones and watches and gadgets and fridges and microwaves and all this cool stuff. And the store is really nice. And I want a fancy new sofa
because that's a fancy new sofa. But if you have more
of a producer mindset, then you start thinking you could- you kind of ignore the fact
that there's all this stuff out there you can buy. Instead, you start thinking, "Oh, this is an interesting marketing play that they're doing." "I wonder how much it costs
to put the store together?" "Oh, I wonder if I could
make a video where I switched from iPhone to Samsung because there's so many Samsung phones here? So I can make a video where
I talk about it and switch. And then teach people
what it's like to switch from an iPhone to an Android",
and all that kind of jazz. And so the way I'm thinking
there is, hopefully, as a producer, rather than a consumer. And if you want a practical
tip for how this works, I think, really, the key is to just think about what's going on on the business side of stuff when you are out and about. For example, next time
you're in McDonald's, instead of thinking how tasty
your Filet-O-Fish burger is, think, "Huh, I wonder how it
is that McDonald's created a system whereby every single fish burger in every single McDonald's
basically tastes the same?" "How do they do that?" That's pretty incredible. And then you can read a book
like "The E-Myth Revisited", which is, again, one of my favourite
business books of all time that talks about exactly
how McDonald's built this sort of franchise system. And lesson number five, show commitment, don't just show interest. And this is a message that MJ talks about throughout the book. Basically, there's a difference between interest and commitment. And if you want to get
rich quick, but not easy. If you wanna get rich quick, you have to do things that other people are not willing to do or not able to do. And usually, that shows commitment rather than just interest. And there's a nice quote from
the book where he says that, "Interest works in your
business one hour a day, Monday through Friday. Commitment works in your
business seven days a week, whenever time permits." Now, when I was first
growing this YouTube channel and the personal brand and the business and everything, I would spend
basically every waking moment where I wasn't at work or at university or in lectures and stuff, thinking and planning videos. And planning content and figuring
out the business strategy and doing a lot of stuff. And yes, someone might
look at that and think, "Oh my god, toxic
productivity, hustle culture," and all that jazz. But you don't get to a point where you build a successful business or a successful YouTube channel, all this kind of stuff, you don't get to that
point without putting in the hard, hard work. And my point is that the
hard work does not have to be suffering. It's hard, but it doesn't
have to be painful. It can be fun. And I find ways to make it fun. And that's the subject of
the book that I'm writing, how to make things fun. But it does take work and it is hard. It's not an easy process. And I think a lot of the
kind of anti-productivity, toxic hustle-culture kind of zealots, are sort of campaigning for
an easy, chilled-out life. And that's totally fine. If you want easy, chilled-out life, 100%, I'm not gonna argue with
you, you do what you want. But, what MJ says and what these sorts of people were like, you know, if you care about building wealth in a short amount of time, you can't take the easy route and have a chilled-out life. You do have to start being committed to the stuff that you're doing, rather than just interested in it. And there's so many people I know who've started YouTube channels
or businesses that are like, "Oh, you know, I just want to
do it for half an hour a day." Okay, that's fine. You can do it for half an hour a day as a hobby. But if you just do it
for half an hour a day, you are very unlikely to be successful. Which, I mean, in fairness, it kind of depends on what your goals are. If you don't wanna become a millionaire through this business, whatever. That's totally fine, be
chilled out about it. But if you do, if you want to follow The Millionaire
Fastlane approach, you have to be committed,
rather than just interested. Okay. So we've talked about
five of the different lessons. And in fact, like there's tonnes of-- this is a very, very dense book. It looks- I actually read this on-
listened to this on Audible, so I didn't know how dense it was. But actually, it reads more
like a sort of textbook, rather than a storybook,
which is kind of nice. Like it's really, really
good, would recommend. Amazon link in the video description. But so, we talked about
five of the key lessons that I learned from this. There's so many more, but I want to talk about
his five commandments for building a business now. And his overall point on the book is that if you want to be on the
Millionaire Fastlane, you have to follow all
five of these commandments. You don't have to follow all five, like dropping one or two
could still make you rich, but it's just so much more likely for you to become a millionaire
quickly i.e. in under 10 years, which is isn't that quick. But quickly, if you follow all
five of these commandments. The first one is the Commandment of Need. And he says that 90% of businesses fail within the first five years because they don't satisfy
the Commandment of Need. And the Commandment of Need
is that people actually need the thing that you are offering. We have to create a
business that provides value or solves people's needs
or wants in some way. And if we're not, it's really, really hard to build a business based on something that tries to solve a problem that people don't actually have. Secondly, we have the
Commandment of Entry. And the idea here is that you ideally want to build a business in a zone where the barrier for entry
is high rather than low. And the reason you want this is because a high barrier to entry means that it's very difficult for someone else to copy your business. For example, if you or
me decided we wanted to start the next Amazon, that's really fricking hard. There is a very high barrier to entry to starting the next Amazon. But if there's a business that looks easy to other people to start,
and there is a low barrier to entry, for example,
starting a YouTube channel where the barrier to entry is low. Or starting a podcast
where it's even lower. Or starting a blog where
it's even lower than that. Or starting a TikTok with
even lower than that. The lower the barriers to entry, the more competitive
the landscape becomes. And actually, one of the nice
things I like about YouTube is that in this creative sphere, YouTube is still the thing that has the highest barrier to entry. There is now, like every year, the bar for production value and quality and all this stuff rises. And so, for a newcomer to
get into the YouTube sphere, they kind of need to have decent
gear and decent equipment. It's like, "oh, and this takes us into a whole lot controversial territory", which I talk a lot about in my course, the Part-Time YouTuber Academy. So I'm not gonna go into it here, but basically, I like
YouTube because it has a higher barrier to entry
than starting a TikTok or starting an Instagram
page, for example. The third one is the
Commandment of Control. And that's the idea that at
every step of the process, we want to be in control of the thing that we're trying to sell. And if we don't control things, like the price or the way it's managed or the way that it's being sold, then it's hard to build
a business on that. This is partly why building a business of just a YouTube channel is very scary because it does not fulfil
the Commandment of Control because ultimately, my business lives and dies by this YouTube channel. That's really scary. That's really bad. I am not fulfilling the
Commandment of Control in this business that I've got
around the YouTube channel. And that's why when I make courses like my Part-Time YouTuber Academy, I try and fulfil the
Commandment of Control by being in control of as much
of that process as possible. This is also why MLM
multi-level marketing schemes don't work because if you're
selling someone else's product, who's also trying to get you
to sell someone else's product, you ultimately don't
really have the control over that process. And therefore, if stuff
goes wrong or stuff is bad, you personally can't really influence it. And that's a very scary
way to build a business. Commandment number four is
the Commandment of Scale. And that's the idea that ideally, if you want to grow rich quick, the idea is you want to build a business that has the potential to scale up. For example, starting a barber shop and cutting people's hair for
£10 a pop is not a business that has very much potential to scale, unless you try and build up more and more and more barbershops and
a chain of barbershops. But then, that costs loads of money. Whereas a software business or a content business really does have the potential to scale. So ideally, you to build a business that satisfies the commandment scale. And there's another
thing that he talks about in the book that we haven't
talked about in this video, which is the Law of Effection. Basically, the law is
that to make millions, you have to impact millions. (chuckles) And it's pretty simple. Like if you want to make
millions off a YouTube channel, you have to be impacting
millions of people. If you want to make
millions off a business, you have to be impacting
millions of people or impacting fewer people, but with a very large amount of impact. And so the Commandment of
Scale kind of relates to that. You can't get rich quick
off of selling lemonade in your local neighbourhood. You have to build a business that has the potential, at least, for scale. And finally, we have
the Commandment of Time, that the idea here, as we talked about before, is that you want to build
a business where the value of the business is disconnected from your personal time input. If you have to show up every
single day, nine to five or whatever many hours to make your money, then that's not really true wealth. And that is actually one of the problems with this YouTube business. As great as the content business in, I have to keep showing
up time and time again, to record videos like this one. It's kind of fun. I'm having a great time. And I would like to build a
sort of business in the future. One where I really don't
have to show up at all to continue to do the work. This is why writing a book is great because once you've written the book, people just buy it,
assuming it's marketed well. And assuming it's a good book, of course, all that fun stuff. So that was a very, very long
summary of some of the lessons in this enormous really, really good book, The Millionaire Fastlane, would recommend. If you're interested in more ideas on how to be able to make money, how to build passive income, check out this video over here, which is nine passive income ideas. And it talks about how at the time, I was making $27,000 a week from these passive income sources. Thank you so much for watching. Do hit the subscribe button,
if you aren't already. And I'll see you in the next video. Bye-bye.