Transform your financial future with Money for Tomorrow—a game-changing guide to creating, keeping, and growing wealth for generations to come.
Most investors who are serious about scaling their wealth must learn through decades of trial and error. What if there’s a more efficient way to gain an investing edge and avoid costly investing mistakes?
Money for Tomorrow uncovers a four-part wealth-building strategy that makes financial freedom and generational wealth more attainable than ever. Author and investor Whitney Elkins-Hutten unveils the very systems that elevated her from living paycheck to paycheck to overseeing a portfolio valued at an astonishing $800M+.
What You'll
Five Choices of Prosperous Discover the essential decisions that lead to success without burnout. The Legacy Unearth why so many families fail to pass down their wealth and how you can break this cycle. The Asset Performance Harness a simple math equation to unlock your assets' true potential. The Seven Principles of Conservative Build an unassailable financial "moat" to safeguard your wealth. Defeating the Five Financial Eliminate the threats eroding your finances. Multigenerational Craft a blueprint to ensure your wealth endures for future generations.
No matter where you stand on your investing journey, this accessible plan will guide you toward prosperity through sound financial principles. It's time to construct a lasting legacy of wealth—for yourself and the generations yet to come.
Was an interesting book in parts. I completed the exercises which provided some insights to my investing and financial life that'd I'd not come across before.
This book reads to me as just another real estate 'influencer' trying to funnel people into their consulting pipeline, but charging you for the privilege of this marketing.
My other 'issue' with this book is there is a heavy emphasis on real estate, particularly in the USA residential space. This is expected given the knowledge that the author made a significant portion of their wealth from real estate, but I'd not known this coming into the book and was disappointed. The real estate sections were nothing ground breaking and is information constantly sprouted in today's media.
If you've got some level of financial literacy I'd say this book is not for you, or only read it if you want a refresher of information you've consumed before.
This was an excellent read. I heard about this book through bigger pockets. It reinforced a lot of things I did know. Specifically about getting your assets in order in case you pass. It also discussed pros and cons of using investments in IRA versus business and real estate. It was well written and I would highly recommend.