Friday, July 27, 2012

12 lessons Steve Jobs taught Guy Kawasaki.

Twelve lessons Guy Kawasaki learnt from Apple's Steve Jobs. These lessons I feel are not only applicable to entreprenuers but are also useful for any employee who constantly want to improve at how they think and function at work. Anyone can think and feel like an entreprenuer no matter an employer or employee. Any work that one do is likely to be involved in dealing with providing goods and services to people. Even an employee working in an organisation is providing service to his employer, his fellow colleagues across various departments and also their customers (even back end support staff who think that dealing with customers is not their job is in fact providing indispensable support to their front end colleagues who deal directly with customers).

Twelve inspiring lessons from one of the World's greatest entreprenuer Steve Jobs that can be applied for everyone who wants to improve at how they think and feel in their work, enjoy!

Summary of the 12 lessons:
1. Experts are clueless. 
2. Customers can't tell you what they need. 
3. Biggest challenges beget the best work. 
4. Design Counts. 
5. Big graphics, big fonts. 
6. Jump curves, not better sameness. 
7. If it works or doesn't work, that's all that matters. 
8. Value is different from price. 
9. A Players hire A Players. 
10. Real CEOs can demo. 
11. Real entrepreneurs ship. 
12. Some things need to be believed to be seen.



Monday, July 9, 2012

How much money does one need to reach financial freedom?

In my earlier post "So you want to retire in Singapore?" under the label "Financial Planning", I did an estimation of the amount of money needed to retire in Singapore. The estimation of the retirement amount varies depending on the current age of the person. However, a conservative estimate runs in the likes of retirement funds of at least one million Singapore dollars to retire comfortably. Not many people will be able to reach this amount upon their retirement. I see around me many retirees who are on family retirement support meaning they are supported financially by their children. It comes as no surprise as not many people can have a decent amount of savings upon retirement to depend upon. Thus, the burden of retirement will have to rest upon their children.

It is good and well for children to support their parents financially in their retirement years since their parents have put in their sweat and toil to raise up their children. This is the tradition of many Asian families having their children support their parents' financial needs during their retirement years. However, wouldn't it be great if the parents do not require any financial support from their children in their retirement years? It will mean that parents have no financial worries since they are self-supporting and their children will have no financial burden to support their parents. I am not saying this to mean that children do not have the responsibility to care for their parents, but rather that it will be truly beneficial to everyone if there is no financial worry to both parents and their children if elderly parents have no need for any financial support.

Therefore, it is important for everyone to work towards becoming financially free. One will no longer have the worry of earning the next paycheck in order to survive another day of living. Working can then become a matter of choice and perhaps enjoyment, and not just one of necessity for the income that work brings. One can live a life of choices having the time to do the things that one likes to do when one becomes financially free. One can choose to engage in a work out of passion rather than necessity for the earned income. Aside from the choice to continue to work, one can also engage in meaningful activities that are beneficial for oneself as well as others. Afterall, one has only one life to live and our time is limited. Live a meaningful life. 

For me, living a meaningful life means living a life for God. One does not need to be financially free in order to live a meaningful life. Financial freedom is just a platform to allow one to have extra time on one's side to make the choice to live a meaningful life.   

After knowing the objective of becoming financially free is to have the choice to use one's freed up time to engage in meaningful activities for meaningful living, the golden question to ask is "How much money does one need to reach financial freedom?". In my reading, I found out a guideline that one can use. The amount of money to reach financial freedom can be estimated to be around twenty times the annual expenses of a person.

For example, if Albert lives in Singapore and spends a total of SGD$24000 in annual expenses, he will need an estimated sum of SGD$480000 to become financially free. One may raise the question of how this is possible. Afterall, if one requires a total sum in savings of at least one million Singapore dollars to retire in Singapore, how can half the amount at SGD$480000 make one financially free?

This is where the difference in having investment knowledge kicks in. The estimated sum of SGD$480000 is not going to work miracles if it is not invested and providing passive income. Due to inflation and spending, this amount is not going to last very long. However, if this amount can be invested at an annual yield of 8%, it will provide a passive income for Albert that will fight inflation and allow him to be perpeptually financially free if he maintains his current lifestyle in annual expenses without increasing his financial expenditure.

How does the SGD$480000 work out in terms of fighting inflation and still providing enough passive income for Albert? For a yield of 8%, Albert will receive $38400 annually in passive income. He must not spend all these money or else inflation will erode away his subsequent years' spending power since the price of goods and services has increased due to inflation. Instead, if Albert is financially wise and disciplined, he will set aside 3% out of total 8% annual yield religiously every year for reinvestment into his original capital sum. This reinvested amount will keep growing his original capital sum in order to receive more passive income in every subsequent year to fight the effects of inflation (assuming long term annual inflation rate at average of 3%). 

The remaining 5% out of total 8% annual yield then works out to be exactly what Albert requires to meet his annual expenses. So, the magic numbers are a capital sum of twenty times one's annual expenses to be invested at an annual yield of at least 8% and 3% out of 8% annual yield is to be reinvested every year leaving only 5% out of 8% annual yield in any year to meet the annual expenses. Thus, financially freedom can be met if the magic numbers are observed. However, this is just a theory which may not work out in real life as the annual yield on one's investment may vary every year. If one can truly invest at a constant yield of at least 8% per annum, one is not very far away from the realities of financial freedom should one be able to accumulate a capital sum of twenty times one's annual expenses to be invested at such annual yield. 

Of course, it does not take an intelligent mind to appreciate that if one requires less annual expenses to meet his lifestyle needs, one can become financially free faster. A person with an annual expenses of $12000 only needs a capital sum of SGD$240000 to become financially free in Singapore if the above magic numbers are observed. There again, is it possible to survive in Singapore with an annual expense of $12000 which works out to be approximately $1000 monthly expense? This is probably wishful thinking if not impossible to survive with such meagre monthly expense in a state of financial freedom. Who knows? Maybe there are already people who are financially free on a low living expense?

There are two choices. 
Control money to reach financial freedom 
or let money control oneself never to reach financial freedom.