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7 Ways To Build Wealth — Even if You’re Starting From Zero

7 Ways To Build Wealth — Even if You’re Starting From Zero

Financial News
7 Ways To Build Wealth — Even if You’re Starting From Zero

Locking in on your North Star can help you stay focused when the process feels lonely or overwhelming.

3. Prioritize Your Emergency Fund

When you think of building wealth from scratch, Russell wants you to picture building a house. The exterior may look gorgeous, and the pool in the backyard may sparkle, but without a solid foundation, the structure won’t last.

“The most important thing you can do to start off is build up that emergency fund,” he said. “Make sure you have money put away in a high-yield savings account. So, if you were to lose your job — especially in days like today — you can always fall back on it.”

He recommends setting aside three to six months’ worth of expenses before you start investing aggressively. Skipping this step might feel tempting, but he cautions that it’s a costly mistake:

“Even if you’re completely debt-free, but you don’t have an emergency fund, you’re going to go back into debt if you don’t have that emergency fund put away.”

4. Get Free Money, Then Tackle High-Interest Debt

Establishing an emergency fund is part of what Russell considers a three-pronged approach to financial stability: build your emergency fund, claim your employer match, and pay off high-interest debt.

Taking advantage of an employer match on your 401(k) or 403(b) is essentially free money.

“You want to make sure you’re putting money in there up to the match. You don’t have to go beyond that,” he said. “You don’t have to max out your 401(k), but make sure you’re getting that free money from your employer. That will check the investing bucket as you’re building your emergency fund and paying off your debt.”

Russell also advises focusing on paying down high-interest debt — anything 10% or more — while you save and invest modestly. It can feel like a lot to juggle, but he emphasizes balance and consistency.

“My dad would always tell me, take it one day at a time and don’t overwhelm yourself,” he said.

5. Buy the Haystack, Not the Needle

When Russell started his career on Wall Street, he learned an investing principle that has stuck with him: “Don’t try to find the needle in the haystack. Just buy the entire haystack.”

In other words, don’t chase the next hot stock. Instead, invest in diversified options like index funds or ETFs, which spread risk across many companies.

“So when everything collectively does well, your portfolio does well,” he said. “One trap I feel like newer investors fall into is that they just want to dive into individual stocks without understanding that those stocks can really tank very quickly.”

Russell suggests limiting individual stocks to 5% to 10% of your portfolio — a small “sweet treat” compared with your “healthy” core investments.

6. Invest Early, Often and Automatically

Despite the image of elite power brokers wearing suits that cost as much as your rent, Russell says anyone can become a successful investor — if they stay consistent.

“I think a lot of times we focus on how much money we can put into it, but what’s most important is just establishing that habit, even if it’s just a dollar or $10 per week,” he said. “Establish the habit, and then as you make more money and have more of a gap between your expenses and income, you can invest more and more.”

Russell recommends automating the process to make investing seamless and to protect yourself from emotional decisions.

“You wouldn’t chop down a tree because it’s dormant during the winter,” he said. “It’s going to come back during the spring.”

He compared that cycle to investing — growth takes patience and consistency.

7. Knowledge Protects Your Wealth

Russell recalls one of his students who received a windfall of several hundred thousand dollars — a life-changing amount for anyone who’s currently feeling pinched financially. Unfortunately, the student squandered the money on trips and shopping sprees.

The lesson: Money without financial literacy is fleeting.

“Knowledge, when it relates to finances, is critical because money alone doesn’t make you rich,” he said. “There are celebrities and people who got major inheritances and squandered it very quickly because they didn’t have the knowledge — or didn’t apply it — to grow that money over time.”

To truly protect your wealth, Russell encourages continuous learning. Resources like the BetterWallet community, online publications, podcasts and books make it easier than ever to expand your financial understanding — and safeguard your progress.

More From GOBankingRates

This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: 7 Ways To Build Wealth — Even if You’re Starting From Zero

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