The third book in The White Coat Investor series was just published this week. As is traditional, I thought I would both announce and review it here on the blog. First-year medical and dental students should read the whole post carefully as there is a special giveaway for them in the post.
The White Coat Investor's Guide for Students: How Medical and Dental Students Can Secure Their Financial Future is now available on Amazon in paperback. The price is listed at $29.99, meaning Amazon will likely sell it in the $25-$27 range. The Kindle version is also available (again just $9.99). An audio version will be out in a couple of months.
While both the original book (The White Coat Investor: A Doctor's Guide to Personal Finance and Investing) and the second book (The White Coat Investor's Financial Boot Camp: A 12-step, High-yield Guide to Bring Your Finances Up to Speed) are often given to medical and dental students, they're really more appropriate for residents and young attendings. This book is squarely aimed at the student. There are three parts to the book. Here is the Table of Contents:
Introduction
Part 1 – The Financially Savvy Student
- Chapter 1 – Why Money Should Not Be Your Primary Motivation
- Chapter 2 – You Do Not Get a Pass on Math
- Chapter 3 – How to Choose a Medical or Dental School
- Chapter 4 – How to Pay for Professional School
- Chapter 5 – Why You Should Be a Thrifty Student
- Chapter 6 – How to Live on Loans
- Chapter 7 – The Advantages of Being a Non-traditional Student
- Chapter 8 – How to Choose a Specialty – Physicians
- Chapter 9 – How to Choose a Specialty – Dentists
- Chapter 10 – Avoiding Financial Catastrophes
- Chapter 11 – Preventing and Combating Burnout
- Chapter 12 – How to Choose a Residency Program
- Chapter 13 – Why a Dentist Should Not Be Afraid to Open a Practice
Part 2 – Managing Finances During Residency
- Chapter 14 – Why Renting Could Actually Save You Money
- Chapter 15 – Student Loan Management During Residency
- Chapter 16 – Investing During Residency
- Chapter 17 – Protecting Your Most Valuable Asset
- Chapter 18 – Got Dependents? Get Life Insurance
Part 3 – The Next Step: Achieving Financial Literacy
- Chapter 19 – Stocks, Bonds, and Mutual Funds (Financial Literacy 101)
- Chapter 20 – Taxes and Retirement Accounts (Financial Literacy 102)
- Chapter 21 – Financial History (Financial Literacy 103)
- Chapter 22 – Numbers You Need to Know (Financial Literacy 104)
An Invitation
As you can see, the bulk of the book is all about what to do during medical and dental school to optimize your current and future financial situation. However, I felt it was also important to include a few chapters to at least get people started as they move into the first year of post-graduate training (or practice for general dentists).
The third section is unique and covers a lot of material you will not find on the blog, on the podcast, in the online courses, or in any of the other books. This is what I consider basic financial literacy education. I broke it down into four “100” level chapters and four more “200” level chapters (Financial Advisors, Insurance, Contracts, and Real Estate Investing).
Then I looked at the length of the book. The original WCI book was 160 pages. Boot Camp, including the appendices, was 205 pages. This thing was well over 300 pages, basically twice as thick as The White Coat Investor.
So we decided to pull four chapters out of the book and put them into a PDF. When you buy the book, you simply enter your email and the website automatically sends you the last four chapters and signs you up for our newsletter. As always you can unsubscribe from the newsletter at any time with the click of a button. The remaining book has a little over 260 numbered pages, plus another 25 or so in the front matter.
The foreword for the book is written by the esteemed Rick Ferri, current president of the John C. Bogle Financial Literacy Center, and a speaker at WCICON20.
If you are a student, I would encourage you to buy the book today. If you know a medical or dental student, this would be a very useful gift for them.
The White Coat Investor's Guide for Students: The Review
Now for a completely unbiased review of the book. It is superb. I would give it six stars if I could. The writing is superior to what you will find in either of the other two books. Obviously, an author is going to get better after writing constantly for years, but it is more than that. The arguments are more clear, pronouns are more inclusive (or mostly eliminated as is the current style), and the organization of thought and flow is top-notch.
The book is also a lot prettier. The layout and images are more professional (this will really be noticed on the Kindle version where images are particularly tough to do well), there are endnotes and references, and every chapter is summarized in a “main ideas” section at the end.
The beloved Additional Resources feature at the end of each chapter is also preserved. However, every link in the print book also now includes a QR code. Remember, these students are all far more tech-savvy than I was in school. They can simply scan the QR codes and pull the link up right on their phone as they read.
The content itself is high-quality and high-yield, as you have come to expect from The White Coat Investor. The author nicely balances the fact that doctors should not be primarily motivated by money with the fact that they cannot ignore it completely. He argues forcefully that students living on student loans should not feel guilty whatsoever about doing so (as long as they have a reasonable plan to take care of it after school), but, at the same time, will be glad they did what they could to minimize the size of that debt. He includes up to date information about how students are paying for school, what they owe, and how much each given specialist is likely to make after school.
There are also a bunch of chapters you might not have expected, such as a chapter on burnout. Realizing this affects a large part of the profession is important. There is a chapter that is all about the advantages and disadvantages of a non-traditional student. Apparently, some people consider me to be non-traditional since I didn't start med school until I was 24, but it turns out that's actually probably still below average. There is also a chapter arguing that most dentists who want to be financially successful and who paid for their schooling primarily with loans ought to give very serious consideration to owning their practice.
Chapter 19 (Stocks, Bonds, and Mutual Funds) is probably not going to be anyone's favorite chapter. However, many of the reviewers who read it thought it was really important information that many of them had never seen anywhere else. It finally helped them to understand what stocks and bonds really are.Chapter 21 contains material I've never covered anywhere else. Not the blog, not the podcast, not the course. It was fun to research and write, and I think financial history is more important than ever to understand in order to comprehend today's markets and stay the course with a reasonable plan. Even non-students are likely to find the book worthwhile just to get the eight financial literacy chapters at the end. They're almost as long as the entire first WCI book.
The Giveaway to First-Year Students
Yes, we're selling this book on Amazon. Yes, we hope lots of medical and dental students buy it. We're still running a for-profit business here. But that wasn't the only reason I wrote it. You may have noticed during the 2020 Scholarship Week that we didn't give away a box of books to every member of the winners' classes like we have in the past. That was deliberate because we knew we had this new book coming out.
Instead of just giving it to five classes of students, we're going to give a copy of this book to every first-year student at every MD school, DO school, and dental school in the country. There are about 22,000 first-year MD students, about 8,000 first-year DO students, and about 6,500 first-year dental students in the country. And we're willing to give every one of them a copy of this book. That's a 36,500 * $29.99 = $1,094,000 value. We're literally giving away over a million dollars worth of books here. However, if just 10% of them will read it and apply the information in their lives, it will likely be worth at least a few hundred thousand dollars to each of them. By giving away a million dollars worth of books to first-year students, we can eventually help create over a billion dollars in increased doctor wealth. This might be one of the greatest things we ever accomplish here at The White Coat Investor.
Becoming a Champion
However, we're not going to mail out 36,500 books individually. Sorry. Nor are we going to send them to the medical and dental school Dean's offices and hope they pass them out to you. We're only going to ship them to a volunteer “champion” in the first-year class to distribute to their classmates.
If you are selected to be the champion for your class, we'll ship the books directly to you and we'll include a WCI T-shirt for you. If you send us back a picture of you and your classmates with the books, we'll ship you a WCI Yeti tumbler too! All you have to do is be a full-time, first-year student in good standing (yes, we'll check) and promise to distribute them. We're going to tell your classmates who you are, so if you just go sell the books on eBay, they're not going to be very happy with you.
April 15 is the Volunteer Deadline!
This is your chance to be the hero to your classmates, but you only have until April 15th to volunteer. Then you and your classmates will have to buy your own books. No, we're not giving out Kindle copies. No, we're not giving out audiobooks. Just paperbacks.
If you would like to be the White Coat Investor Champion for your FIRST YEAR class, take charge of this book distribution, and get some free swag, you can sign up below. If this goes well, we may do it again this Fall with the new class of first-year students.
I Am a First-Year US MD/DO/Dental Student and Want to Be the Champion for My Class!
Overall, the new book is well worth $29.99, but, when combined with changing the lives of tens of thousands of young doctors, it might be the most important thing The White Coat Investor ever does.
Buy The White Coat Investor's Guide for Students Today!
What do you think? Have you read the book? What did you like about it? Comment below!
Excited to read this book and recommend to my friends who are currently in Med School. Thanks Jim and WCI!
I’m really excited to read this!
Will you sell the book on Bookshop.org so I can support local stores instead of amazon?
We went to a big effort to sell the first book elsewhere but sold very few copies through any outlet outside of Amazon and ended up getting it pirated because of it. So we’re just sticking with Amazon. Sorry!
Super stoked for all first year medical students! I’m just one year to far ahead, but I’ll for sure be spreading the word about your free books. Such a great way to help the future generation of physicians. Thank you!
Sorry, guess you’ll have to fork out $9.99 for it!
What a generous gift to medical trainees! This is an amazing gesture that will have a measurable impact on the next generation of doctors and dentists. Bravo.
Thanks for your kind words. At least 35 classes have taken us up on it already.
An incredibly generous act. Kudos. I hope this message reaches all med student bodies
Hello! Will there be any giveaways for any 3-4th years? The second and third parts are exactly what I’m looking for. It looks more geared than your other two books. Thanks!
No, sorry! 🙂 But it’s only $9.99 on Kindle. I think it’s a fantastic investment for you.
dude god bless you man! Hopefully this will really promote financially literacy, especially eliminating the friction of cost- free is any person’s favorite price!
Just got it in the mail today from Amazon and very excited to read! I do have a question, how do I access the last 4 chapters? I don’t think I received an email containing the pdf. I must’ve missed something.
There are three places in the book that explain how to get the last four chapters. Is there some reason you want to read them first? 🙂
Haha sorry, just getting ahead of myself! I should’ve opened the book before writing that post lol
This wouldn’t happen to apply for those going *into* their first year of medical school this fall, would it? Just wanted to clarify, thanks!
It might, but if that occurs it will be announced this Fall. The current giveaway is for those who are currently first years.
Great post that encourages to start reading a book as fast as possible! It will be especially useful for all first-year medical students! Hope they won’t lose their chance to gain new such helpful knowledge!
Read your book. I think it is super helpful and is also very well written and targeted to healthcare professionals.
I just released a book on Amazon that might also be of interest to your readers especially those who read through Chapter 19 of the White Coat Investors Guide and want to learn furthermore about pharma and biotech stocks. The book is called “The Profit Pill” and is currently available for free on Kindle Unlimited for a limited time.
Once again, great job on the book and love your blog!
You must have ordered it right away and read it very quickly to be able to post an ad for yours here so quickly after publication. 🙂
Thank you so much! This is such an amazing opportunity! Do you know when you’ll start to reach out to those who filled out the form? I have a small nagging doubt I misspelled my email.
It’s just turned to be more time consuming than we thought to verify enrollment. We’ll get it done.
Heard about this on your podcast today! Very generous of you, but I don’t want our DPM colleagues to be left out… will 1st year DPM students be included as White Coat Investor Champions? (Many DPM programs are integrated with DO medical schools). Thanks for the consideration!
Now this year. We’ll see how this goes this Spring and perhaps it will be modified in the Fall. Remember, the book is only $9.99 on Kindle. Nobody is “left out” at that price.
I heard about this from your podcast today and really love the initiative, thank you for presenting us with this opportunity! I was wondering though if I’m a little “too early” to apply for this, as I am going to be an incoming first year medical student and I just received my medical school acceptance letter and submitted my deposit. I start in fall of 2021, but I still want to fill out the application, is it alright if I do that?
Please don’t, we’ll just throw it away.
This is for current first year students. We don’t yet know if we’ll be giving any books away this Fall to next year’s first year students or not. We’re going to see how this goes first.
If you want the book now (and I think it would be a great purchase) I’d buy it. If you end up getting a free one down the road you can pass it along.
That’s understandable, just wanted to get clarification if we fit within the criteria beforehand. I’ll look forward to future opportunities if there are ever available. Thank you for your response!
This seems like a great opportunity! I hope you will be able to continue this giveaway in the future. I am incoming MS1 in the Fall of 2021 and I would love to be an ambassador for my class one day. I am new to your blog and it is very informative thus far, do you have a financial mentorship program for students?
I don’t know what a financial mentorship program for students would look like but if it involves a free blog, newsletter, podcast, videocast, forum, facebook group, and subreddit and some free/cheap books, then yes, we have one. 🙂
Hey quick question for you- I tried becoming the champion for VCU dental school but when I went to sign up it was already under the list of schools that people that had signed up. I’ve waited to see if anyone in our school has reached out to us to let us know they have a copy for us, but no one has. I’m really interested in getting this book from you as I have your previous ones and love them. Is it possible for you to tell me the name of the VCU student that was the champion for our school so I can reach out to him/her to get the copy?
Hi Garrett, I’ll check it out and get back to you.
Thank you! I really appreciate.
I’ve sent you an email with the name of the VCU champion. However, they have not completed the required verification form (deadline 4/27). In order for VCU to get books, we need your champion to send in the form before 4/27. If your champion has decided to drop out, I’ve included instructions for how you can apply.
Hi Dr. Dahle,
I was just getting ready to pick up a copy of the original White Coat Investor’s Guide when I saw this. I’d love to be a champion for my class at TUSOM if there’s anyway to still make this happen!
I think you missed the deadline, sorry! The good news is the Kindle version is just $9.99.
Hello!
I would like to be the champion for my class, OHSU MD 2024. Can I obtain a copy of the White Coat Investor?
Thank you for your advice!
You’ve missed the deadline unfortunately.
My wife and I are both 30 year old chemical engineers, though she hasn’t found the work very rewarding and is considering going back to school to become a doctor. I see you have a chapter on non-traditional students, would this book be valuable in helping her decide a school and specialty? Or would this be more suited for after she started school? Any other recommendations for helping in making this decision? Just trying to support her as she considers the change, thanks for all the help!
Yes.
But even if she hates it, it’s only $10-30.
Mostly careers are about finding something that pays reasonably well and that you would enjoy doing for a few decades. While burnout is at record heights, there are still lots of us in medicine that love it and some who started out as Chemical Engineers.
As a current medical student that started medical school in 2020 I received one of these book for free (thank you very much). Will the upcoming class of students (starting in 2021) also be receiving a free copy or was this just for the group of students that started in 2020? Thank you in advance for your help.
We still haven’t made a decision on that yet. If you want the book, I’d just buy it. It’s only $9.99 on Kindle.
When will the audible version be out? Too many hours on the road between rotations, only way I’ll get anything done is via audio! Thanks!
Sorry, the person in charge of that is balancing several projects (and is a new mother) right now. Hopefully soon.
As a mom in med school, I totally understand! Congrats to the new mom.
Hi there! Do you know who the student charged with distributing to the NYU College of Dentistry Class of 2024 is? I never received a book. Thank you!
I’ve got bad new for you. We selected a champion for your class. YOUR SCHOOL forbid the champion from distributing books to you (the champion’s classmates). I’m very sorry, but they don’t seem to want you to learn anything about managing finances, at least from me. At least for free from me. The book is only $9.99 on Kindle though.
Got accepted into an MD a few months ago (very very excited!). I read the “White Coat Investor” last year and it gave me the foundation to become a more financially literate person. So, I am very excited to read a book catered to my peers and I. With that being said, I hope that the white coat investor champion program goes exceedingly well so that I can become the champion for my class (c/o 2026) to help them and their future mentees have a financially successful career.
Im an attending (8 years out) and recently found your site. Its gold by the way. Thank you. I have changed the way I invest because of you and I so appreciate it. Im one of those that accidentally followed many of your recommendations by just being frudgle out of residency and succeeded. I would like to pass on some tips to my residents. I teach mostly interns. Was wondering which book you would recommend for them? This one seems to be a little late if they are already out of medical school. So, if i were to buy them one of your books, do you think The original White Coat Investor would be best?
Thank you again!
The original white coat investor book is more inspirational (you can do this!), the bootcamp book is more prescriptive (do this, then do that). Both could be right for the right person.
While everyone knows about nursing shortages, few people know about the terrifying lack of medical laboratory scientists (formerly “med techs”). Without a laboratory, hospitals cannot function. I met with MLS students yesterday and was absolutely shocked by how little they know about personal finance and investing. Most come from very modest backgrounds. Do you think this book would be helpful for these students, or is it really geared toward medical and dental students?
95% of personal finance is the same for everyone, so yes, I think it would be helpful. Especially the financial literacy section at the end.