Continuing Financial Education Week 2020!
What are you doing to boost your financial literacy this year? Reviewing a stack of books to give you some new options.
What are you doing to boost your financial literacy this year? Reviewing a stack of books to give you some new options.
I haven't been bitten by a radioactive spider. Nevertheless, I have a superpower and you can have it too. Just stop "sucking at money."
We all have money problems. The sooner and more effectively you address yours, the sooner you will be on the path to financial security.
Reviewing a few more books today for CFE week. Also answering reader Q&As on how to invest your HSA, budgeting for a wedding, kids' 529s vs retirement saving, and lots more.
The premise of the Pareto Principle is that 20% of the work will give you 80% of the results. Here's the 20% doctors need to know about successful investing.
If you keep doing what you've always done, you'll keep getting what you've always gotten. Here's my attempt to motivate you to take control and change your financial life.
Physicians are notorious for being bad with money. Today we're going to assign some blame for that phenomenon. Physician finances have three enemies and we're going to expose them today.
Are you a doc that is always finding opportunities to educate your co-workers about finances? Consider increasing your audience and reach with lecturing. Today's guest, Dr Nathaniel Minnick, is doing just that.
The Foolish Corner is the highest-yield behavioral finance book I know of and I can't recommend it more highly.
Continuing financial education week is here again! Today we review three financial history books to consider for your CFE book this year.
One of the lessons frequently taught to me growing up was that I was free to choose anything I like, but that I wasn't free to choose the consequences of my choices. Those were attached to the choices, like two ends of a stick.
Retiring at 45 is actually pretty straightforward. Physician on Fire provides this 10 Step Guide to Doing It.
Some successes come from luck, while other successes come from smart decisions. But a great deal of financial success comes from putting yourself in a position where luck can do its thing.