MI REWIND: THE MILLIONAIRE FASTLANE

W/ MJ DEMARCO

02 August 2024

Clay Finck chats with MJ DeMarco about why he chose entrepreneurship as his path to building wealth, his journey in building a successful business, how he knew it was time to sell what he built, why following your passion is bad advice when starting a business, what MJ’s definition of wealth is, ways in which entrepreneurs can validate their business ideas, and much more!

MJ DeMarco is an entrepreneur and international best selling author of The Millionaire Fastlane, Unscripted, and The Great Rat Race Escape. He is also the founder of The Fastlane Forum, which is a worldwide forum for entrepreneurs with over 70,000 users and nearly 1,000,000 contributions.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why MJ chose entrepreneurship as his preferred path to building wealth.
  • MJ’s journey to building his first successful business.
  • How he knew it was time to sell out of his business. 
  • Why following your passion in starting a business is bad advice.
  • What MJ’s definition of wealth is.
  • Ways in which entrepreneurs can validate their business ideas.
  • And much, much more!

TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

MJ DeMarco (00:03):

The challenge in that particular business was no longer there. It wasn’t exciting. And also this was right before Uber started getting into my space, and I recognized that I needed a significant technological injection into the company, along with multiple more employees. I mentioned I only had five employees.

Clay Finck (00:27):

On today’s episode, I’m joined by MJ DeMarco. MJ is an entrepreneur and international bestselling author of The Millionaire Fastlane, Unscripted, and the Great Rat Race Escape. He’s also the founder of The Fastlane Forum, which is a worldwide forum for entrepreneurs with over 70,000 users and nearly 1 million contributions. During this conversation, we uncover why MJ chose entrepreneurship as his path to building wealth, his journey in building his own successful business, how he knew it was time to sell what he had built, why following your passion is bad advice when starting a business, what MJ’s definition of wealth is, ways in which entrepreneurs can validate their business ideas, and much more. With that, I hope you enjoy today’s episode with the one and only MJ DeMarco.

Intro (01:15):

You’re listening to Millennial Investing by The Investor’s Podcast Network where your hosts, Robert Leonard and Clay Finck, interview successful entrepreneurs, business leaders, and investors to help educate and inspire the millennial generation.

Clay Finck (01:28):

Welcome to the Millennial Investing Podcast. I’m your host, Clay Finck. And on today’s episode, I’m joined by MJ DeMarco. MJ, it’s a pleasure having you on.

MJ DeMarco (01:44):

Hey, Clay. Great to be here. Thanks for the invite.

Clay Finck (01:48):

I listened to your book, The Millionaire Fastlane, a couple of times a few years back and really enjoyed your message and thought it was a pretty cool thing that you were the one actually reading the book to me. I just really liked that aspect of it. And I had the chance to read through your physical copy as well over the past few days in preparation for this interview. Just a fantastic book for anyone that just wants to learn how to fast track their path to building lasting wealth. Now, MJ, conventional wisdom tells us that you need to invest 10 to 20% of each paycheck from your job into an index fund to build sustainable wealth. That’s the tried and true path that many people aren’t willing to really deviate from. When did you decide that this wasn’t the right path for you and you wanted to push for something different and maybe bigger?

MJ DeMarco (02:36):

I decided that at a pretty young age when I saw that people who had success in that, I guess, domain were living pretty much mediocre lives, and that did not appeal to me. I didn’t want to be subjected to a budget. I liked fast cars. I liked nice houses. I like eating out four or five times a week if I want to. And so that is not my definition of wealth is constraining yourself to a particular existence so you can call yourself wealthy but you really can’t do anything or you can’t have a good experience with life, whether it’s travel or living in the house you want or living how you want to live. So for me, I was never happy with that plan although I did accept that it is a viable plan if you want to invest 30, 40, 50 years into it with the job and whatnot, and pretty much relinquish control over your financial plan to the stock market, which I do not like doing.

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