Future Proofing You. Jay Samit

Future Proofing You - Jay Samit


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millionaire. For a year, I mentored one individual on how to turn his perseverance into his first million dollars. I took detailed notes of each weekly session and I mapped out the process. My goal wasn't to just mentor one person but to come up with a program by which anyone could Future Proof their life. You now hold in your hand the knowledge and the results of our experiment.

      Since many first‐time entrepreneurs blame a lack of money or access to investment capital as the reason for their failure, I needed to find someone who was broke. My mentor would not get a penny from me (though, in full disclosure, I did buy him pizza at our lunch meetings). I also wanted to show would‐be entrepreneurs that success could be achieved without raising any capital. He would have to use his skills to create a business that wasn't capital intensive and learn to reinvest his own profits to fuel his first year's growth.

      Second, I wanted someone who had no external advantages. I wanted someone with little or no corporate experience. Someone who had only worked entry‐level jobs so that every reader could relate. My mentee had to come from working‐class roots. No entrepreneurs in the family to use as role models or to lean on for a loan. I also wanted someone with a limited social network. I wanted to find the proverbial fish out of water. Someone new to Los Angeles with no safety net.

      Lastly, I was not going to open any doors nor share any of the business connections in my vast global network. I wouldn't ask friends to throw business his way or help him find employees. For this experiment to be truly fair, my mentee would have to build his own universe of contacts and associates. By setting these conditions, I knew that the mentee would feel the sense of pride and accomplishment that comes with achieving something on your own. I needed him to internalize that feeling and use it to catapult him over each new obstacle in his path.

      Though my methods for quickly generating wealth can be applied by young and old alike, I really wanted to find a millennial. There is a prevailing cultural stereotype that millennials are spoiled and afraid of hard work. Many of my peers have written off millennials as a pampered generation who were given trophies for just showing up and expect accolades for everything they say or do. Having raised two hard‐working millennial sons, I didn't believe the entitled narrative. I wanted to find someone who would obliterate those preconceptions. If this book was going to help the largest generation our planet had ever seen succeed, then I wanted one of their own to lead the charge.

      In my mind, the rules for engagement were set. I was prepared to bet my entire professional reputation on one person. All that I needed to do now was find my mentee.

      When the student is ready, the teacher will appear.

      When the student is truly ready, the teacher will disappear.

      Lao Tsu

      Vin Clancy grew up in a poor, working‐class family in London. He and his older sister lived in council housing (or as we call it in the States: government projects) in the gritty Shepherd's Bush neighborhood. A few years before his birth, Shepherd's Bush became internationally infamous when three Metropolitan police officers were gunned down in a routine traffic stop. Vin's father was a caretaker and his mom worked when work was available. Throughout his childhood in council housing, Vin was surrounded by poverty, violence, and substance abuse. At 12 years old, he used to stop by the Blue Hawaii restaurant on Richmond Road on his way home from school because they gave out free glasses of pineapple juice. One day, one of the waiters who was supposed to hand out the juice didn't show up, and young Vin was offered a job. Earning four pounds for a few hours work, Vin kept the job all through high school. In his early twenties, Vin worked a series of odd jobs, including at the popular British grocery chain Tesco. Directionless, Vin even tried a sales job, but soon grew bored and quit. Until recently, he had been living in the UK on welfare, collecting about $100 a week. Statistically, a young man with his background was more likely to end up dead or in prison than a self‐made millionaire.

      A million dollars isn't cool. You know what's cool? A billion dollars.

      Sean Parker in The Social Network

      Though not a programmer, he taught himself how to use a computer and put all his focus into learning how social media works and, as he would call it, how to “hack the system.” Vin networked with others online, learned which tools could help grow a person's social media following and how to interact with followers. Like so many of his generation, Vin's dream was to be famous online and move to Hollywood. He wanted to be a social media influencer, like Kylie Kardashian or British Minecraft reviewer Daniel Middleton, who are paid millions each year just for posting branded social media content. He was determined to become a self‐made social media marketing expert and had created a personal following of over 100,000 twenty‐somethings without spending a penny. Vin scrimped and saved, sold everything he had in the world, and with stars in his eyes, bought a one‐way ticket to Los Angeles. He came to America ready to build his personal Vin Clancy brand. When fame and fortune quickly proved elusive, he tried to pivot his skills to being paid to generate followers for others. Turns out, even in Hollywood, finding paying clients


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