My dad was a physician, he would always say that the top 3rd of med school graduates would become academics, the middle 3rd would make the best doctors, and the bottom 3rd would make the most money.
@@lelele1408 Probably because they went into medicine for the money in the first place. It's not a recipe for someone being passionate enough to excel in the field, but the supply and demand for doctors means they can still get paid very well. There may also be a difference in ethics/values...
@@lelele1408 imagine the same situation with hookers, the one without self worth will get more money than the one that does it because its her passion.
@@lelele1408 Because they would be ambitious enought to take risk. Which would result in several big winners and most losing out on those bets. But in sum because of those few winners bottom third would get more money as a group.
I could have told you this without a study. I'm an attorney that does wealth management and protection for the 1%, so I deal with the 1% every day. Being charismatic and lucky is far more important than being intelligent when it comes to being in the 1%.
charisma and people skills are arguably as important as intelligence. I know a lot of very intelligent people who are shy, not very assertive, and not great at communication. There are borderline autistic people in maths and sciences that are amazing at their jobs but would not do well managing a company
I knew a guy at work that was forced around from job to job within the company because he was "dumb". Apparently he received a raise every time this happened because of negotiating power and a "diversified" resume.
At my company, he'd be fired on the spot LOL. There's always more to guys like these than meets the eye. Family connections in top management, or something similar that a regular employee has no idea about.
@@fhujf Or drug connections. I know of someone that got promoted got a new job, quit that job and got the same job with the promotion to top it all because they personally knew the president and manager, and they knew each other because of weed deals in the past. It’s not always what you know, it’s also who you know; and yes, lots of luck with that one. XD
Survivorship bias is a big part. Dumb people gamble for success while smart people are slow, methodical, and disciplined. Taking huge risks with huge rewards can reap terrible consequences but if you succeed at your venture your ceiling for success is far higher. When you look at these top earners, you're looking at the gamblers who succeeded and missing the mountain of failures who you will never hear of.
Glad someone pointed this out. This is true for countless situations. W/ the exception of stupid influencers, you can't be dumb to be even moderately successful (even if you use income as the metric). You don't need to be book smart but you have to be smart in various areas.
Consider yourself lucky because you have access to social media, basically changing the entire marketing game. Most of my time marketing was spent by myself learning here on TH-cam and viewing where I failed and searching for an answer on TH-cam. Although connections help get to success. You can do it on your own it'll simply take longer. The best trait to have is perseverance.
@@aigoated "Doing it on your own" still implies doing business with others to aquire wealth, human wealth is an indication of social connections, from monopoly's to inheritance, if you could build your own castle yourself you woudn't create currency as a King you'd just do it, you only create currency when you reach your own limitation and reach out to others.
The second comma in that sentence should be between the r and the end quotation “…poor,” Punctuation always goes within the quotations, unless you are doing a parenthetical citation. Not trying to be rude or anything, I just have grammar ocd.
That was not what the video was about, but okay. It was just more about the normal distribution of intelligence impact on the studies results. But you can of curse just say something based on no logic connected reality that some random person is stupid if you want to do that, you do you.
I believe luck plays a role much bigger than people are comfortable to admit. Two people with the same intellect and skills can have a completely different life based in what country they born and from what parents.
Luck is decidedly *the* deciding factor to success. Hard work and calculated, intelligent decisions can help luck along but without an initial "lucky break", it is usually very, very difficult to create a successful business that can last long term. Being lucky might be something as simple as getting the right customers (eg. willing to do business again in the future), getting the right kind of exposure at the right time or marketing "the thing" at the right time (eg. the OG iPhone prototype was basically a broken mess when it was first revealed to the public).
Personally I've been wondering if it might be a combination of becoming more risk adverse and having to much structured education leading to 'institutionalized' thinking. The less educated 'dumb' person might be better able to recognize an opportunity because they aren't as educated on what can be done and more willing to take the risks needed to take advantage of it.
I agree though I'd add that it's luck as a function of opportunities offered by wherever you are right now physically and what you're doing there. Moving yourself physically and temporally can greatly change your luck hence the saying of "show me your friends and I'll show you who you are". It's not the friends themselves per se but what circles they are in. And if you're an interesting person in the sense of having wide interests, plus have an open mind, a lot of people will humor you a conversation if you happen to be around them - no matter what your income bracket is at present moment.
@@olstar18 I think it is less so that less educated people are better able to recognize opportunities and more so that there are more people we would consider less educated trying to find such opportunities than more educated people. It's like a lottery, more "dumb" people win them because less "smart" people play them since the "smart" people recognize that the expected value of playing the lottery isn't worth their money (unless of course the lottery is set up with a high expected value, in which case its a bunch of MIT students winning them).
its not about been smart or dumb but getting the right update on. investment planning, for me i was advised to diversify my portfolio among several assets such as stocks and bonds since this can protect my portfolio for retirement of about $150k. I want to know: Do I keep contributing to my portfolio in these unstable markets, or do I look into alternative sectors?
The professionals presently control the market since they not only have the essential business strategy but also have access to inside information that the general public is not aware of.
This is why I entrusted a fiduciary with my investment decisions. Many underestimate advisors until emotions lead to losses. My advisor crafted a tailored strategy aligning with my long-term goals, guiding entry and exit points for the equities I focus on. This has grown my portfolio to over $850k. My personal best so far
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I love how everybody and their mother on social media always tell people to quit their 9-5 and go into business. Yeah like every body can be an entrepreneur
Actually this video is only applicable to a weird small % of people. Myself include. I'm no dummy though. I graduated with a degree in engineering. But I quickly realized I wasn't as good as my peers. Quitting my high paying job to start my own business was a much better option but I had to be clever enough to come up with a niche business model and have the level of crazy to actually go through with it. It's a different type of intelligence. But I certainly lack a lot of conventional intelligence. For example, I think kinda slow and have poor working memory but I have above average creativity.
Don't. Most people can't handle it. There is a reason business founders are less than 1% of the population. There is a reason 50% of startups fail in the first five years. There is a reason less than half of startups turn a profit in the first three years. I started my business in 2007. I've seen multiple suppliers, competitors, collaborators and clients go down over the years for various reasons. It's not a joke. Some founders shut down gracefully, some crashed and burned, others rolled into another venture (sometimes more than once) stronger than before. That said it can be pretty freaking awesome to call all the shots, and it's treated me well. I'll never go back to being an employee.
Many people who had to go through the grind were motivated thanks to sunken cost, it really helps, especially once your standards become realistic and you’re more thankful for the little things.
One thing that wasn’t talked about is that being so much smarter than the average person makes it harder to relate to average people, aka the people who make up the vast majority of the economy and from whom you have to earn your money. It helps to be a bit smarter than your average customer, but not too smart that you can’t even understand them.
This is our issue with politics as well. When someone was raised with such a vastly different lifestyle and income bracket, it's extremely hard for them to have empathy and understanding for those less fortunate. I'm reminded.of the politician here in the U.S. who recently claimed he's never seen a child go hungry and equated him not having eaten since breakfast and now being hungry to that being the exact same situation of childhood hunger, completely trivializing the issue. 😒
@@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley exactly. When people insulted Trump by calling him a “poor man’s version of what a rich man should look like” they were actually pointing out the reason why he’s more successful as a politician than say, Mitt Romney.
I can't tell you how many times I've heard this sentiment and how wrong it is. You "being smart" doesn't make it hard to relate to people, having an underdeveloped emotional intelligence does. You should pretty much be able to empathise with anyone, even if you don't like them that much you should be able to form an understanding of how their brain works. Annoying to hear all these ex gifted kids who've never done the work in building their social/emotional intelligence complaining that it's their enormous intellect preventing them from doing so, and not the neglect of a learned set of skills.
As someone who went to top undergrad and graduate institutions, I would add that most truly smart people are looking to accomplish something other than maximal income with their careers. They'll happily sacrifice income to feel like they are using their intellect to improve the world. I think this often stems from so many adults telling gifted children that they hope they'll use their talents to make the world a better place when they grow up. I don't think average kids are groomed to expect such things from their work and feel freer to just chase money. Then again, it could just be that smart people demand more from their work than just income or are more likely to refuse to make the sacrifices to their personal lives that chasing very high income often entails.
Yeah I’m glad you mentioned this because this kind of discussion applies if you’re defining success as making lots of money. Other people have differing ways of measuring their success
I think the expression groomed to become a better human is quite diminishing 😅 I think that a inteligent person would release oneself from the cuffs of brainwash in a relative young age. I think that a inteligent courioise persons will understand reality in a different way than others do. And will reach conclusions that lead them to direct their work onto making the world a better place.
I also share similar opinion. My smart friends often have idealistic value and their goal is to improve life of others or the make the world a better place. Often involves voluntary work. In contrast, average guy will chase career and start making money for a more realistic goal. I also think average people has the confidence to make decision while smart people always hesitate as they fear to be wrong. Which makes average people a better choice for professional world that requires decision making.
I think it helps to understand this issue by hearing what the truly smart people think too. I have the luck to have met an engineer who was working for NASA's JPL. He told me that if suddenly the lab says that they don't have funds anymore to pay the scientists, they would still go to work as usual. Hyperbole or not, I think it gave the idea of what is the driving force behind those scientists. Also, here's a couple of quotes from Terence Tao, some say arguably the greatest mathematician alive: "Okay, I don't think it would count as evil, but a lot of my PhDs, they go into the finance industry, Wall Street, and typically they earn ridiculous salaries. In fact, I don't even know exactly how much they earn. It's probably good for my health not to know." "Tao himself was once head-hunted by a hedge fund. 'But I don't know, these things never sort of really interested me.'" - Stephanie Wood, Sydney Morning Herald, March 5, 2015
As a retired support helper, I’d say the best job right now is working from home for an investment manager who hires you to handle records. I make over $390k a year. You just need the right connections and contacts to land a job that could change your life and your family’s future
Wow, this is amazing! You're absolutely right it's all about having the right connections to find a good job. Honestly, I've been looking for a job like this for a while now.
Please, I’d love more info on this! Some of my friends have been talking about it, and working remotely for an investment firm is exactly what I want! I’m currently jobless, so any help with the right information would be greatly appreciated I’m a great fit for this type of job. please help how can i apply.
To apply for a role like this, you’ll need strong communication skills, especially the ability to guide and convince clients about the best investment options. You don’t necessarily need extensive knowledge upfront, as you’ll receive guidance on working with clients. Experience in reading and writing financial reports is also important. For opportunities, reach out to Graciela Lynne Schriewer online, who helps people connect with investment firms.
I love to see an analysis on how personal ethics plays into this dynamic as well. Having worked in corporate jobs, I've noticed that the people who can "turn off" their personal ethics and do things that they would never do outside the work place, often get promotions before employees who refuse to behave in unethical ways. I remember seeing a video clip of a Ted talk where the presenter said that there are more clinical psychopaths in high paid positions then in the average population, and all the "business leaders" in the audience looked shocked. My reaction was, "that doesn't surprise me." No one can turn off their ethical code as quickly a clinical psychopath. In other words, you don't have to be clinical psychopath to get ahead, but it helps.
I mean, if you keep worrying about all the little people all the time you’re not gonna have time to make that dough. Gotta make sacrifices. Everything in life has a price, even being rich
@@KhiemNguyen-ly1wz Yeah, but the difference is that some people are willing to pay the price while others don't. Otherwise everone would dream of becoming a paid undercover murderer for the secret service or so. Most people do have empathy that permits them from adapting towards inhumane work ethics. And more often than not, how much empathy you have is dependend upon genetics and early childhood trauma far more than on actual socialization.
@@Vercusgames That's correct. Lying and cheating is the fast lane to the riches, but it can be accomplished without lying and cheating too. Buy the bottom, sell near to the top. That's it. This is the job. Even a 5 year old can trade in Crypto highly successful with only trading on RSI and absolutely basic information. But most people just don't do it. They think it's some kind of magic and must be more complicated, but it's not.
@@Vercusgames Making big money doesn't correlate with intelligence. If there would be correlation, all of these University PhD's would be the riches people on the planet. It has to do in what field you are (is it a new one where the money is?), if you make a business or just work for some other guy (if work 9-to-5 you probably will never become rich) and if you know how money works (investing). What makes you money in order of possibility to get rich: 1.) a job (low possiblity, because least risky) 2.) a business 3.) investing/speculation If you believe everybody who gets rich is an a-hole or corrupt, I really can't help you. Then you need to alter your mindset or educate yourself on what money is and how it works. Hope my comment is of help for you. Wish you the very best!
My father had a masters in engineering. There came a time after being in the work world for a number of years that he began to think about getting his PhD. He looked around at the various levels of people he worked with and decided it would be a better idea to get degree in management. Not long after he found himself hiring and firing PhD's on a regular basis.
Sometimes you can hire and fire people, but still not earn much more than they do. But specifically about PHD, it mainly benefits those who work at university or science lab. They, too, are hired and fired by a manager. In general PHD is worth spending money on mostly if you have extra money, and everyone in your social environment already has PHD.
From my experience many PhD holders are a prick...refuse to listen to people below them..undermine techinicians and operators..always treat machine and process theoretically and causing major headache to engineering and production department and worst of all i've got 2 warning because i didnt appear on cctv working and operating the machine (i was operating on other machine and the machine wasnt in cctv field of view)..
We live in a society where being famous and good looking is valued more than intelligence and hard work. Look at all these influencers making loads of passive income doing nothing but posting on social media. Meanwhile professionals like doctors, engineers, and teachers are undervalued considering how central they are to the functioning of a modern civilization. It really feels like Americans put enterainment above other priorities like healthcare education, and infrastructure decelopment.
Culture is much more involved in keeping civilizations running than pragmatists will ever admit 🤷🏻♂️ Teachers should definitely be paid more for that reason though
The problem we have is because Most people always taught that " you only need a good job to become rich " . These billionaires are operating on a whole other playbook that many don't even know exists.
" It is remarkable how much long term advantage people like us have gotten by trying to be consistently not stupid , instead of trying to be very intelligent."
The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on government paycheck, especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a time to invest in Stocks, Forex and Digital currencies.
I also keep seeing lot's of people testifying about how they make money investing in Stock, Forex and Crypto Trade(Bitcoin) and I wonder why I keep loosing. Can anyone help me out or at least advice me on what to do.
As a statistician, I'm very glad with how you presented this study. Survivorship bias, Simpsons paradox and all one hundred other biases, even plain population proportion considerations are all too often overlooked
Jesus Christ died to save you from sin and death. If we die without knowing/accepting Him as our Lord and Savior - Hell becomes very REAL! Jesus in John 14:6 says He is the ONLY way to Heaven, there is no other way. He is also LIFE! He grants us life - Eternal life with Him in Heaven. Say Yes to Jesus Christ today ! He is knocking on the door of your heart, let Him in. He loves you so much 🙏☺️.
@@thcg-evangelismministrychi5477 If he actually loved me he wouldnt shower me with an endless streak of bad things. Get your bs out of this comment section.
I studied physics in college and work as a software engineer. This video is true. I could go start businesses left and right and make 10x as much but at an opportunity cost of ~200k/year. Unless this business could make me 10M+, staying put has a better expectation value. I already have a fulfilling life lol
How you get to such a high required business value? If you'd choose the most promising of those alleged business ideas, keep your job until you get funding and proof of concept, you might get a 10% success chance. Then 2M+ would just be enough.
In addition to all mentioned in the video there’s also probably less overthinking, resulting in more confidence and quicker decision making. 1% probably have a lot of their group who succeed through proximity to other successful people. .i.e. networking through either schooling, families etc
The swedish Wallenberg family is on their sixth generation of cultivated wealth. No one can study or work hard to get the Wallenberg family name. And when they appoint someone to chair their different controlling foundations, it's often another Wallenberg. Six generations is the upper national extreme. Most are 2-3 generations old. Wallenberg has their system of indirect control where individual parts of the family can't break things up. They're bound to their fortune.
I think it's the opposite. One with highest inteligence will sort out the problem faster. Will be more courioise,so will have more data to analize and correctly decide. But, in that regard, i think decision making is a skill. And most are not trained to assume responsability, and are always expecting others to take it from them.
I can concur with this take on why so many can’t become top 1%. Overthinking=stress= poor decisions. But also a lot has to do with luck. Being born into a wealthy family can be seen as very lucky. Or knowing someone whom is wealthy and kind. Or hitting it good with being nice to look at can also get you further in life. I’m an over thinker and a dreamer. I don’t do as much as I think and dream of things to do. I wasn’t in the lucky category with anything. Including brains. Mental illness and mental disabilities plague my overthinking mind. I’d love for a different brain. One that can work and do basic math and basic human social interactions. I can’t do either without falling apart and after overthinking about how much I’ve fallen and failed. And then intrusive thoughts of jumping off a high place. Yeah sounds sure smart brain. But also sounds really nice at times. I’m curious how other peoples brains work. Is it calm and peaceful? Or just as noisy and chaotic as my comment which would be worse if I didn’t delete half of what I was initially going to put. I can’t find an employer that can work with me. I can’t find a job. I’m that unable to do things. How in the heck am I going to get money when all I do is burden my parents with my brain. Like would it be best for the world if I never existed to begin with?
@@_Chessa_ you already know what you might have, so perhaps you might make your purpose to find how to get better? Chemical unbalance perhaps? Or you can investigate other thoughts so to overthinking about new ideas of instead focusing on yourself? Hope you find peace
@@PedroPereira-si3sy I’d love peace. Thanks for comment. I’m not sure if there is enough research on over thinking heads I’ve always liked reading up about new research on depression and anxiety/ptsd. Memory is also not a very strong point for me, so unless I write it down most things get forgotten. I focus on plants to keep my head busy. And I focus on trying to stop being self conscious and self absorbed.
This brings new meaning (or confirmation) to the old adage "It's not what you know, but who you know" that makes a difference in getting ahead in life.
Basically the people you think are dumb and making money aren't actually dumb.They are intelligent enough to know that there are enough dumb people in the market who are potential audience of whatever so called "dumb stuff"that they do
I see this all the time, my family have lots of friends/connections in their fields and they receive the latest news about job openings through their connections/friends. It amazes me how easier it is when you have good connections, but it also discourages me because it might be harder for those who try to find work on their own. Makes me wonder how I'll navigate through life on my own.
Actual rocket scientist here. I feel I am severely limiting my earning potential because I know I could start some kind of business or create my own product, but I always second guess myself and say “this is so trivial, why on Earth would somebody be stupid enough to give me money for this?” So I just never try. “Dumb” people don’t care, they just try anyway.
if it solves a problem that many have, is framed to be the solution to a problem where the problem is grave enough for you to charge your customers a relatively fair, profitable price, it will sell. Even businesses do market research like that, but there's a strategy they teach where you test the product buy selling some first, and then if it works, you scale it
Higher iq people are also more often more self aware and more consciousness. They use their slightly higher intelligence to figure out that life is more than being rich and pivot alot of their energy to becoming more secure in themselves, stop chasing power and status and learn to find meaning through more healthy pursuits. That happened to me and personally I'm relatively wealthy compared to many of my richer friends, however I'm maybe the most mentally healthy.. I find that across most of my friends
IQ?😂 sure, keep telling yourself it's a measure of intelligence. Being self aware is more about wisdom. Wisdom is superior to intelligence, wisdom is attained through empical knowledge and heuristic understanding, I had a mentor once who died at 89, he was so wise and advised me plenty but I couldn't hold a deep intellectual conversation with him. He was of course a millionaire, not from inheritance nor sacrifices to a family or social life. Wisdom is superior to anything one could acquire. Physicists will tell you that intelligence is the ability to see the future, the further you can see what impact your actions today will have on the future the more intelligent you are. I.Q. testing was developed by the US military and then dropped, I.Q. testing was then picked up by the public school system to determine children's needs. A high I.Q. can say someone may be intelligent but further observations are needed. Imagine having a high I.Q. and coronary heart disease🤷 intelligence is subjective also chance and luck happens to everyone.
I'm an Optometrist with almost 20 years experience, and would suggest avoiding any profession that deals with insurance. Some insurers have paid me the same rates since 2005 and through inflation my services were more valuable back in '05 than today. My friend who runs a plumbing company dwarfs my income because he can constantly keep charging market rates. Life is still pretty good & could have turned out a lot worse.
I remember how the Insurer chosen by my employer... had a list of about 250+ Practices... were they absolutely refused to process any claims from! I was flabbergasted! That's when I realized why Insurance companies are worth so much... and coveted by Investors: They're the legal MOB of the medical practitioners!!
Making money is not the same as keeping it there is a reason why investments aren't well taught in schools, the examples you gave are well stationed, the market crisis gave me my first millions, people shy away from hard times, I embrace them., well at least my advisor does lol
Investors should be cautious About their exposure and be wary of new buys, especially during inflation. Such high yields in this recession is only possible under the supervision of a professional or trusted advisor.
This is superb! information, as a noob it gets quite difficult to handle all of this and staying informed is 3 major cause, how do you go about this are you a pro investor?
@@PhilipDunk Not at all having monitor my porifolio performance which has made a jaw dropping $273k from just the past two quarters alone, I have learned why experienced traders make enormous returns from the seemirigly unknown market. I must say it’s the boldest decision I've taken since recently
“Vivian Carol Gioia” is my adviser and she is highly qualified and experienced inthe financial Market , she has extensive knowledge on portfolio diversification and is considered an expert in this field. I recommend researching her credentials further she has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the market.
"Be honest with yourself" is probably the best advice I've ever heard given by a TH-cam channel. 90% of people think their IQ is above average, let that number sink in. 90% of people think they are smarter than average...
OTOH, being stupidly confident helps people project a much better image of themselves, effectively opening the doors to better jobs. People that know their own limits do not usually even dare to knock at those doors because of the doubts they have. This is not ideal. Have you not had mediocre bosses, managers, politicians or leaders that seemed to be there just because they had the guts to try in the first place, where others didn’t even dare to show up!?
@@fetchstixRHD Neil Degrass Tyson said it, he claimed there was a survey done. To be fair I never did double check his claim. However most people are biased towards themselves in most things. That I know.
We were fed this huge LIE from the time we got to middle school, that we had to study hard and get a college degree to earn more money. What a crock of SH!T. Most of what I know, I taught myself. I've asked several people this question before and never got a good answer. I used to live in a tourist trap, in Michigan, and quickly found that, what you know didn't matter one bit to any interviewers. The only thing that mattered to these people is WHO You know. Unfortunately I didn't know the right people. It was and is very frustrating, and infuriating. Thank you.
Also grew up with the thought of if you don’t go to college your shit. TV portrayed this a lot. Gotten better jobs through connections, doesn’t hurt that it playing into my strengths. Ohio sucks.
When I was in undergrad, the top students went into sciences and elite academic majors, while the B and C average students often went into business and marketing, where the material was much easier and they didn't have to try or study as much. Years later, those lesser achieving students are often far wealthier because they received their education in a subject that would work for them economically, while the kids that were at the top of the class are now serving under the kids that were always too lazy to get higher grades. And if you want an explanation as to why management is always so awful...
The problem is that society praises chasing capital for the sake of more capital without considering the side effects. It's a big reason why quality of life is declining over time
@@sp123huh? that has nothing to do with the OPs topic at hand, in regards to the issue about human temperament, and the leaning to the academics, or business hustle. If you're on a rant about people working for money, just say so. But "smart" people think as well, that they're making the financially right choice as well
@@The-Dirty-Straw it has a lot to do with the topic at hand. Making money has to do with the ability to sell, not the ability to create value. Someone shilling their low quality white-label products will make more money than an engineer or a chemist who is doing much more difficult work.
It’s also why it’s the bumbling fool general in the USA military is a toxic leader. And the enlisted are sometimes smarter than officers with higher rank. I never served I’m just fussing my comment is accurate.
Being dumb may also make you more likely to take risks. Like most things in life, you only need to be good enough and there is a factor of luck in terms of being at the right place, at the right time, with the right skill set. I think the biggest factor of success is recognizing opportunities. I see opportunities all the time, they are frequent, yet I see plenty of people oblivious to them.
What I love about this channel is that not only is the videos highly resourceful, the comments are filled with people with even more resources. Reading the comments is like watching a second equally useful video.
Even though you're differentiating between Professionals and Business owners, the principles apply even INSIDE of professional fields. The extremely high paid Doctors, Bankers and lawyers are all a lot more charismatic than intelligent, because at a certain point you have to "create" demand in these fields, aka manipulating or convincing people to buy your product/come to your clinic instead of the other ones
Very true. I am for sure not one of the most intelligent people in the world. I can't even finish an IQ test because I think they are the stupidest way ever to judge intelligence. But, I know a few things very very deeply from lived experience. Deep self directed research etc. I could probably leverage these things to make a ton of money. But, I utterly abhor the sales tactics required to get people to even listen to me. .. Which sucks because some of these things are life changing. Like being able to manage allergies, pain etc with very very simple stress management techniques.
@@jfamo3552 The most important merit to be part of the Wallenberg family in Sweden is to have the last name Wallenberg. So it's a sort of meritocracy, where your bloodline is your merit.
@@jfamo3552 They've been going for six generations with their system of foundations. No single part of the family can break it all up or break out a part. They're all bound to it, if they want to live off it.
The first sentence killed me 😂. "Dumb people makes a lot more money then smart people. And it took a lot of smart people doing a study to find it out" Imagin how the scientists must have felt when reaching that conclusion. Did they feel smart or dumb.
I always figured very smart people would be less likely to go into business for themselves because they recognize that most products and services in the economy are total bullshit, and they don't want to be caught dead selling them. Would a very smart person want to run a cosmetics company or be a fitness influencer? No, but a Kardashian sure would. To be very financially successful, you need to have the same tastes as your totally ordinary customers, and that means you need to be ordinary in some ways. If you see past all of the bullshit, you won't want to create more of it. Instead, once you have enough money, you will run far far away from it.
My hypothesis is that smart people overthink things and second guess/overintellectualize too much, while the dumb people in question simply just do it and don't overthink too much. Some things can only be learnt though doing, like driving, riding a bike, learning to cook etc.
The med school fail/dropout comment hits too close to home. Luckily I have a stable career that pays decently well, but 12 years after leaving school I'm still paying off loans with tens of thousands left to pay off. Financially, it was by far the worst decision I ever and I'd have to make some really terrible decisions for that med school detour to fall to second.
The main thing I've learned from working in creative fields (design, film, etc.) for over 20 years is that your skills don't matter; who you know matters. The more people you know, the more you will know people in positions of power, and the more likely you will get a job, even if you're not fully qualified for it. Your odds increase tremendously if you're attractive and/or come from money.
For some reason, most of the class clowns from my high school ended up studying accounting and finance, and now working in the finance industry. A couple of them work in consulting companies. It's all about confidence.
Omg i was the class clown! Did STEM but my soft skills of speaking to people, managing work/expectations, and being able to translate requirements into agile stories led me to where I'm at. I'm 28 and earn $112k+ so far. Youngest, teammates are all 45+.
@@katar9090 agile is a methodology like waterfall for projects. Stories are bite sized requirements we give to a developer. So I translate requirements from the business into agile scrumban stories that a developer works on. Then after a 2 week sprint we present to the business and ensure we are on the right path. Also do analysis on how many story points we can handle per sprint.
In my experience it's been more consistently "who" you know rather than "what" you know...and that can apply to being able to capitalize on opportunities in many fields. So..network, don't burn bridges, don't be scared to say hi or have a conversation/be friendly with people in influential and decision making positions. Be confident, but as the video says ..be honest with yourself and be humble also, not arrogant. Willing to learn, to hustle and sometimes fake it (a little), till you make it. Swing for the fences and ..when..you fall,.. get up, dust off and get back at it. Keep practicing, keep learning, keep pushing forward, keep smiling and keep being grateful for everything you learn or experience. That way..when the "who" you know has a need or an opening, you're the first person that comes to mind.
it's not about smarts it's about guts. in human society, the one who has the audacity or privileged advantages to do something risky and highly profitable has always had the greatest influence and earnings.
Yup, that's my takeaway from this: - Smart people who make good, steady money are less likely to take risks. They fear for their reputation or family more than they should, which is being responsible. - Dumb people are more apt to take risks simply by virtue of who they are; they don't know they're "dumb", and they have a lot less to lose. If things don't work out for them, they just dust themselves off and try again.
So, if we all had the guts to risk starvation to collectively stay put and refuse to contribute to the economy until demands are met, then we would all be more successful than if we did not all stop contributing to profit margins and productivity to make demands?
@@evilds3261 I think he was trying to argue that risk-taking is a privilege. If you don't have absolute financial security, you're going to have to commit to regular employment - because without that income, you're going to lose your home and and up in poverty. You can't invest in starting your own business, or spend years of your life making no income at all in higher education. But if you're from a background of wealth? Sure, you can do that. You've got savings to fall back on, and in the worst case the Bank of Mum and Dad will bail you out. Yes, you might lose the gamble - but doing so won't be catastrophic, so you can afford to try and perhaps make it to the big leagues when your company becomes a huge success.
@@th3azscorpio The millionaires you met may be decent people for example investors or small business owners but, there also a lot of small businesses that get their resources in sketchy ways. That fact is even more true the richer you are so it isn’t really about personality. Don’t even get me started on corpos
@@blink-my2955 All of what you've stated is completely arbitrary, irrelevant to the point, and cant be quantified. Most businesses owners do not acquire their income via sketchy ways. Largely because their under higher scrutiny under the IRS, and the likely chances of being audited. The richer you are, personality is very much important. Especially for those self made. Without a good personality, its going to be quite difficult to network, develop good customer and employee relations, and sell whatever goods you have. Small business and corporations are not nearly even comparable. Perhaps lets get some actual life experience, and actually meet said rich people, and not try to base our perceptions around things we read on pro socialist leaning Twitter threads.
In high school I received the worst grades compared to my peers. I was probably the lower 20% in 12th grade. I joined the military when I was 19, served for 8 years and learned that I didn’t need to be smart, I needed to be ambitious. I buckled hard and 8 years later I’m cracking 130k per year. Compared to my peers today, I make 30 - 40k more. It’s ambition and goals setting.
Yep. In high school I was the only one who didn't finish it. I was however on the final picture. 3 years later I made it. Afterwards I studied and failed becoming a teacher for history and philosophy. Few years forward I'm specialist in Crypto and the only multimillionaire. And no, I have never scammed anyone. It's possible because of constant improvement. Average guy just stops learning and never shifts completely his mindset. I did. Average guy is not suitable to watch 12-16 (!) hours onto market charts and take on massive risk. His psyche isn't made for it. Average people also love to overestimate themselves, especially if they have a degree. They think they are badly intelligent like a friend of mine (MSc computer science). They told him that their technical university is elite, so they can promote themselves and he really believes it. But if you are elite, how come you work only for a bank and I am the rich guy??? His mindset isn't elite, it is mediocre. Per definition a mediocre mindset cannot achive top 1%. Only the hated, different mindset of a top 1% man can become self-made rich. The skillset for becoming rich hasn't much to do with college degrees. A degree you need to prove somebody like me, that you have a certain understanding of the topic. Not more.
In the US there is a lot of skepticism towards college education and career vocation training because there are too many people in high positions who achieved those without them and too many TH-camrs showing off that they are earning six figure salaries with no education or training. I always get that kind of conversation from those kind of people who are high earners without degrees making fun of the college educated. One reason is because they started working at a younger age and built a better network and got into those positions because they have more years in the company as a result of starting early and being promoted after someone left, retired, or got promoted. I personally made the mistake of going to college and putting off full time employment during my prime years which put me behind from those peers who have more years of work experience which is more valuable than education.
@@jacqueslee2592 Same here. Resorted to Crypto speculation et voila. No traditional career needed anymore. A friend just asked me if I plan to finish my degree => no. There isn't any need to prove to anybody else that I'd be "good enough". Degree is only for future employer. But when there is no employer, then degree is useless.
My brother is highly intelligent but he couldn’t finish his university in Peru since we had to come to America! His only set back was language and now he is a business owner and we have only been here in America for 14 years. I’m so proud! 😊
Worst combo in life would be like: Dumb + broke + paraplegic + aids + cancer + Fibromyalgia + Old + Ugly + Born in 3rd world + no family * Paraplegic, not quadriplegic cuz the upper body must have working nerves to feel that Fibromyalgia, in order to qualify.
I remember a quote from one of my favorite TV shows which is Mr. Robot and it goes, “Power belongs to the people that take it. Nothing to do with their hard work, strong ambitions, or rightful qualifications, no. The actual will to take is often the only thing that’s necessary.”
That makes total sense. At a certain point, being too stupid to recognise your own lack of capability or knowledge causes a sense of confidence that tends to trade well when seeking socially-decided position.
I'm surprised lotteries weren't mentioned at all in this. Buying a lottery ticket has an expected negative value - that's how the lottery works. But we still have a small minority of people who win the lottery. Everyone in that group of winners is someone who was willing to spend money on something with a bad risk-reward ratio, but that doesn't mean none of them won. People highly willing to take risks are going to naturally filter to the extreme ends of the scale. Or just be born rich enough you can keep taking risks until you win, that works better.
Yep, exactly. So the main takeaway of this video is that the smartest people probably DO still make the most money but only AFTER you take into account the STEEP survivorship bias in the data. It's just like gun violence statistical bias. They never want to show you how many conflicts were avoided by brandishing a firearm... Just how many total deaths there were.
@@johanneswerner7649 One thing keeping the swedish Wallenberg family fortune intact is the limits placed on the family. No single member of the family can decide to suddenly dismantle the thing. They are bound to it, in a way.
As someone who has moved into academia from running a fairly successful business I now earn less, but my metric for being a successful person has changed from financial to intellectual achievements (as long as I can support my family comfortably).
this may be true that your metric has changed, but it could also be that it "changed" because you couldn't bear running a business and now cope with justifying yourself telling "oh my metric just changed".
@@oooouaa I can see how it might look like that, but that is genuinely not how it feels. The imminent thought of 'Dr' on my passport honestly means more to me than driving something really fancy (though this is within the context of continuing financial security).
Damn, this hits home. Academics, researchers and other similar career people undergo a lifestyle where sacrificing many years of one’s youth and being disciplined in order to acquire the knowledge needed to do well is paramount. Then, oddly enough, it seems that the supply vs demand equation is really not going to reward their sacrifices. These people are, usually, condemned to a life of mediocre material rewards, most nowadays not even being able to own their own home or start a family.
When Confucius said, "A scholar sets his heart on the Way; if he is ashamed of his shabby clothes and coarse food, he is not worth listening to," I felt that.
I've known a few very rich people, and I noticed that they were all business owners, not that smart but almost obsessively locked into their business goals in a strangely simplistic but not stupid way, could talk for hours about money and investments etc so there is a level of research/passion, and most had some connections that helped them (e.g. get good deals with suppliers) though they definitely put the work in.
What I think makes dumber people richer is, being charismatic, lucky, and being bold to take risks. All about being assertive, also to note that, of course, without luck, that risk can turn out bad.
There are smart people who have no intention of earning money but rather live a more passionate, purposeful life which is a disadvantage because you are passionate on something and can't make a living out of it. Earning a lot of money is really based on luck and deceit. You have to step on other people to go to a higher level in the hierarchy.
Or, better yet, refuse to create more people so that you have fewer expenses overall and fewer responsibilities to undertake. If enough people do this, then corporations will not be able to afford to be picky and will have to invest in the citizens or else the citizens will cease to continue investing in them.
Apathy was my answer and I learned to get more bang for my life. One thing my professor taught me was that employers will always pay you less than your worth in order to remain profitable. Hence no matter who you work for you will always be paid less than your worth hence will never be rich. Moderation has always been the key to success. Knowing when enough is enough instead of trying to maximize every single decision is how you get ahead. Also there is a difference between being smart and being wise. I think wise people are likely to be rich compared to smart people who go by the books.
It’s frustrating that many still confuse the word “intelligent” with “educated”. The people described in this video as “intelligent” are actually the highly educated who tend to go into professions requiring advanced degrees. But they are still employees , which, by definition, means that there is a cap on how much they can earn. Steve Jobs dropped out of college, so he was not highly educated. But no one would ever claim that he was not intelligent. He used his intelligence, instincts and capacity for enormous amounts of hard work to build Apple and change the world of computing, and become extremely rich doing so.
This is arguing semantics but I'd say that it's not about education but rather qualification, Steve Jobs was clearly an educated man who decided pursue a risky business venture instead of a safe career in Computer Engineering or whatever it was that he was originally majoring in.
To go through those education you need intelligent. And people who finish these education and become professionals proved they are intelligent. Not everyone can do these task.
@@FreakGUY-007 Don't agree. Degrees and good grades are gotten by doing what the professor tells you to do and often applying information from an open book. It proves you can work for someone to risk hiring someone without experience in a field. I focused on learning and improving my thinking and I unavoidably got a few terrible grades with that strategy and now that I work I can hardly stand it and everyone seems slow and dumb and incapable of critical thinking. Management is even dumber and micro manages so they don't care as long as you do the dumb work they come up with...
@@lucky6666 Disagreements don't hide facts, and facts don't care about your emotions. Earning degrees and good grades isn't easy. A class in engineering or medicine shows how well you can manage and make decisions. If you think books restrict your thinking, that’s your perspective. But as someone who attended advanced physics classes, completed all assignments, and now works as an assistant professor at a university, I can tell you that my thinking hasn't been downgraded.Academics isn't for everyone. If you don't like studying and investing time in books, that's fine. You have different interests. But for me, as a bookworm whose job is teaching physics at a university, it's what I love and what works for me. So, don't degrade professionals who invest time and effort in their fields. Remember that when you need help with taxes, legal issues, health problems, or any situation requiring professional insight, you rely on those who have dedicated themselves to their professions.Work might seem dumb, and life can be tough, but the world functions this way. People live fulfilling lives and pass away.
Connections, more than "luck", will get you farther. If someone knows what you are truly capable of doing and are willing to help you, you can be introduced to people who need someone with your abilities. The person doing the introduction can give the other person a background on you emphasizing your strengths for the job and the other person will be open to meeting you because of their relationship with the first person.
As a Swede who has done this test three times, I know the test involves reading comprehension, logical reasoning with a bit of science and spatial recognition (folding and turning boxes/figures). General cognitive ability.
This is great, as always. I've heard that people with Math Master's degrees earn more than those with Math PhDs for similar reasons pointed out in this video. The Ph.D.s have prestigious jobs, but people with MAs work in higher-paying industries.
Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. A trader made over $350k in this recession influenced market
Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of folks gaining over 250k just in a matter of weeks/couple months, so I think there are a lot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look.
The best course of action if you lack market knowledge is to ask a consultant or investing coach for guidance or assistance. Speaking with a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and grow my portfolio to about 65% since January, even though I know it sounds obvious or generic. I believe that is the most effective way to enter the business at the moment.
One of my goals is to employ the service of one this year. I've seen some off LinkedIn but wasn't able to get a response. Could you recommend who it is you work with?
Linda Aretha Reeves is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name on the web, You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment
Smart people earn well, not great. The reason they earn well is due to the demand in their field and the scarcity in finding qualified candidates. But even smart people jobs are not safe from corporate greed and overtaxation. If you want to earn well, do a smart white collar job. If you want to earn amazing, then you need to make it your priority to chase the money...even if that does not benefit society in any way, shape or form. White collar work is cool. Chasing the money is a different world altogether.
Thats cus smart people overthink shit lol. I learnt that the hard way. Like bro. Were all human. We make fuckups and we act like amateurs. Just wing shit and deal with the shitstorm as it comes. Thats just life. People who think their smart, are usually just overthinkers.
Being good with people and having communication skills requires intelligence. An analogy I use is that intelligence is like strength, there are different measurements of strength. Some people have a good bench press but a lousy squat and some people have a good squat but a crappy benchpress. Likewise there are different areas of intelligence.
@@robcubed9557 The Wallenberg family communicates inside the Wallenberg family. Mostly that they should elect another Wallenberg to chair their different foundations. Swedish upper class folks aren't showoffs the same way. Most of them prefer their privacy. They don't clown around on social media.
To be fair that requires intelligence of it's own. The video assumes rote learning is the only kind of intelligence out there. It's extremely narrow and flawed perspective. The videos on this channel brings interesting topics but get lost in the way to push a political viewpoint.
Well explained. Thank you for bringing up this video. Financial education is indeed required for more than 70% of the society in the country as very few are literate on the subject ..... Thanks to Mylah Evander the lady you recommended.....
Many factors to consider outside of cognitive ability to generate wealth: emotional intelligence, charisma, social connections, resources, risk tolerance, and early adoption of new and sustainable technology.
@@rumplstiltztinkerstein I'm not a fan of him but in this video th-cam.com/video/9DAbkAJzUcY/w-d-xo.html he scores 122 on an IQ test which is well above average.
@@Adiuveaui have an IQ of 120 and based on my dealings with most people, I am well above average. I believe the world average is 90-100. I have to assume that even the dumbest content creators only act that way because they know what appeals to the majority of society.
@@adamhercik581 he is a youtube scammer. Of course he is dumb. People that praise him are the ones who give him money whenever he pitches another of his crypto scams.
Malcolm Gladwell summarizes this well in Outliers when talking about Christopher Langan, “the smartest man in America.” Also matches up with his other book David and Goliath. Basically being smart matters up to a point, but after that - social skills, conscientiousness, creativity, luck, etc. all matter MUCH more. Not to mention, the richest people tend to be the ones who WANT money to the exclusion of other things. Maybe smarter people realize that infinite money ≠ infinite happiness? 🧐 Edit: your analysis during the second half was 💯💯 playing to your strengths will always beat chasing what others tell you to.
True. Working in corporate America I know numerous people in highly paid management and supervisor positions that are completely useless and do nothing. Working hard matters but being in the right place at the right time along with having connections and being social will get you farther.
There are two types of smarts. People/social smarts and book/technical smarts. It depends on how you apply them. Yes IQ plays a roll but I think most "smarts" can be learned over time. Figuring out how to learn is important as well.
Most of the time I have seen that a balance of intelligence, social skills, and emotional intelligence is what makes some people earn more. People that are incredibly intelligent without social skills/emotional intelligence tend to be poor. TH-camrs are social and connect to other people, that's why their success.
Luck, randomness, willingnesd to do whatever it takes, low concern for the consequencies to others, skills at manipulation and faking, loudness, large inherited or acquired circle of connections, unethical levels of overcharging for otherwise cheap products, etc...
I don't regret not doing a PhD (because you get paid nothing compared to what you're producing) and not doing a masters degree. I got a Bachelor in ECE and went into software engineering quicker than my national counterparts (I moved to the UK from Italy) and now I'm earning good money and I can see the career progression is quite good if I apply myself as I have done so far. I want to be a business owner but I'm definitely lacking capital and risk is rewarding but scary, definitely will look into this when I'm in a better position. As far as making top money, it doesn't really matter, as long as you're happy and earn well you'll be better off than being stressed in other work/business situations.
I've always thought that the upper middle class was where very intelligent people where the most represented, for one it includes most engineers but also most niche extremely specialized professions.
@@Fishmans Sweden's Wallenberg family is an extreme example in how to keep a family company going. They're in their sixth generation right now. They're sort of... Separated from their own wealth, and bound to it. No individual Wallenberg heir can decide to just start selling off bits and breaking it up. Otherwise, family businesses don't seem to survive forever. Most of the oldest I've seen have been three generations.
Hoping to break into the upper middle soon. 28, engineer, earn $112k+. I know I'll continue to move up. As a poor kid, remember the moment I hit 100k at 26! Nearly cried 🥳
As an accountant I can attest that you don't need to be a genius to make millions. One of my oldest clients opened his drywall company with me when he was 22. The guy didn't even know how to use a laptop or do anything business wise. His thing was drywall. Now in only 5 years this dude went from a kid fresh out of his parents house with no knowledge of the world. To havung income in the millions before tax. I watched him go from coming in at 10 or 11 when he was done working, covered in paint and dust. To showing up in his famcy clothes watching youtube with his airpods while he waits to meet with me. He's only 1 out of another 30 or so of my clients with similar stories
Whenever I hear the stories of “bro he couldn’t even wipe his own ass now he’s a trillionaire” I always roll my eyes. Not to say it’s not true, it very well could be, but you’re not giving the full story or you don’t know the full story.
@@mackeejack6731 exactly, how did he find all these customers to pay him millions of dollars for installing drywall? How did he find employees who did the job as well as he did so he could scale?
@Mackee Jack , @sp123, I can't really say how it is for other people but I deal almost exclusively with people in the latino community since a lot of them don't ever bother learning english, it pays well to be the only accountant in the area available to them. For most of them they get their start because the family helps out a ton. It's not necessarily helping with money but you get like 6 cousins together and you have your construction crew. Then finding clients is kinda the same, for the most part the latino community, at least here in ohio, kinda sticks together and does everything through eachother. Instwad of googling lawn care or an accountant they'll ask their buddy for a cousin in the business or something like that
As a fellow financial professional, I would caution that you likely only see those who can afford your services (i.e. winners). Most business ventures are failures and even more are outright frauds and scams. Beware of survivorship bias because tons of statistics are built on it.
Another factor that shouldn’t be ignored - more intelligent people often also acknowledge the thing called “work life balance” and the value of one’s health and social relationships - and that one has a much better life when one doesn’t always prioritize making as much money as possible - but living a life as good as possible.
Last part hits kinda hard for me personally. I’m in uni, reading physics right now and my goal was to become a theoretical physicist but i’ve realised that i’m probably not smart/passionate enough compared to some of my peers. Mind you I’m not dumb by any means, but there are some people in my class that have placed high in math olympiads and won physics competitions and i just don’t think i can compete with that. Luckily i have the option to specialize in other things such as finance statistics, maybe i’ll start by becoming a quant and moving on from there, becoming a big fish in a small pond or something
Haha, I know it feels that way sometimes. I don't see these videos as a reason to give up however. I see them as a way to expose the reality we live in so you can successfully adapt to it.
I think the term "intelligence" is used in too broad a manner. Technical skills are important, yes. But you can't neglect interpersonal intelligence, and emotional awareness. These attributes are absolutely crucial to these top earners, as marketing is one of the most important attributes to modern capitalism, which is almost entirely emotionally driven. But there are other kinds of intelligence to be aware of. You can also demonstrate a high kinesthetic intelligence by performing acts of great physical skill, whether in sport or in performance. You can create rhythms and sounds that make up some incredible music. The point I'm making is, intelligence is not limited to technical knowledge and skills, but is a gauge of skill in any field at all. DISCLAIMER: Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences is one of many theories on the mechanics of intelligence, and is of course a controversial subject. There are lots of research papers in psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy that are published each year arguing about this. This is just one of many takes that I'm drawn to.
Almost no one in research psychology takes Gardner's theory seriously. Heck, Gardner does not even take his own theory seriously! I am also skeptical of your suggestion that the top one percent in income have superior "interpersonal intelligence" or "emotional awareness."
This makes perfect sense. I used my intelligence to get into web applications development, but don't see a way to rise above the rank of senior developer. Meanwhile, I answer to project managers, product managers, scrum masters, department heads, and vice presidents who don't have the slightest idea how to begin to comprehend what I do, but they make more than I do and have much more opportunity for advancement.
@@SlimThrull It's an industry-wide problem, plus this video highlights why skilled professionals like me are unlikely to start their own business or move into a different field.
That is the EXACT reason why as a developer I’m switching to Agile project management. If I can code, I can manage a project. It’s not as true the other way around. I won’t be responsible at all for work deliverables or writing code. Just oversight and management.
I used to think everybody went broke during the Great Depression and other major crashes but they didn’t… Some made millions, I also thought everybody went out of business during these times but they didn’t, some went into business, there's always depression/recession for some people and there's always a good time for others, it's all about perspective.
first step is discovering the key steps to generate gains during volatility, It is very possible to retire big time from the current market condition without having to hold stocks long term.
@@DeSplendor most of these strategies and loopholes are better managed by experts and pros, the average investors on the other hand are exposed to market sham which can lead to portfolio blunder
@@MadrilenosConqueror i watch videos like this with hopes to learn from the experts but it just seems you can never be right all the time when it comes to stocks
@@GodIsMyOat been pulling off chunky gains since the 2019 rona-outbreak, coupled with the fact we’ve had the longest uptrend ever in U.S history before officially falling into a bear market this year June, precisely have accrued $749k in savings with about $300k in portfolio balance thus far and this is because i seek assistance from an expert. The issue is people always have the “I want to do it myself mentality” unapologetically, that’s why they get affected amidst crash/recession, most folks aren’t equipped enough during these times .
@@YouthfulHappyGem to me, not evryone can afford a coach/advisor. I personally dabble in stocks and my first rule is survival before flipping for chunky gains! congrats however, your coach must be really good, mind if I check him out on my computer?
I have to agree, much in life is being in the right place at the right time. I am almost 60 and I work for a 34 year old business owner. I have done well financially, have 2 graduate degrees. I hope he does better than me because he’s taking a huge risk, I am comfortable and can’t take that risk anymore. Being content is a gift.
And sometimes 'the right place' is a super-exclusive school where you will meet the friends of other wealthy and influential people, who will later become the contacts that get you into the highest-paying jobs and give your business the edge in negotiations.
some call it luck, I call it blessing specially when there's less stress involve. My brother used to be a very successful and very proud entrepreneur but everything he got was wiped out in one day. He's starting from scratch again and taking huge loans which is worrying. Some pursue and value material things far more in our short life, some value blessings and peace. @@iamthemoss
I think one other big factor here that isn't mentioned is how an intelligent person approaches potentially life-changing decisions and how a layman approaches these decisions. No matter how much ambition and grit the intelligent person has, they are more likely to educate themself on the decision before charging head-first in on a whim. The intelligent person analyzes and subsequently understands that, no matter how "great" of an idea they may have conceived for their business, any business is inevitably more likely to fail than it is to succeed. Thus, the intelligent person seeks a highly skill-based job that may not make them rich, but will solidify a foundation of financial stability as a career path. That is obviously not to say that no business owners are highly intelligent, only that more rather than not are probably of average intelligence. And yes, a business IS going to be more likely to succeed than not if the owner is highly intelligent, but that doesn't mean that the chances the business survives breaks past 50% (in which case you're more likely to succeed and reap a profit). If we lived in a world where everyone was highly intelligent, there would probably be a lot less businesses around in general.
Adding to aspects: (1) People have different risk aversities, and (2) you don't look for a 50% business success rate (in average, only every tenth funded startup becomes successful), but you look for the reward expectation. Basic example: If I could start a business with a 10% success expectation and 1Mio. ROI, the expected gain would be 100k. Thus I'd do it, as long as my salary is below 100k and I'm not too risk-avers. So far the theory! But let me add aspect (3), real world people act rather irrationally, no matter how smart they are.
People who are scam artists don't need to be smart, they just need to be charismatic and be willing to do or say anything to climb the latter. That doesn't require much intelligence. Fake it until you make it mentality which isn't good for anyone.
Luck is key I've seen hard worker, smart worker, Schemer, ambitious, hustler, kisser but still struggling for years But 1 good luck moment can elevate someone life And bad luck moment can wreck someone life
You’re literally one of my top3 favorite TH-camrs. I don’t know what I would do w/I your amazing videos. I just love how critical you are of basically everything especially given that you have an experience in the finance department.
Apart from luck, connections and charisma, the best gift for an entrepreneur is probably single mindedness. You need to have an overarching goal to succeed in business. It may be that "smart" people are too easily intellectually distracted, which prevents them from giving their all to a single challenge, or if they do become obsessed with a single objective, it is often not directly tied to financial gain.
Work smart and hard while having time management skills makes a job more bearable.Yeah I know it takes up a lot energy and effort, sometimes it’s worth it. You gotta look at the big picture and find where you belong.
Is there any genuine logic to why they’re “not smart”? They chose a profession, are good at it, stick to their strengths, don’t meddle in any other field wasting time, also manage to keep a functional family and try to maintain friendly relations with people useful to their line of work, effectively using their available resources properly. All of this sounds like the definition of “smart”. So how exactly are they dumb?
Worked for a start-up. Got stock options, start-up had IPO. Yes, I was intelligent enough (patent attorney) but the rest was luck. I totally admit it. Grateful and used my money to help my family since I felt like it was a windfall.
Something not mentioned: Highest-income earners might be "dumber", but intelligent people have higher salaries -- on *average* . So the chances of earning more than X is always (again, on average,) higher for intelligent people.
Yes, intelligent people will still make more on average, but once you get into the most wealthy people, luck and to a lesser extent social skills becomes the most important factor.
After 32 years of working, I can tell you right now, charisma plays more of a role in success than intelligence ever could. I've watched charismatic people fly by me on the ladder no matter where I worked. Despite the fact I knew more jobs, knew those jobs better, worked physically harder, and longer hours. There is a kid that just made manager that has only been with the company a little over a year, versus my 8 years and I even told him in front of his boss, that I thought he was an odd pick since he was literally the laziest person I've ever met. He is just a very charismatic person and sat in the office schmoozing the higher ups while others did his job. This isn't just in industries, it's overwhelmingly obvious in social media platforms. Charismatic people will have more followers/subscribers/supporters than people with bland personalities, hands down. Charisma is literally the only quality you need to have to be wildly successful in life.
Sociability is the highest order of thinking that matters. Cats are smart, but they have smooth brains, and therefore they can't be sociable without massive conditioning from early in life. Dogs have more human-like brains, and while they might not be very smart, they can still adapt to situations and groups far better than cats. The "high-IQ introvert" is essentially maladapted, a savant.
Yet we are collectively immensely lucky they exist because they are the one carrying us forward. The social ones are good at keeping things rolling day to day, but without the savants they'd still be doing that as hunter gatherer.
There's also an aspect of what fulfills you at work here. The more intrinsic your values are the harder it is for someone to dangle a carrot in form of money to grab your attention. Past a certain point having more money becomes largely meaningless, esp for someone who doesn't derive their value from their possessions. If you're able to sustain your interests there is little reason to amass more money since it really wont affect you. Money past that point only offers new utility once you've amassed so much of it that it becomes power and most people with a highly developed mind and heart would never wish for power in the first place, since to them it is a burden, not a gift.
My dad was a physician, he would always say that the top 3rd of med school graduates would become academics, the middle 3rd would make the best doctors, and the bottom 3rd would make the most money.
why would the bottom 3rd make most money?
@@lelele1408 Probably because they went into medicine for the money in the first place. It's not a recipe for someone being passionate enough to excel in the field, but the supply and demand for doctors means they can still get paid very well. There may also be a difference in ethics/values...
@@lelele1408 The same reason Dr Dre makes more money than most doctors
@@lelele1408 imagine the same situation with hookers, the one without self worth will get more money than the one that does it because its her passion.
@@lelele1408 Because they would be ambitious enought to take risk. Which would result in several big winners and most losing out on those bets. But in sum because of those few winners bottom third would get more money as a group.
I could have told you this without a study. I'm an attorney that does wealth management and protection for the 1%, so I deal with the 1% every day. Being charismatic and lucky is far more important than being intelligent when it comes to being in the 1%.
Sometimes I think studies that study something where we know the answer for get more support. Then again, I haven't studied that.
Elongated Muskrat fits the bill
@@keanuxu5435 😂😂😂
It’s always better to be lucky than good
charisma and people skills are arguably as important as intelligence. I know a lot of very intelligent people who are shy, not very assertive, and not great at communication. There are borderline autistic people in maths and sciences that are amazing at their jobs but would not do well managing a company
I knew a guy at work that was forced around from job to job within the company because he was "dumb". Apparently he received a raise every time this happened because of negotiating power and a "diversified" resume.
Could just be he knows the job and it’s easy for him.
😂 He is not the one that is dumb, that's for sure.
At my company, he'd be fired on the spot LOL. There's always more to guys like these than meets the eye. Family connections in top management, or something similar that a regular employee has no idea about.
This guy has a video on that actually, "Why is Company Management Always Bad" - Basic idea was the dilbert principle (this)
@@fhujf Or drug connections. I know of someone that got promoted got a new job, quit that job and got the same job with the promotion to top it all because they personally knew the president and manager, and they knew each other because of weed deals in the past.
It’s not always what you know, it’s also who you know; and yes, lots of luck with that one. XD
Survivorship bias is a big part. Dumb people gamble for success while smart people are slow, methodical, and disciplined. Taking huge risks with huge rewards can reap terrible consequences but if you succeed at your venture your ceiling for success is far higher. When you look at these top earners, you're looking at the gamblers who succeeded and missing the mountain of failures who you will never hear of.
it's true I gamble with leveraged options in the market
Exactly.
Exactly. Millions of failures pave the minimum wagers
Glad someone pointed this out. This is true for countless situations. W/ the exception of stupid influencers, you can't be dumb to be even moderately successful (even if you use income as the metric). You don't need to be book smart but you have to be smart in various areas.
EXACTLY
Money is basically just an indicator of how good you are at navigating the social game, in most cases
100%
True that, connections matter.
Or whether you got lucky and was just born in the right family.
Consider yourself lucky because you have access to social media, basically changing the entire marketing game. Most of my time marketing was spent by myself learning here on TH-cam and viewing where I failed and searching for an answer on TH-cam. Although connections help get to success. You can do it on your own it'll simply take longer. The best trait to have is perseverance.
@@aigoated "Doing it on your own" still implies doing business with others to aquire wealth, human wealth is an indication of social connections, from monopoly's to inheritance, if you could build your own castle yourself you woudn't create currency as a King you'd just do it, you only create currency when you reach your own limitation and reach out to others.
If you saw this, and think "Ah, I'm smart, that's why I'm poor", you are not one of those smart people.
He did actually say that intelligence correlates to income, but only to a certain point. So this comment was superfluous.
😂😂
The second comma in that sentence should be between the r and the end quotation “…poor,”
Punctuation always goes within the quotations, unless you are doing a parenthetical citation.
Not trying to be rude or anything, I just have grammar ocd.
That was not what the video was about, but okay. It was just more about the normal distribution of intelligence impact on the studies results. But you can of curse just say something based on no logic connected reality that some random person is stupid if you want to do that, you do you.
🤣🤣🤣🤣👌🏾
I believe luck plays a role much bigger than people are comfortable to admit. Two people with the same intellect and skills can have a completely different life based in what country they born and from what parents.
Luck is decidedly *the* deciding factor to success.
Hard work and calculated, intelligent decisions can help luck along but without an initial "lucky break", it is usually very, very difficult to create a successful business that can last long term.
Being lucky might be something as simple as getting the right customers (eg. willing to do business again in the future), getting the right kind of exposure at the right time or marketing "the thing" at the right time (eg. the OG iPhone prototype was basically a broken mess when it was first revealed to the public).
Personally I've been wondering if it might be a combination of becoming more risk adverse and having to much structured education leading to 'institutionalized' thinking. The less educated 'dumb' person might be better able to recognize an opportunity because they aren't as educated on what can be done and more willing to take the risks needed to take advantage of it.
I agree though I'd add that it's luck as a function of opportunities offered by wherever you are right now physically and what you're doing there. Moving yourself physically and temporally can greatly change your luck hence the saying of "show me your friends and I'll show you who you are". It's not the friends themselves per se but what circles they are in. And if you're an interesting person in the sense of having wide interests, plus have an open mind, a lot of people will humor you a conversation if you happen to be around them - no matter what your income bracket is at present moment.
@@kristianjensen5877 "Fortune favours the bold"
@@olstar18 I think it is less so that less educated people are better able to recognize opportunities and more so that there are more people we would consider less educated trying to find such opportunities than more educated people. It's like a lottery, more "dumb" people win them because less "smart" people play them since the "smart" people recognize that the expected value of playing the lottery isn't worth their money (unless of course the lottery is set up with a high expected value, in which case its a bunch of MIT students winning them).
its not about been smart or dumb but getting the right update on. investment planning, for me i was advised to diversify my portfolio among several assets such as stocks and bonds since this can protect my portfolio for retirement of about $150k. I want to know: Do I keep contributing to my portfolio in these unstable markets, or do I look into alternative sectors?
The professionals presently control the market since they not only have the essential business strategy but also have access to inside information that the general public is not aware of.
This is why I entrusted a fiduciary with my investment decisions. Many underestimate advisors until emotions lead to losses. My advisor crafted a tailored strategy aligning with my long-term goals, guiding entry and exit points for the equities I focus on. This has grown my portfolio to over $850k. My personal best so far
impressive gains! how can I get your advisor please, if you dont mind me asking? I could really use a help as of now
My CFA Melissa Terri Swayne a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further... She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market
Thank you for the lead. I searched her site up and filled the form. I hope she gets back to me soon.
I love how everybody and their mother on social media always tell people to quit their 9-5 and go into business. Yeah like every body can be an entrepreneur
Or even wants to be one.
Actually this video is only applicable to a weird small % of people. Myself include. I'm no dummy though. I graduated with a degree in engineering. But I quickly realized I wasn't as good as my peers. Quitting my high paying job to start my own business was a much better option but I had to be clever enough to come up with a niche business model and have the level of crazy to actually go through with it. It's a different type of intelligence. But I certainly lack a lot of conventional intelligence. For example, I think kinda slow and have poor working memory but I have above average creativity.
Don't. Most people can't handle it. There is a reason business founders are less than 1% of the population. There is a reason 50% of startups fail in the first five years. There is a reason less than half of startups turn a profit in the first three years.
I started my business in 2007. I've seen multiple suppliers, competitors, collaborators and clients go down over the years for various reasons. It's not a joke. Some founders shut down gracefully, some crashed and burned, others rolled into another venture (sometimes more than once) stronger than before.
That said it can be pretty freaking awesome to call all the shots, and it's treated me well. I'll never go back to being an employee.
Many people who had to go through the grind were motivated thanks to sunken cost, it really helps, especially once your standards become realistic and you’re more thankful for the little things.
@@dexterne It's the only way to fly.... well at least for you and me.
One thing that wasn’t talked about is that being so much smarter than the average person makes it harder to relate to average people, aka the people who make up the vast majority of the economy and from whom you have to earn your money. It helps to be a bit smarter than your average customer, but not too smart that you can’t even understand them.
This is our issue with politics as well. When someone was raised with such a vastly different lifestyle and income bracket, it's extremely hard for them to have empathy and understanding for those less fortunate. I'm reminded.of the politician here in the U.S. who recently claimed he's never seen a child go hungry and equated him not having eaten since breakfast and now being hungry to that being the exact same situation of childhood hunger, completely trivializing the issue. 😒
@@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley wait who are you talking about
This.
@@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley exactly. When people insulted Trump by calling him a “poor man’s version of what a rich man should look like” they were actually pointing out the reason why he’s more successful as a politician than say, Mitt Romney.
I can't tell you how many times I've heard this sentiment and how wrong it is. You "being smart" doesn't make it hard to relate to people, having an underdeveloped emotional intelligence does. You should pretty much be able to empathise with anyone, even if you don't like them that much you should be able to form an understanding of how their brain works. Annoying to hear all these ex gifted kids who've never done the work in building their social/emotional intelligence complaining that it's their enormous intellect preventing them from doing so, and not the neglect of a learned set of skills.
As someone who went to top undergrad and graduate institutions, I would add that most truly smart people are looking to accomplish something other than maximal income with their careers. They'll happily sacrifice income to feel like they are using their intellect to improve the world. I think this often stems from so many adults telling gifted children that they hope they'll use their talents to make the world a better place when they grow up. I don't think average kids are groomed to expect such things from their work and feel freer to just chase money. Then again, it could just be that smart people demand more from their work than just income or are more likely to refuse to make the sacrifices to their personal lives that chasing very high income often entails.
Yeah I’m glad you mentioned this because this kind of discussion applies if you’re defining success as making lots of money. Other people have differing ways of measuring their success
"Either you're smart enough to want something more than being rich, or you're smart enough to want something less than being rich"
I think the expression groomed to become a better human is quite diminishing 😅
I think that a inteligent person would release oneself from the cuffs of brainwash in a relative young age.
I think that a inteligent courioise persons will understand reality in a different way than others do. And will reach conclusions that lead them to direct their work onto making the world a better place.
I also share similar opinion. My smart friends often have idealistic value and their goal is to improve life of others or the make the world a better place. Often involves voluntary work. In contrast, average guy will chase career and start making money for a more realistic goal. I also think average people has the confidence to make decision while smart people always hesitate as they fear to be wrong. Which makes average people a better choice for professional world that requires decision making.
I think it helps to understand this issue by hearing what the truly smart people think too. I have the luck to have met an engineer who was working for NASA's JPL. He told me that if suddenly the lab says that they don't have funds anymore to pay the scientists, they would still go to work as usual. Hyperbole or not, I think it gave the idea of what is the driving force behind those scientists.
Also, here's a couple of quotes from Terence Tao, some say arguably the greatest mathematician alive:
"Okay, I don't think it would count as evil, but a lot of my PhDs, they go into the finance industry, Wall Street, and typically they earn ridiculous salaries. In fact, I don't even know exactly how much they earn. It's probably good for my health not to know."
"Tao himself was once head-hunted by a hedge fund. 'But I don't know, these things never sort of really interested me.'"
- Stephanie Wood, Sydney Morning Herald, March 5, 2015
As a retired support helper, I’d say the best job right now is working from home for an investment manager who hires you to handle records. I make over $390k a year. You just need the right connections and contacts to land a job that could change your life and your family’s future
Wow, this is amazing! You're absolutely right it's all about having the right connections to find a good job. Honestly, I've been looking for a job like this for a while now.
Please, I’d love more info on this! Some of my friends have been talking about it, and working remotely for an investment firm is exactly what I want! I’m currently jobless, so any help with the right information would be greatly appreciated I’m a great fit for this type of job. please help how can i apply.
Hey Charles, do you have a place where I can apply and what experience do you need to have this job?
$390k yearly wow , please how do i apply also ???
To apply for a role like this, you’ll need strong communication skills, especially the ability to guide and convince clients about the best investment options. You don’t necessarily need extensive knowledge upfront, as you’ll receive guidance on working with clients. Experience in reading and writing financial reports is also important. For opportunities, reach out to Graciela Lynne Schriewer online, who helps people connect with investment firms.
I love to see an analysis on how personal ethics plays into this dynamic as well. Having worked in corporate jobs, I've noticed that the people who can "turn off" their personal ethics and do things that they would never do outside the work place, often get promotions before employees who refuse to behave in unethical ways. I remember seeing a video clip of a Ted talk where the presenter said that there are more clinical psychopaths in high paid positions then in the average population, and all the "business leaders" in the audience looked shocked. My reaction was, "that doesn't surprise me." No one can turn off their ethical code as quickly a clinical psychopath.
In other words, you don't have to be clinical psychopath to get ahead, but it helps.
I mean, if you keep worrying about all the little people all the time you’re not gonna have time to make that dough. Gotta make sacrifices. Everything in life has a price, even being rich
@@KhiemNguyen-ly1wz Yeah, but the difference is that some people are willing to pay the price while others don't. Otherwise everone would dream of becoming a paid undercover murderer for the secret service or so. Most people do have empathy that permits them from adapting towards inhumane work ethics. And more often than not, how much empathy you have is dependend upon genetics and early childhood trauma far more than on actual socialization.
@@vornamenachname1069 "Yeah, but the difference is that some people are willing to pay the price while others don't."
I know, that's the point
@@Vercusgames That's correct. Lying and cheating is the fast lane to the riches, but it can be accomplished without lying and cheating too. Buy the bottom, sell near to the top. That's it. This is the job. Even a 5 year old can trade in Crypto highly successful with only trading on RSI and absolutely basic information. But most people just don't do it. They think it's some kind of magic and must be more complicated, but it's not.
@@Vercusgames Making big money doesn't correlate with intelligence.
If there would be correlation, all of these University PhD's would be the riches people on the planet.
It has to do in what field you are (is it a new one where the money is?), if you make a business or just work for some other guy (if work 9-to-5 you probably will never become rich) and if you know how money works (investing).
What makes you money in order of possibility to get rich:
1.) a job (low possiblity, because least risky)
2.) a business
3.) investing/speculation
If you believe everybody who gets rich is an a-hole or corrupt, I really can't help you. Then you need to alter your mindset or educate yourself on what money is and how it works.
Hope my comment is of help for you. Wish you the very best!
My father had a masters in engineering. There came a time after being in the work world for a number of years that he began to think about getting his PhD. He looked around at the various levels of people he worked with and decided it would be a better idea to get degree in management. Not long after he found himself hiring and firing PhD's on a regular basis.
Smart
What management degree was it?
Sometimes you can hire and fire people, but still not earn much more than they do. But specifically about PHD, it mainly benefits those who work at university or science lab. They, too, are hired and fired by a manager. In general PHD is worth spending money on mostly if you have extra money, and everyone in your social environment already has PHD.
From my experience many PhD holders are a prick...refuse to listen to people below them..undermine techinicians and operators..always treat machine and process theoretically and causing major headache to engineering and production department and worst of all i've got 2 warning because i didnt appear on cctv working and operating the machine (i was operating on other machine and the machine wasnt in cctv field of view)..
Still doesnt mean he makes more than the people he fired.
We live in a society where being famous and good looking is valued more than intelligence and hard work. Look at all these influencers making loads of passive income doing nothing but posting on social media. Meanwhile professionals like doctors, engineers, and teachers are undervalued considering how central they are to the functioning of a modern civilization. It really feels like Americans put enterainment above other priorities like healthcare education, and infrastructure decelopment.
Dungeons and Dragons analogy of charisma beating intelligence in certain situations.
Culture is much more involved in keeping civilizations running than pragmatists will ever admit 🤷🏻♂️
Teachers should definitely be paid more for that reason though
And that's where Rome died, for saying "A bread and an entertainment".
Everyone is stupid to me until they can prove otherwise, I know because I know how stupid I can be sometimes.
Professionals make a good living, engineers and doctors make but loads of money... what exactly are you talking about?
The problem we have is because Most people always taught that " you only need a good job to become rich " . These billionaires are operating on a whole other playbook that many don't even know exists.
Money invested is far better than money saved , when you invest it gives you the opportunity to increase your financial worth.
" It is remarkable how much long term advantage people like us have gotten by trying to be consistently not stupid , instead of trying to be very intelligent."
The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on government paycheck, especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a time to invest in Stocks, Forex and Digital currencies.
I also keep seeing lot's of people testifying about how they make money investing in Stock, Forex and Crypto Trade(Bitcoin) and I wonder why I keep loosing. Can anyone help me out or at least advice me on what to do.
Trading under the guidance of an expert is the best strategy for beginners.
As a statistician, I'm very glad with how you presented this study. Survivorship bias, Simpsons paradox and all one hundred other biases, even plain population proportion considerations are all too often overlooked
Jesus Christ died to save you from sin and death. If we die without knowing/accepting Him as our Lord and Savior - Hell becomes very REAL! Jesus in John 14:6 says He is the ONLY way to Heaven, there is no other way. He is also LIFE! He grants us life - Eternal life with Him in Heaven.
Say Yes to Jesus Christ today !
He is knocking on the door of your heart, let Him in. He loves you so much 🙏☺️.
@@thcg-evangelismministrychi5477 If he actually loved me he wouldnt shower me with an endless streak of bad things. Get your bs out of this comment section.
@@thcg-evangelismministrychi5477 stfu got doesnt exist
If you're not self-made rich, you can present me every "bias" you want, I will still ignore your average-loser-mindset
@@milan51259 average cringy 14yo
I studied physics in college and work as a software engineer. This video is true. I could go start businesses left and right and make 10x as much but at an opportunity cost of ~200k/year. Unless this business could make me 10M+, staying put has a better expectation value. I already have a fulfilling life lol
How you get to such a high required business value? If you'd choose the most promising of those alleged business ideas, keep your job until you get funding and proof of concept, you might get a 10% success chance. Then 2M+ would just be enough.
Overly confident
Arrogant outlook
@@Videos-xn6ssif 200k is "scraps" then what kind of money are you making?! 😮
Nope. You do not have the balls and ability to delegate
In addition to all mentioned in the video there’s also probably less overthinking, resulting in more confidence and quicker decision making. 1% probably have a lot of their group who succeed through proximity to other successful people. .i.e. networking through either schooling, families etc
The swedish Wallenberg family is on their sixth generation of cultivated wealth. No one can study or work hard to get the Wallenberg family name. And when they appoint someone to chair their different controlling foundations, it's often another Wallenberg.
Six generations is the upper national extreme. Most are 2-3 generations old. Wallenberg has their system of indirect control where individual parts of the family can't break things up. They're bound to their fortune.
I think it's the opposite. One with highest inteligence will sort out the problem faster. Will be more courioise,so will have more data to analize and correctly decide.
But, in that regard, i think decision making is a skill. And most are not trained to assume responsability, and are always expecting others to take it from them.
I can concur with this take on why so many can’t become top 1%. Overthinking=stress= poor decisions.
But also a lot has to do with luck. Being born into a wealthy family can be seen as very lucky.
Or knowing someone whom is wealthy and kind.
Or hitting it good with being nice to look at can also get you further in life.
I’m an over thinker and a dreamer.
I don’t do as much as I think and dream of things to do. I wasn’t in the lucky category with anything. Including brains.
Mental illness and mental disabilities plague my overthinking mind. I’d love for a different brain.
One that can work and do basic math and basic human social interactions.
I can’t do either without falling apart and after overthinking about how much I’ve fallen and failed. And then intrusive thoughts of jumping off a high place.
Yeah sounds sure smart brain. But also sounds really nice at times. I’m curious how other peoples brains work. Is it calm and peaceful? Or just as noisy and chaotic as my comment which would be worse if I didn’t delete half of what I was initially going to put.
I can’t find an employer that can work with me. I can’t find a job. I’m that unable to do things. How in the heck am I going to get money when all I do is burden my parents with my brain. Like would it be best for the world if I never existed to begin with?
@@_Chessa_ you already know what you might have, so perhaps you might make your purpose to find how to get better?
Chemical unbalance perhaps?
Or you can investigate other thoughts so to overthinking about new ideas of instead focusing on yourself?
Hope you find peace
@@PedroPereira-si3sy I’d love peace. Thanks for comment.
I’m not sure if there is enough research on over thinking heads I’ve always liked reading up about new research on depression and anxiety/ptsd. Memory is also not a very strong point for me, so unless I write it down most things get forgotten. I focus on plants to keep my head busy. And I focus on trying to stop being self conscious and self absorbed.
This brings new meaning (or confirmation) to the old adage "It's not what you know, but who you know" that makes a difference in getting ahead in life.
Yep, and why high 'social intelligence' can often trump high 'IQ'.
Basically the people you think are dumb and making money aren't actually dumb.They are intelligent enough to know that there are enough dumb people in the market who are potential audience of whatever so called "dumb stuff"that they do
I see this all the time, my family have lots of friends/connections in their fields and they receive the latest news about job openings through their connections/friends. It amazes me how easier it is when you have good connections, but it also discourages me because it might be harder for those who try to find work on their own. Makes me wonder how I'll navigate through life on my own.
Actual rocket scientist here. I feel I am severely limiting my earning potential because I know I could start some kind of business or create my own product, but I always second guess myself and say “this is so trivial, why on Earth would somebody be stupid enough to give me money for this?” So I just never try. “Dumb” people don’t care, they just try anyway.
if it solves a problem that many have, is framed to be the solution to a problem where the problem is grave enough for you to charge your customers a relatively fair, profitable price, it will sell. Even businesses do market research like that, but there's a strategy they teach where you test the product buy selling some first, and then if it works, you scale it
Maybe they are not dumb then.
Go work for a quant fund! You don’t even need investment experience. You would be a multimillionaire within 5 years
I'm not dumb, I know people will buy this shit 😂😂😂
You need, among other traits, BALLS to create a successful business! Maybe yours haven’t dropped yet . . .
Higher iq people are also more often more self aware and more consciousness. They use their slightly higher intelligence to figure out that life is more than being rich and pivot alot of their energy to becoming more secure in themselves, stop chasing power and status and learn to find meaning through more healthy pursuits. That happened to me and personally I'm relatively wealthy compared to many of my richer friends, however I'm maybe the most mentally healthy.. I find that across most of my friends
What is your net worth and age?
Absolutely this.
@@jackjack4412 lol I think you missed the point
Bro you are not "high iq". Thats a genetic thing you realize that right?
IQ?😂 sure, keep telling yourself it's a measure of intelligence. Being self aware is more about wisdom.
Wisdom is superior to intelligence, wisdom is attained through empical knowledge and heuristic understanding, I had a mentor once who died at 89, he was so wise and advised me plenty but I couldn't hold a deep intellectual conversation with him. He was of course a millionaire, not from inheritance nor sacrifices to a family or social life.
Wisdom is superior to anything one could acquire.
Physicists will tell you that intelligence is the ability to see the future, the further you can see what impact your actions today will have on the future the more intelligent you are.
I.Q. testing was developed by the US military and then dropped, I.Q. testing was then picked up by the public school system to determine children's needs. A high I.Q. can say someone may be intelligent but further observations are needed. Imagine having a high I.Q. and coronary heart disease🤷 intelligence is subjective also chance and luck happens to everyone.
I'm an Optometrist with almost 20 years experience, and would suggest avoiding any profession that deals with insurance. Some insurers have paid me the same rates since 2005 and through inflation my services were more valuable back in '05 than today. My friend who runs a plumbing company dwarfs my income because he can constantly keep charging market rates. Life is still pretty good & could have turned out a lot worse.
Interesting. My job is to do google ads for optometrist and insurance is such a big constraint for growth.
Plumbing is Plumbing tho. I wouldnt do that for a million per month
There is a load full of irony between that statement and the profile picture
I remember how the Insurer chosen by my employer... had a list of about 250+ Practices... were they absolutely refused to process any claims from! I was flabbergasted! That's when I realized why Insurance companies are worth so much... and coveted by Investors: They're the legal MOB of the medical practitioners!!
@@pastorofmuppets9346why?
Making money is not the same as keeping it there is a reason why investments aren't well taught in schools, the examples you gave are well stationed, the market crisis gave me my first millions, people shy away from hard times, I embrace them., well at least my advisor does lol
Investors should be cautious About their exposure and be wary of new buys, especially during inflation. Such high yields in this recession is only possible under the supervision of a professional or trusted advisor.
This is superb! information, as a noob it gets quite difficult to handle all of this and staying informed is 3 major cause, how do you go about this are you a pro investor?
@@PhilipDunk Not at all having monitor my porifolio performance which has made a jaw dropping $273k from just the past two quarters alone, I have learned why experienced traders make enormous returns from the seemirigly unknown market. I must say it’s the boldest decision I've taken since recently
@@hankmarks69 Please pardon me, who guides you on the process of it all?
“Vivian Carol Gioia” is my adviser and she is highly qualified and experienced inthe financial Market , she has extensive knowledge on portfolio diversification and is considered an expert in this field. I recommend researching her credentials further she has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the market.
"Be honest with yourself" is probably the best advice I've ever heard given by a TH-cam channel. 90% of people think their IQ is above average, let that number sink in. 90% of people think they are smarter than average...
the 2nd time you said it really hit me, just sitting here with my jaw open in disbelief.
OTOH, being stupidly confident helps people project a much better image of themselves, effectively opening the doors to better jobs. People that know their own limits do not usually even dare to knock at those doors because of the doubts they have. This is not ideal. Have you not had mediocre bosses, managers, politicians or leaders that seemed to be there just because they had the guts to try in the first place, where others didn’t even dare to show up!?
ong. People dont understand this is a genetic thing.
100 IQ by definition is supposed to be the most common too.
Where does that 90% figure even come from? What group was asked that question?
@@fetchstixRHD Neil Degrass Tyson said it, he claimed there was a survey done. To be fair I never did double check his claim. However most people are biased towards themselves in most things. That I know.
We were fed this huge LIE from the time we got to middle school, that we had to study hard and get a college degree to earn more money. What a crock of SH!T. Most of what I know, I taught myself. I've asked several people this question before and never got a good answer. I used to live in a tourist trap, in Michigan, and quickly found that, what you know didn't matter one bit to any interviewers. The only thing that mattered to these people is WHO You know. Unfortunately I didn't know the right people. It was and is very frustrating, and infuriating. Thank you.
Also grew up with the thought of if you don’t go to college your shit. TV portrayed this a lot. Gotten better jobs through connections, doesn’t hurt that it playing into my strengths. Ohio sucks.
When I was in undergrad, the top students went into sciences and elite academic majors, while the B and C average students often went into business and marketing, where the material was much easier and they didn't have to try or study as much.
Years later, those lesser achieving students are often far wealthier because they received their education in a subject that would work for them economically, while the kids that were at the top of the class are now serving under the kids that were always too lazy to get higher grades. And if you want an explanation as to why management is always so awful...
The problem is that society praises chasing capital for the sake of more capital without considering the side effects. It's a big reason why quality of life is declining over time
Quality of life is declining over empty money and fiat
@@sp123huh? that has nothing to do with the OPs topic at hand, in regards to the issue about human temperament, and the leaning to the academics, or business hustle. If you're on a rant about people working for money, just say so. But "smart" people think as well, that they're making the financially right choice as well
@@The-Dirty-Straw it has a lot to do with the topic at hand. Making money has to do with the ability to sell, not the ability to create value. Someone shilling their low quality white-label products will make more money than an engineer or a chemist who is doing much more difficult work.
It’s also why it’s the bumbling fool general in the USA military is a toxic leader. And the enlisted are sometimes smarter than officers with higher rank. I never served I’m just fussing my comment is accurate.
Being dumb may also make you more likely to take risks. Like most things in life, you only need to be good enough and there is a factor of luck in terms of being at the right place, at the right time, with the right skill set. I think the biggest factor of success is recognizing opportunities. I see opportunities all the time, they are frequent, yet I see plenty of people oblivious to them.
Perfect
all you have to do is recognize the opportunity -Meyer Lansky aka the famous mob's accountant.
To see opportunities and seize them, you have to be intelligent
@@gijane2cantwaittoseeyou203 I'm not sure that is correct. I see a lot of idiots seizing opportunities.
Being dumb makes you more likely to underestimate the risks. Fools rush in etc.
What I love about this channel is that not only is the videos highly resourceful, the comments are filled with people with even more resources. Reading the comments is like watching a second equally useful video.
i agree
Yes..and all smart people too😀
SO TRUE!!!
Real I actually enjoy the comments more than the actual video lol
Even though you're differentiating between Professionals and Business owners, the principles apply even INSIDE of professional fields. The extremely high paid Doctors, Bankers and lawyers are all a lot more charismatic than intelligent, because at a certain point you have to "create" demand in these fields, aka manipulating or convincing people to buy your product/come to your clinic instead of the other ones
You get it!
Very true.
I am for sure not one of the most intelligent people in the world. I can't even finish an IQ test because I think they are the stupidest way ever to judge intelligence.
But, I know a few things very very deeply from lived experience. Deep self directed research etc.
I could probably leverage these things to make a ton of money. But, I utterly abhor the sales tactics required to get people to even listen to me.
.. Which sucks because some of these things are life changing. Like being able to manage allergies, pain etc with very very simple stress management techniques.
Successful people aren’t smart, they’re adaptable.
Yeah that happens when you're not entirely aware of your surroundings.
@@jfamo3552 conversely, that's what happens when you aren't caught in a loop of overthinking and cowardice
@@Laotzu.Goldbug you are right.
Its a near pure meritocracy. We are lead by the most reasonable, altruistic and gifted people👌🏽
@@jfamo3552 The most important merit to be part of the Wallenberg family in Sweden is to have the last name Wallenberg. So it's a sort of meritocracy, where your bloodline is your merit.
@@jfamo3552 They've been going for six generations with their system of foundations. No single part of the family can break it all up or break out a part. They're all bound to it, if they want to live off it.
The first sentence killed me 😂. "Dumb people makes a lot more money then smart people. And it took a lot of smart people doing a study to find it out"
Imagin how the scientists must have felt when reaching that conclusion. Did they feel smart or dumb.
Im sure they were social or economic scientists, not STEM scientists
I always figured very smart people would be less likely to go into business for themselves because they recognize that most products and services in the economy are total bullshit, and they don't want to be caught dead selling them. Would a very smart person want to run a cosmetics company or be a fitness influencer? No, but a Kardashian sure would.
To be very financially successful, you need to have the same tastes as your totally ordinary customers, and that means you need to be ordinary in some ways. If you see past all of the bullshit, you won't want to create more of it. Instead, once you have enough money, you will run far far away from it.
I'll have to disagree. In any aspect they are less likely to take any high risk.
No it's not about that I disagree their nis no person who knows every product
That is how I feel; my ethics get in the way of any easy money.
My hypothesis is that smart people overthink things and second guess/overintellectualize too much, while the dumb people in question simply just do it and don't overthink too much. Some things can only be learnt though doing, like driving, riding a bike, learning to cook etc.
The med school fail/dropout comment hits too close to home. Luckily I have a stable career that pays decently well, but 12 years after leaving school I'm still paying off loans with tens of thousands left to pay off. Financially, it was by far the worst decision I ever and I'd have to make some really terrible decisions for that med school detour to fall to second.
Dam how much where your loans, undergrad and med school? and how far did you go (how many years or units did you have left to complete)?
The main thing I've learned from working in creative fields (design, film, etc.) for over 20 years is that your skills don't matter; who you know matters. The more people you know, the more you will know people in positions of power, and the more likely you will get a job, even if you're not fully qualified for it. Your odds increase tremendously if you're attractive and/or come from money.
For some reason, most of the class clowns from my high school ended up studying accounting and finance, and now working in the finance industry. A couple of them work in consulting companies. It's all about confidence.
Omg i was the class clown! Did STEM but my soft skills of speaking to people, managing work/expectations, and being able to translate requirements into agile stories led me to where I'm at. I'm 28 and earn $112k+ so far. Youngest, teammates are all 45+.
@@djm2189 what is an "agile story"?
@@katar9090 agile is a methodology like waterfall for projects. Stories are bite sized requirements we give to a developer. So I translate requirements from the business into agile scrumban stories that a developer works on. Then after a 2 week sprint we present to the business and ensure we are on the right path. Also do analysis on how many story points we can handle per sprint.
@@katar9090 it comes from agile management which has its origin in software development. Scrum is one very popular tool to utilize it.
So what?
Learning How money works whilst eating a Plain Bagel, perfect
Watching a plain bagel whilst eating how money works, perfect.
@@Mezagodplays perfect
Perfection.
I am watching The Plain Bagel right after this. 👀
Don't forget a shot of Coffeezilla too
You're seriously one of the most balanced, down to earth finance channels on TH-cam today. Excellent work!
Wow, thank you!
@@HowMoneyWorks I have a feeling you like the Kardashians.. very much. 🤣
So true. No polarising nonsense, just factual info.
In my experience it's been more consistently "who" you know rather than "what" you know...and that can apply to being able to capitalize on opportunities in many fields. So..network, don't burn bridges, don't be scared to say hi or have a conversation/be friendly with people in influential and decision making positions. Be confident, but as the video says ..be honest with yourself and be humble also, not arrogant. Willing to learn, to hustle and sometimes fake it (a little), till you make it. Swing for the fences and ..when..you fall,.. get up, dust off and get back at it. Keep practicing, keep learning, keep pushing forward, keep smiling and keep being grateful for everything you learn or experience.
That way..when the "who" you know has a need or an opening, you're the first person that comes to mind.
Exactly.
it's not about smarts it's about guts. in human society, the one who has the audacity or privileged advantages to do something risky and highly profitable has always had the greatest influence and earnings.
Yup, that's my takeaway from this:
- Smart people who make good, steady money are less likely to take risks. They fear for their reputation or family more than they should, which is being responsible.
- Dumb people are more apt to take risks simply by virtue of who they are; they don't know they're "dumb", and they have a lot less to lose. If things don't work out for them, they just dust themselves off and try again.
So, if we all had the guts to risk starvation to collectively stay put and refuse to contribute to the economy until demands are met, then we would all be more successful than if we did not all stop contributing to profit margins and productivity to make demands?
@@evilds3261 I think he was trying to argue that risk-taking is a privilege. If you don't have absolute financial security, you're going to have to commit to regular employment - because without that income, you're going to lose your home and and up in poverty. You can't invest in starting your own business, or spend years of your life making no income at all in higher education. But if you're from a background of wealth? Sure, you can do that. You've got savings to fall back on, and in the worst case the Bank of Mum and Dad will bail you out. Yes, you might lose the gamble - but doing so won't be catastrophic, so you can afford to try and perhaps make it to the big leagues when your company becomes a huge success.
what a dumb take
Exactly. All the ‘dumb’ people on TikTok are making alot more money than the average teacher
The top 1% is not full of influencers, it is full of people from already wealthy families
It’s a mix of that I believe. In order to make that much you have to abandon your ethics at least in America.
@@blink-my2955 No you don't. The millionaire Ive met were pretty decent, and humble people. Then again, they were also self made.
Not Oprah and Jay-Z
@@th3azscorpio The millionaires you met may be decent people for example investors or small business owners but, there also a lot of small businesses that get their resources in sketchy ways. That fact is even more true the richer you are so it isn’t really about personality. Don’t even get me started on corpos
@@blink-my2955 All of what you've stated is completely arbitrary, irrelevant to the point, and cant be quantified. Most businesses owners do not acquire their income via sketchy ways. Largely because their under higher scrutiny under the IRS, and the likely chances of being audited. The richer you are, personality is very much important. Especially for those self made. Without a good personality, its going to be quite difficult to network, develop good customer and employee relations, and sell whatever goods you have. Small business and corporations are not nearly even comparable. Perhaps lets get some actual life experience, and actually meet said rich people, and not try to base our perceptions around things we read on pro socialist leaning Twitter threads.
In high school I received the worst grades compared to my peers. I was probably the lower 20% in 12th grade. I joined the military when I was 19, served for 8 years and learned that I didn’t need to be smart, I needed to be ambitious. I buckled hard and 8 years later I’m cracking 130k per year. Compared to my peers today, I make 30 - 40k more. It’s ambition and goals setting.
I would argue its commitment and grit. commit to a plan/job/study and have the grit to see it through
Yep.
In high school I was the only one who didn't finish it. I was however on the final picture. 3 years later I made it. Afterwards I studied and failed becoming a teacher for history and philosophy. Few years forward I'm specialist in Crypto and the only multimillionaire. And no, I have never scammed anyone.
It's possible because of constant improvement. Average guy just stops learning and never shifts completely his mindset. I did. Average guy is not suitable to watch 12-16 (!) hours onto market charts and take on massive risk. His psyche isn't made for it. Average people also love to overestimate themselves, especially if they have a degree. They think they are badly intelligent like a friend of mine (MSc computer science). They told him that their technical university is elite, so they can promote themselves and he really believes it. But if you are elite, how come you work only for a bank and I am the rich guy??? His mindset isn't elite, it is mediocre. Per definition a mediocre mindset cannot achive top 1%. Only the hated, different mindset of a top 1% man can become self-made rich.
The skillset for becoming rich hasn't much to do with college degrees. A degree you need to prove somebody like me, that you have a certain understanding of the topic. Not more.
That's because America experienced growth since 1991. The Soviet Union collapsed, and didn't experience growth. Therefore, I can't make $130k.
In the US there is a lot of skepticism towards college education and career vocation training because there are too many people in high positions who achieved those without them and too many TH-camrs showing off that they are earning six figure salaries with no education or training. I always get that kind of conversation from those kind of people who are high earners without degrees making fun of the college educated. One reason is because they started working at a younger age and built a better network and got into those positions because they have more years in the company as a result of starting early and being promoted after someone left, retired, or got promoted. I personally made the mistake of going to college and putting off full time employment during my prime years which put me behind from those peers who have more years of work experience which is more valuable than education.
@@jacqueslee2592 Same here. Resorted to Crypto speculation et voila. No traditional career needed anymore. A friend just asked me if I plan to finish my degree => no. There isn't any need to prove to anybody else that I'd be "good enough".
Degree is only for future employer. But when there is no employer, then degree is useless.
My brother is highly intelligent but he couldn’t finish his university in Peru since we had to come to America! His only set back was language and now he is a business owner and we have only been here in America for 14 years. I’m so proud! 😊
Perhaps smart people realize being at the top 1% is not worth the sacrifices.
So smart = lazy in the same way Big Bang + Time = Entropy
Bingo!
Or the risk
It's not like the middle class/upper middle class have the same class interests as the upper class.
That statement also justifies the 1% deserving it's wealth for taking the risk and making sacrifices.
I think I'm blessed because I get to be dumb AND broke.
Worst combo in life would be like: Dumb + broke + paraplegic + aids + cancer + Fibromyalgia + Old + Ugly + Born in 3rd world + no family
* Paraplegic, not quadriplegic cuz the upper body must have working nerves to feel that Fibromyalgia, in order to qualify.
😅😅😅
@@djm2189 Thats not funny. I think he's serious.
@@theintrovertedaspie9095 😅😅😅
@@theintrovertedaspie9095 😅😅😅
I remember a quote from one of my favorite TV shows which is Mr. Robot and it goes, “Power belongs to the people that take it. Nothing to do with their hard work, strong ambitions, or rightful qualifications, no. The actual will to take is often the only thing that’s necessary.”
Absolutely true.
"The top 1% of the top 1%, the ones who played god without supervision"
That makes total sense. At a certain point, being too stupid to recognise your own lack of capability or knowledge causes a sense of confidence that tends to trade well when seeking socially-decided position.
I'm surprised lotteries weren't mentioned at all in this. Buying a lottery ticket has an expected negative value - that's how the lottery works. But we still have a small minority of people who win the lottery. Everyone in that group of winners is someone who was willing to spend money on something with a bad risk-reward ratio, but that doesn't mean none of them won. People highly willing to take risks are going to naturally filter to the extreme ends of the scale. Or just be born rich enough you can keep taking risks until you win, that works better.
It takes the average lottery winner less than 5 years to waste all the lottery money.
Yep, exactly. So the main takeaway of this video is that the smartest people probably DO still make the most money but only AFTER you take into account the STEEP survivorship bias in the data.
It's just like gun violence statistical bias. They never want to show you how many conflicts were avoided by brandishing a firearm... Just how many total deaths there were.
@@johanneswerner7649 One thing keeping the swedish Wallenberg family fortune intact is the limits placed on the family. No single member of the family can decide to suddenly dismantle the thing. They are bound to it, in a way.
Most lottery winners blow everything quickly. They need to be smart to keep that money
Pin this
As someone who has moved into academia from running a fairly successful business I now earn less, but my metric for being a successful person has changed from financial to intellectual achievements (as long as I can support my family comfortably).
this may be true that your metric has changed, but it could also be that it "changed" because you couldn't bear running a business and now cope with justifying yourself telling "oh my metric just changed".
@@oooouaa I can see how it might look like that, but that is genuinely not how it feels. The imminent thought of 'Dr' on my passport honestly means more to me than driving something really fancy (though this is within the context of continuing financial security).
@@oooouaa exactly, seems like a coping mechanism
Damn, this hits home. Academics, researchers and other similar career people undergo a lifestyle where sacrificing many years of one’s youth and being disciplined in order to acquire the knowledge needed to do well is paramount. Then, oddly enough, it seems that the supply vs demand equation is really not going to reward their sacrifices. These people are, usually, condemned to a life of mediocre material rewards, most nowadays not even being able to own their own home or start a family.
Academics is just a perfect example of how to exploit peoples need for status and prestige for profits...
When Confucius said, "A scholar sets his heart on the Way; if he is ashamed of his shabby clothes and coarse food, he is not worth listening to," I felt that.
For them, this work is partly a hobby, partly an addiction. So financially it's not the best choice, but they just like to live that way.
@@MRFLOPPYmrUsually it's just envy of "educated" to the genuinely academic types that they don't have the prestige and power those not as smart have.
I've known a few very rich people, and I noticed that they were all business owners, not that smart but almost obsessively locked into their business goals in a strangely simplistic but not stupid way, could talk for hours about money and investments etc so there is a level of research/passion, and most had some connections that helped them (e.g. get good deals with suppliers) though they definitely put the work in.
What I think makes dumber people richer is, being charismatic, lucky, and being bold to take risks.
All about being assertive, also to note that, of course, without luck, that risk can turn out bad.
There are smart people who have no intention of earning money but rather live a more passionate, purposeful life which is a disadvantage because you are passionate on something and can't make a living out of it. Earning a lot of money is really based on luck and deceit. You have to step on other people to go to a higher level in the hierarchy.
It's harder when the upper class is in a position to change national policy more than others.
Or, better yet, refuse to create more people so that you have fewer expenses overall and fewer responsibilities to undertake. If enough people do this, then corporations will not be able to afford to be picky and will have to invest in the citizens or else the citizens will cease to continue investing in them.
@@evilds3261 So do you support closing our borders and shutting down immigration?
Apathy was my answer and I learned to get more bang for my life. One thing my professor taught me was that employers will always pay you less than your worth in order to remain profitable. Hence no matter who you work for you will always be paid less than your worth hence will never be rich. Moderation has always been the key to success. Knowing when enough is enough instead of trying to maximize every single decision is how you get ahead. Also there is a difference between being smart and being wise. I think wise people are likely to be rich compared to smart people who go by the books.
It’s frustrating that many still confuse the word “intelligent” with “educated”. The people described in this video as “intelligent” are actually the highly educated who tend to go into professions requiring advanced degrees. But they are still employees , which, by definition, means that there is a cap on how much they can earn. Steve Jobs dropped out of college, so he was not highly educated. But no one would ever claim that he was not intelligent. He used his intelligence, instincts and capacity for enormous amounts of hard work to build Apple and change the world of computing, and become extremely rich doing so.
Good spot, something seemed off and this is it.
This is arguing semantics but I'd say that it's not about education but rather qualification, Steve Jobs was clearly an educated man who decided pursue a risky business venture instead of a safe career in Computer Engineering or whatever it was that he was originally majoring in.
To go through those education you need intelligent. And people who finish these education and become professionals proved they are intelligent.
Not everyone can do these task.
@@FreakGUY-007 Don't agree. Degrees and good grades are gotten by doing what the professor tells you to do and often applying information from an open book. It proves you can work for someone to risk hiring someone without experience in a field.
I focused on learning and improving my thinking and I unavoidably got a few terrible grades with that strategy and now that I work I can hardly stand it and everyone seems slow and dumb and incapable of critical thinking.
Management is even dumber and micro manages so they don't care as long as you do the dumb work they come up with...
@@lucky6666 Disagreements don't hide facts, and facts don't care about your emotions. Earning degrees and good grades isn't easy. A class in engineering or medicine shows how well you can manage and make decisions. If you think books restrict your thinking, that’s your perspective. But as someone who attended advanced physics classes, completed all assignments, and now works as an assistant professor at a university, I can tell you that my thinking hasn't been downgraded.Academics isn't for everyone. If you don't like studying and investing time in books, that's fine. You have different interests. But for me, as a bookworm whose job is teaching physics at a university, it's what I love and what works for me. So, don't degrade professionals who invest time and effort in their fields. Remember that when you need help with taxes, legal issues, health problems, or any situation requiring professional insight, you rely on those who have dedicated themselves to their professions.Work might seem dumb, and life can be tough, but the world functions this way. People live fulfilling lives and pass away.
Connections, more than "luck", will get you farther. If someone knows what you are truly capable of doing and are willing to help you, you can be introduced to people who need someone with your abilities. The person doing the introduction can give the other person a background on you emphasizing your strengths for the job and the other person will be open to meeting you because of their relationship with the first person.
That's why wealthy parents will pay such huge amounts to get their kids into an exclusive school. It's where those connections are formed.
As a Swede who has done this test three times, I know the test involves reading comprehension, logical reasoning with a bit of science and spatial recognition (folding and turning boxes/figures).
General cognitive ability.
If they're using the older tests, they would cover a huge amount of conscripts.
This is great, as always. I've heard that people with Math Master's degrees earn more than those with Math PhDs for similar reasons pointed out in this video. The Ph.D.s have prestigious jobs, but people with MAs work in higher-paying industries.
True though math MAs are hardly "dumb"
With a math degree you can work in either technology jobs or finance jobs.
@@elosant2061 Yes, I agree. I doubt anybody who earns 1.4 million is really "dumb." But Math MAs are likely among the least dumb in the group! Ha.
@@TheChees1996 And if you're one of the very best experts in the subject you can work in academia to advance the field while earning crap.
@@vylbird8014Yeah the ppl who go into math academia aren't looking for money.
Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. A trader made over $350k in this recession influenced market
Stocks are pretty unstable at the moment, but if you do the right math, you should be just fine. Bloomberg and other finance media have been recording cases of folks gaining over 250k just in a matter of weeks/couple months, so I think there are a lot of wealth transfer in this downtime if you know where to look.
The best course of action if you lack market knowledge is to ask a consultant or investing coach for guidance or assistance. Speaking with a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and grow my portfolio to about 65% since January, even though I know it sounds obvious or generic. I believe that is the most effective way to enter the business at the moment.
One of my goals is to employ the service of one this year. I've seen some off LinkedIn but wasn't able to get a response. Could you recommend who it is you work with?
Linda Aretha Reeves is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name on the web, You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment
I just looked her up on the web and I would say she really has an impressive background in investing. I will write her an email shortly.
Smart people earn well, not great. The reason they earn well is due to the demand in their field and the scarcity in finding qualified candidates. But even smart people jobs are not safe from corporate greed and overtaxation. If you want to earn well, do a smart white collar job. If you want to earn amazing, then you need to make it your priority to chase the money...even if that does not benefit society in any way, shape or form. White collar work is cool. Chasing the money is a different world altogether.
This explains all those business owners we met that made us wonder how they were able to stay in business for so long.
Thats cus smart people overthink shit lol.
I learnt that the hard way.
Like bro. Were all human. We make fuckups and we act like amateurs.
Just wing shit and deal with the shitstorm as it comes. Thats just life.
People who think their smart, are usually just overthinkers.
@@honkhonk8009Not so, smart people might overthink more often which leads to analysis paralysis. Has more to do with cognition than intelligence.
You don’t need to be smart to become rich, just be good with people, communication skills is key!
Being good with people and having communication skills requires intelligence.
An analogy I use is that intelligence is like strength, there are different measurements of strength. Some people have a good bench press but a lousy squat and some people have a good squat but a crappy benchpress.
Likewise there are different areas of intelligence.
@@robcubed9557 The Wallenberg family communicates inside the Wallenberg family. Mostly that they should elect another Wallenberg to chair their different foundations.
Swedish upper class folks aren't showoffs the same way. Most of them prefer their privacy. They don't clown around on social media.
To be fair that requires intelligence of it's own. The video assumes rote learning is the only kind of intelligence out there. It's extremely narrow and flawed perspective. The videos on this channel brings interesting topics but get lost in the way to push a political viewpoint.
any tips on where can i enhance my communication skills?
@@ahmedyarkhan5169 Public Speaking classes, you’re welcome!
Well explained. Thank you for bringing up this video. Financial education is indeed required for more than 70% of the society in the country as very few are literate on the subject ..... Thanks to Mylah Evander the lady you recommended.....
That woman totally changed my life for good. I have come across individuals but none is as honest as Mylah. So surprised you know her too.
SHE'S MOSTLY ON TELEGAMS WITH THE ABOVE NAME!!!
Many factors to consider outside of cognitive ability to generate wealth: emotional intelligence, charisma, social connections, resources, risk tolerance, and early adoption of new and sustainable technology.
I love how Logan Paul was in the intro when you talked about "dumb" people.
It would be weird if he was NOT in the intro.
@@rumplstiltztinkerstein I'm not a fan of him but in this video th-cam.com/video/9DAbkAJzUcY/w-d-xo.html he scores 122 on an IQ test which is well above average.
@@Adiuveaui have an IQ of 120 and based on my dealings with most people, I am well above average. I believe the world average is 90-100. I have to assume that even the dumbest content creators only act that way because they know what appeals to the majority of society.
He isn't dumb though. He just pretends to be so that people call him dumb instead of malicious.
@@adamhercik581 he is a youtube scammer. Of course he is dumb. People that praise him are the ones who give him money whenever he pitches another of his crypto scams.
Malcolm Gladwell summarizes this well in Outliers when talking about Christopher Langan, “the smartest man in America.” Also matches up with his other book David and Goliath. Basically being smart matters up to a point, but after that - social skills, conscientiousness, creativity, luck, etc. all matter MUCH more. Not to mention, the richest people tend to be the ones who WANT money to the exclusion of other things. Maybe smarter people realize that infinite money ≠ infinite happiness? 🧐
Edit: your analysis during the second half was 💯💯 playing to your strengths will always beat chasing what others tell you to.
That, and they've realized that success is an arbitrary societal notion and it shouldn't be programmed into you.
True. Working in corporate America I know numerous people in highly paid management and supervisor positions that are completely useless and do nothing. Working hard matters but being in the right place at the right time along with having connections and being social will get you farther.
There are two types of smarts. People/social smarts and book/technical smarts. It depends on how you apply them. Yes IQ plays a roll but I think most "smarts" can be learned over time. Figuring out how to learn is important as well.
Most of the time I have seen that a balance of intelligence, social skills, and emotional intelligence is what makes some people earn more. People that are incredibly intelligent without social skills/emotional intelligence tend to be poor. TH-camrs are social and connect to other people, that's why their success.
Honestly, from this, it seems that extreme wealth has more to do with luck and randomness than on merit
That’s because that’s true.
Luck, randomness, willingnesd to do whatever it takes, low concern for the consequencies to others, skills at manipulation and faking, loudness, large inherited or acquired circle of connections, unethical levels of overcharging for otherwise cheap products, etc...
I thought this was common knowledge?
I don't regret not doing a PhD (because you get paid nothing compared to what you're producing) and not doing a masters degree. I got a Bachelor in ECE and went into software engineering quicker than my national counterparts (I moved to the UK from Italy) and now I'm earning good money and I can see the career progression is quite good if I apply myself as I have done so far. I want to be a business owner but I'm definitely lacking capital and risk is rewarding but scary, definitely will look into this when I'm in a better position. As far as making top money, it doesn't really matter, as long as you're happy and earn well you'll be better off than being stressed in other work/business situations.
I've always thought that the upper middle class was where very intelligent people where the most represented, for one it includes most engineers but also most niche extremely specialized professions.
@@Fishmans Sweden's Wallenberg family is an extreme example in how to keep a family company going. They're in their sixth generation right now. They're sort of... Separated from their own wealth, and bound to it. No individual Wallenberg heir can decide to just start selling off bits and breaking it up.
Otherwise, family businesses don't seem to survive forever. Most of the oldest I've seen have been three generations.
Hoping to break into the upper middle soon. 28, engineer, earn $112k+. I know I'll continue to move up. As a poor kid, remember the moment I hit 100k at 26! Nearly cried 🥳
Yes, the upper middle class is smartest. That has been the case for as long as there has been an upper middle class.
I am living proof of this. In my business I have A students working for me and I barely graduated high school. It’s all about drive.
What kind of business?
As an accountant I can attest that you don't need to be a genius to make millions. One of my oldest clients opened his drywall company with me when he was 22. The guy didn't even know how to use a laptop or do anything business wise. His thing was drywall. Now in only 5 years this dude went from a kid fresh out of his parents house with no knowledge of the world. To havung income in the millions before tax. I watched him go from coming in at 10 or 11 when he was done working, covered in paint and dust. To showing up in his famcy clothes watching youtube with his airpods while he waits to meet with me. He's only 1 out of another 30 or so of my clients with similar stories
Whenever I hear the stories of “bro he couldn’t even wipe his own ass now he’s a trillionaire” I always roll my eyes. Not to say it’s not true, it very well could be, but you’re not giving the full story or you don’t know the full story.
@@mackeejack6731 exactly, how did he find all these customers to pay him millions of dollars for installing drywall?
How did he find employees who did the job as well as he did so he could scale?
@Mackee Jack , @sp123, I can't really say how it is for other people but I deal almost exclusively with people in the latino community since a lot of them don't ever bother learning english, it pays well to be the only accountant in the area available to them. For most of them they get their start because the family helps out a ton. It's not necessarily helping with money but you get like 6 cousins together and you have your construction crew. Then finding clients is kinda the same, for the most part the latino community, at least here in ohio, kinda sticks together and does everything through eachother. Instwad of googling lawn care or an accountant they'll ask their buddy for a cousin in the business or something like that
As a fellow financial professional, I would caution that you likely only see those who can afford your services (i.e. winners). Most business ventures are failures and even more are outright frauds and scams. Beware of survivorship bias because tons of statistics are built on it.
@@sp123 There are vids on YT where 21yos run huge pressure washer businesses with flashy trucks.
Another factor that shouldn’t be ignored - more intelligent people often also acknowledge the thing called “work life balance” and the value of one’s health and social relationships - and that one has a much better life when one doesn’t always prioritize making as much money as possible - but living a life as good as possible.
Last part hits kinda hard for me personally. I’m in uni, reading physics right now and my goal was to become a theoretical physicist but i’ve realised that i’m probably not smart/passionate enough compared to some of my peers.
Mind you I’m not dumb by any means, but there are some people in my class that have placed high in math olympiads and won physics competitions and i just don’t think i can compete with that.
Luckily i have the option to specialize in other things such as finance statistics, maybe i’ll start by becoming a quant and moving on from there, becoming a big fish in a small pond or something
And there are people that can manage those minds to create huge value.
Physics is hard AF and doesn't pay anything. Get a CIS degree like the rest of us
On today's episode of "Why you should just give up..."
Haha, I know it feels that way sometimes. I don't see these videos as a reason to give up however. I see them as a way to expose the reality we live in so you can successfully adapt to it.
Most people venture into crypto to be a millionaire meanwhile I just want to be debt free
That's very practical and smart goal a wise man once said do everything in your power to get out of debt one of his tips on getting rich
Just do the right thing by trading with an expert, trust me you will be successful and debt free
Starting early is the best way to getting ahead of build wealth, investing remains the priority
Investments are stepping stone to SUCCESS, Investing is what create wealth
That's very impressive are you giving her your money or does it stays in your trading account? What's really the idea behind the copying trades?
So many things at play: Looks, luck, network, opportunities, location etc.
I think the term "intelligence" is used in too broad a manner. Technical skills are important, yes. But you can't neglect interpersonal intelligence, and emotional awareness. These attributes are absolutely crucial to these top earners, as marketing is one of the most important attributes to modern capitalism, which is almost entirely emotionally driven. But there are other kinds of intelligence to be aware of. You can also demonstrate a high kinesthetic intelligence by performing acts of great physical skill, whether in sport or in performance. You can create rhythms and sounds that make up some incredible music. The point I'm making is, intelligence is not limited to technical knowledge and skills, but is a gauge of skill in any field at all.
DISCLAIMER: Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences is one of many theories on the mechanics of intelligence, and is of course a controversial subject. There are lots of research papers in psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy that are published each year arguing about this. This is just one of many takes that I'm drawn to.
EQ is a metric used by the inept to feel better about the fact that they need to exploit the actually competent among us to be useful.
Almost no one in research psychology takes Gardner's theory seriously. Heck, Gardner does not even take his own theory seriously!
I am also skeptical of your suggestion that the top one percent in income have superior "interpersonal intelligence" or "emotional awareness."
This makes perfect sense. I used my intelligence to get into web applications development, but don't see a way to rise above the rank of senior developer. Meanwhile, I answer to project managers, product managers, scrum masters, department heads, and vice presidents who don't have the slightest idea how to begin to comprehend what I do, but they make more than I do and have much more opportunity for advancement.
So, you're smart enough to work for them but not smart enough not to work for them. ;)
They cover you at 10:22
@@SlimThrull It's an industry-wide problem, plus this video highlights why skilled professionals like me are unlikely to start their own business or move into a different field.
Yes, but I’m betting you respect yourself more for doing the smart work well, rather than doing the crummy jobs that they don’t do well.
That is the EXACT reason why as a developer I’m switching to Agile project management. If I can code, I can manage a project. It’s not as true the other way around. I won’t be responsible at all for work deliverables or writing code. Just oversight and management.
I used to think everybody went broke during the Great Depression and other major crashes but they didn’t… Some made millions, I also thought everybody went out of business during these times but they didn’t, some went into business, there's always depression/recession for some people and there's always a good time for others, it's all about perspective.
first step is discovering the key steps to generate gains during volatility, It is very possible to retire big time from the current market condition without having to hold stocks long term.
@@DeSplendor most of these strategies and loopholes are better managed by experts and pros, the average investors on the other hand are exposed to market sham which can lead to portfolio blunder
@@MadrilenosConqueror i watch videos like this with hopes to learn from the experts but it just seems you can never be right all the time when it comes to stocks
@@GodIsMyOat been pulling off chunky gains since the 2019 rona-outbreak, coupled with the fact we’ve had the longest uptrend ever in U.S history before officially falling into a bear market this year June, precisely have accrued $749k in savings with about $300k in portfolio balance thus far and this is because i seek assistance from an expert. The issue is people always have the “I want to do it myself mentality” unapologetically, that’s why they get affected amidst crash/recession, most folks aren’t equipped enough during these times .
@@YouthfulHappyGem to me, not evryone can afford a coach/advisor. I personally dabble in stocks and my first rule is survival before flipping for chunky gains! congrats however, your coach must be really good, mind if I check him out on my computer?
It’s important to remember that “intelligence” is multi-faceted, and success is complex and influenced by many factors beyond just IQ
I have to agree, much in life is being in the right place at the right time. I am almost 60 and I work for a 34 year old business owner. I have done well financially, have 2 graduate degrees. I hope he does better than me because he’s taking a huge risk, I am comfortable and can’t take that risk anymore. Being content is a gift.
And sometimes 'the right place' is a super-exclusive school where you will meet the friends of other wealthy and influential people, who will later become the contacts that get you into the highest-paying jobs and give your business the edge in negotiations.
@@vylbird8014 unfortunately luck/fate plays a huge factor. I would rather be lucky than good.
some call it luck, I call it blessing specially when there's less stress involve. My brother used to be a very successful and very proud entrepreneur but everything he got was wiped out in one day. He's starting from scratch again and taking huge loans which is worrying. Some pursue and value material things far more in our short life, some value blessings and peace. @@iamthemoss
You are one of the youtuber who has most diverse , down to earth and important topics in videos, not like other "finance youtubers".
HATS OFF TO YOU
I think one other big factor here that isn't mentioned is how an intelligent person approaches potentially life-changing decisions and how a layman approaches these decisions. No matter how much ambition and grit the intelligent person has, they are more likely to educate themself on the decision before charging head-first in on a whim. The intelligent person analyzes and subsequently understands that, no matter how "great" of an idea they may have conceived for their business, any business is inevitably more likely to fail than it is to succeed. Thus, the intelligent person seeks a highly skill-based job that may not make them rich, but will solidify a foundation of financial stability as a career path.
That is obviously not to say that no business owners are highly intelligent, only that more rather than not are probably of average intelligence. And yes, a business IS going to be more likely to succeed than not if the owner is highly intelligent, but that doesn't mean that the chances the business survives breaks past 50% (in which case you're more likely to succeed and reap a profit). If we lived in a world where everyone was highly intelligent, there would probably be a lot less businesses around in general.
Adding to aspects: (1) People have different risk aversities, and (2) you don't look for a 50% business success rate (in average, only every tenth funded startup becomes successful), but you look for the reward expectation. Basic example: If I could start a business with a 10% success expectation and 1Mio. ROI, the expected gain would be 100k. Thus I'd do it, as long as my salary is below 100k and I'm not too risk-avers.
So far the theory! But let me add aspect (3), real world people act rather irrationally, no matter how smart they are.
Analysis paralysis. That is the reason.
People who are scam artists don't need to be smart, they just need to be charismatic and be willing to do or say anything to climb the latter. That doesn't require much intelligence. Fake it until you make it mentality which isn't good for anyone.
Luck is key
I've seen hard worker, smart worker, Schemer, ambitious, hustler, kisser but still struggling for years
But 1 good luck moment can elevate someone life
And bad luck moment can wreck someone life
In addition to luck, you have to be ready for it. You need to recognize opportunity, judge its suitability for yourself and jump when it comes.
You’re literally one of my top3 favorite TH-camrs. I don’t know what I would do w/I your amazing videos. I just love how critical you are of basically everything especially given that you have an experience in the finance department.
Apart from luck, connections and charisma, the best gift for an entrepreneur is probably single mindedness. You need to have an overarching goal to succeed in business. It may be that "smart" people are too easily intellectually distracted, which prevents them from giving their all to a single challenge, or if they do become obsessed with a single objective, it is often not directly tied to financial gain.
Mr.beast talks about the single mindedness.
Im smart and should start single minded pursuits
You forgot "access to capital." Numero uno. Without capital, there are no capitalists.
Work smart and hard while having time management skills makes a job more bearable.Yeah I know it takes up a lot energy and effort, sometimes it’s worth it. You gotta look at the big picture and find where you belong.
"Most people in the top 1% are smart but their average is brought down by people like the Kardashians."
Thats the funniest thing I've heard all day. 😂
and sadly also the truest
Why?
Is there any genuine logic to why they’re “not smart”? They chose a profession, are good at it, stick to their strengths, don’t meddle in any other field wasting time, also manage to keep a functional family and try to maintain friendly relations with people useful to their line of work, effectively using their available resources properly. All of this sounds like the definition of “smart”. So how exactly are they dumb?
@@LilacSreya listen to them talk. nothing going on upstairs
hookers make far more than scientists
Kim almost passed the bar test, she scored pretty high actually. Kim is not dumb, just not crazy talented
Worked for a start-up. Got stock options, start-up had IPO. Yes, I was intelligent enough (patent attorney) but the rest was luck. I totally admit it. Grateful and used my money to help my family since I felt like it was a windfall.
Yep. If we could play history over again, we would have just as many millionaires the second time around, but they would not be the same people.
Something not mentioned: Highest-income earners might be "dumber", but intelligent people have higher salaries -- on *average* . So the chances of earning more than X is always (again, on average,) higher for intelligent people.
Yes, intelligent people will still make more on average, but once you get into the most wealthy people, luck and to a lesser extent social skills becomes the most important factor.
@@spiderduckpig yup, exactly what I said :) Thanks
After 32 years of working, I can tell you right now, charisma plays more of a role in success than intelligence ever could. I've watched charismatic people fly by me on the ladder no matter where I worked. Despite the fact I knew more jobs, knew those jobs better, worked physically harder, and longer hours. There is a kid that just made manager that has only been with the company a little over a year, versus my 8 years and I even told him in front of his boss, that I thought he was an odd pick since he was literally the laziest person I've ever met. He is just a very charismatic person and sat in the office schmoozing the higher ups while others did his job.
This isn't just in industries, it's overwhelmingly obvious in social media platforms. Charismatic people will have more followers/subscribers/supporters than people with bland personalities, hands down. Charisma is literally the only quality you need to have to be wildly successful in life.
Sociability is the highest order of thinking that matters. Cats are smart, but they have smooth brains, and therefore they can't be sociable without massive conditioning from early in life. Dogs have more human-like brains, and while they might not be very smart, they can still adapt to situations and groups far better than cats.
The "high-IQ introvert" is essentially maladapted, a savant.
Human-like brains 😂
Maybe yours are dog-like
Yet we are collectively immensely lucky they exist because they are the one carrying us forward.
The social ones are good at keeping things rolling day to day, but without the savants they'd still be doing that as hunter gatherer.
Alternative Title: If you're so smart, why aren't you rich? :)
Some people are not rich because they are not that interested in money.
@@errolmichaelphillips7763cope
Short answer. You are, there are just some people richer than you
@@errolmichaelphillips7763 you can also reasonably argue that how life works out is more complicated than simply your intelligence and/or education.
Now that sounds better.
There's also an aspect of what fulfills you at work here. The more intrinsic your values are the harder it is for someone to dangle a carrot in form of money to grab your attention.
Past a certain point having more money becomes largely meaningless, esp for someone who doesn't derive their value from their possessions.
If you're able to sustain your interests there is little reason to amass more money since it really wont affect you. Money past that point only offers new utility once you've amassed so much of it that it becomes power and most people with a highly developed mind and heart would never wish for power in the first place, since to them it is a burden, not a gift.
The greatest information I heard was that, the wisest person admits he knows nothing.