Review Corner: I Will Teach You to be Rich by Ramit Sethi
April 27, 2009 by Lauren Fairbanks · 9 Comments

A few weeks back, I was able to get my hands on a copy of Ramit Sethi’s (a personal finance blogger gone best selling author) new read. Sethi’s book, “I will Teach You to be Rich” is a six-step program offering financial advice for people just starting out managing their money. Like most financial know-hows, IWTYTBR doesn’t break any new barriers when it comes to basic financial principals. But let’s face it: personal finance isn’t nuclear science. A successful PF book teaches people how to implement those basic ideas into their daily routine and make them stick.

I’ve read a decent amount of personal finance and investment books, and the ones that I find particularly effective and worthwhile are always the ones that break down the financial jargon into simple to understand terms. No investopedia needed.
Luckily, Ramit’s book fits the bill with its easy-to-understand concepts and injected case studies that further explain financial concepts with realistic scenarios from friends and blog readers.
The starkly different concept of Sethi’s book, however, are his ideas on spending. While hoards of other financial writers and bloggers will praise frugality and lecture you on the merits of reusing ziploc baggies and making your own laundry detergent to save $6 a month, Ramit does quite the opposite promoting an alternative to traditional budgeting called a “Conscience Spending Plan”. And in doing so, he succeeds at bringing a sense of reality to money management.
As an example, in his chapter on controlling expenses he discusses his friend “Lisa’s” shoe spending — dropping a whopping five grand a year on footwear. However, he further describes, that along with a healthy salary, she also still lives with a roommate, nixes expensive electronics and keeps eating out at a minimum. While her priorities may seem out of whack to the rest of us, she’s spending money on the things that are important to her, while conserving funds in other areas of her life that she deems less important.
IWTYTBR revolves around a six-week program promoting a different financial concept each week that includes:
- Setting up credit cards and improving credit history
- Setting up the right bank accounts by negotiating no-fee, high interest accounts
- Opening and managing your 401(k) or Roth IRA Investment account
- Analyzing your spending and conceptualizing a budget that fits your spending
- Automating your banking infrastructure to make things run as smoothly and flawlessly as possible
- Learning how to get the most out of your investment accounts with very little work
At around 250 pages, it’s a quick read — and definitely worth your time if you’re like most people and trying (or perhaps forced?) to restructure your finances during the down economy. And with the majority of young adults exiting college with an average of $12,000 in student loan debt and 66% having at least one credit card, it really couldn’t come at a more opportune time.
You can pick up a copy of Ramit’s book here , take a test run of a few chapters here, or you can play our little game in the Comments section for a chance to win a FREE copy! Keeping on the topic of personal finance, we’re asking you guys to chime in with your own tips for saving money and managing your finances. Our favorite tip wins a brand spankin’ new copy of I Will Teach You To Be Rich. Contest officially closes on May 1st at 5pm, and the winner will be announced on May 4th.
Vanguard on Investing Successfully in Today’s Market
December 30, 2008 by Lauren Fairbanks · Leave a Comment
Vanguard has a cool new video series up on their website right now which talks about how to make the most of your investing ventures. Their reassuring voice couldn’t come at a better time, considering many people’s hesitancy to trust the market right now. Read more





