Alain Guillot

Life, Leadership, and Money Matters

032 Sandi Martin from Spring Financial Planning

Sandi MartinNote. My excuses. As I recorded this episode, I notice I was using the microphone on the computer, not the regular microphone I use to record podcasts. For that reason, the sound on my end is not the best.

Sandi Martin From Spring Financial Planning

I heard from Sandi Martin in an interview I had with Shannon Lee Simmons, Shannon recommended the podcast Because Money where Sandi is one of the participants in a roundtable. The podcast is almost like a telenovela, where the speakers present their different points of view and they are not afraid to disagree with one another. In the end, the listener gets a great learning experience from different points of view.

Sandi Martin graduated with a history major. She worked at a bookstore, and that’s great because she loves reading. She went from staking books to the cash register, then to cash supervisor, and then she applied at a bank to be a teller.

Most’s people careers are generally not what they go to school for. Life is full of randomness.

In a bank setting, it’s hard to be good to your clients and also be a good employee.

After eight years of working at the bank, and after building a family with 3 kids, Sandi decided to hang her own shingle.

As far as credit cards in a bank, tellers are constantly offering new credit card offerings.

The credit card-reward game is in the too complicated and boring

Credit card rewards is an elaborated shell game. They give you enough to keep you interested, to keep you playing

We are wired to be scared of the simple solutions

Where the rubber meets the road is on how you spend your money and how that lines up with what’s important to you

We buy consumer “lifestyle” items out of shame ‘ I need to buy a house that looks like this because that’s what successful people have, that’s what my family expects of me. I would be a failure, people would know I am a failure if my car is 10 years old. ‘

If you have the skills to be contempt, that’s way more important than making sure you are in the right investment vehicle.

Related Posts

  1. 031 Jessica Moorhouse from Mo’ Money Podcast
  2. 030 Jen Hemphill, Her Money Matters
  3. 029 Kornel Szrejber, helping Canadians build wealth

Support this blog

You can support this blog by building your next website with Bluehost.


Comments

4 responses to “032 Sandi Martin from Spring Financial Planning”

  1. […] least, one of the biggest mistakes that people make when trying to get out of debt is not having a financial plan to help themselves do so. You need to have a plan so that you know how much you can afford to pay […]

  2. […] 032 Sandi Martin from Spring Financial Planning […]

  3. […] you’re in, you are in the same boat as someone who is any other scenario. You’re in the red and you need to absorb the financial ruin, take stock of what got you to this position in the first place, try to regroup […]