Jim Rohn delivers a seminar on goal setting and financial independence, arguing that designing a clear future is the antidote to facing it with apprehension rather than anticipation. He outlines a four-step goal-setting process: decide what you want, write it down, keep old lists, and check off achievements with drama. Rohn then pivots to financial independence, defining it as living from the income of your own personal resources, and teaches a practical dollar-allocation formula: spend no more than 70 cents, give 10 cents to charity, invest 10 cents as active capital (entrepreneurial profit), and save 10 cents as passive capital (compound interest). He closes with four motivational questions — Why? Why not? Why not you? Why not now? — to push listeners to start immediately.
A four-step process for designing your future: decide what you want, write it down, keep old lists, and check off accomplished goals — ideally with added drama to reinforce achievement.
View concept page →A motivational speaker and personal development philosopher who shares life lessons on goal setting, financial independence, and personal growth, drawing from his own journey from broke farm boy to millionaire.
View concept page →The philosophy that the primary value of achieving goals is not the material outcome but the person you become in the process of achieving them.
View concept page →A personal finance formula where you never spend more than 70 cents of every dollar, allocating the remaining 30 cents as: 10 cents to charity, 10 cents to active capital (profit-seeking ventures), and 10 cents to passive capital (interest-bearing investments).
View concept page →A contrast between two financial philosophies: the poor spend first and invest what's left, while the rich invest first and spend what's left — and the philosophy, not the amount, determines financial outcomes.
View concept page →The idea that for every desired future outcome (the promise) there is a cost to pay (the price), and that when the promise is made sufficiently clear and compelling, the price becomes easy to pay.
View concept page →Jim Rohn's mentor and teacher who provided foundational advice on goal setting, financial philosophy, and personal development that Rohn credits with changing his life.
View concept page →The third of Shoaff's three core subjects, representing the goal of achieving economic freedom through personal development and disciplined habits rather than relying on external conditions.
View concept page →A portion of income lent to financial institutions or invested in instruments like stocks, bonds, or mutual funds, earning compound interest over time as others use your money to generate profit.
View concept page →A portion of income set aside to invest in profit-generating enterprises or projects, representing entrepreneurial wealth-building as opposed to earning wages.
View concept page →A reflective framework consisting of four sequential questions — Why? Why not? Why not you? Why not now? — designed to motivate personal action toward goals and self-development.
View concept page →The idea that profits from entrepreneurial activity are superior to wages as a wealth-building mechanism because they have no ceiling and can be started at any age, while wages are limited and age-restricted.
View concept page →Two contrasting ways people face the future: most people face it with apprehension because it is undefined, while those with clearly designed futures face it with anticipation and excitement.
View concept page →A mindset framework that treats past failures and mistakes as educational experiences to learn from rather than burdens to carry or reasons for self-punishment.
View concept page →The philosophy that giving a portion of one's income to charity or worthy causes is the best teacher of character, and that the habit should be built when amounts are small so it scales as wealth grows.
View concept page →Jim Rohn recommends four steps for setting goals: 1) Decide what you want - sit down and think about what skills, income, places, habits, and friendships you want; 2) Write it down - make a list of everything you want for the future; 3) Keep all the old lists - so you can look back and see how you've grown and changed over time; 4) Check things off when you achieve them - and add some drama to the moment to make it meaningful and memorable.
You should treat the past as a school. Let it teach you from your mistakes, the things that went wrong, and the things that didn't work. Don't use the past as a burden to carry, and don't use it as a club to beat yourself up with over past losses, failures, and mistakes. If you feel good about the past, draw from it for experience and let it teach you.
There are two ways to face the future: with apprehension or with anticipation. Facing the future with anticipation is far better. Most people face the future with apprehension because they don't have it well designed — they've left that up to someone else to fix. You can face the future with anticipation if the future is clear and well designed through intentional goal setting.
Keeping old goal lists allows you to look back and see how much you've grown, changed, and matured over time. Looking back 10 or 20 years at old goals can show you what you once thought was so important that may no longer even be on your list. It's a powerful reminder of your personal evolution and progress. It also lets you check off accomplished goals, which adds motivation and a sense of achievement.
Jim Rohn teaches that if the promise (vision) of the future is clear and powerful, the price becomes easy to pay. The price includes things like taking classes, reading books, maintaining disciplines, and doing the work required to grow and develop. When your future vision is compelling enough, paying that price feels manageable for anyone, regardless of background, color, religion, or circumstances.
Jim Rohn's mentor, Mr. Shoaff, said the real reason to set a goal to become a millionaire is not for the money itself — it's for what it will make of you to achieve it. He said once you become a millionaire, what's most important is not the money; you could give the money away. What truly matters is the skills, knowledge, and values you develop in the process of earning it. This was later confirmed when Rohn lost all his money by age 33 and discovered that what remained valuable was what he had become, not what he had accumulated.
Jim Rohn defines financial independence as the ability to live from the income of your own personal resources. The specific amount needed varies by individual — it could be $2,000, $5,000, $10,000, or even $100,000 per month — but the key principle is that whatever you need to live, you can earn it from your own resources rather than depending on a job or others.
The philosophy of the poor is to spend their money first and invest what's left. The philosophy of the rich is to invest their money first and spend what's left. Jim Rohn emphasizes that the amount of money doesn't matter as much as the philosophy itself. The key shift is to invest first, then spend — regardless of how much you earn.
Jim Rohn recommends never spending more than 70 cents of every dollar, and dividing the remaining 30 cents as follows: 10 cents for charity — supporting people who can't help themselves, worthy projects, or church tithing; 10 cents for active capital — money set aside to invest in projects or enterprises to make a profit; and 10 cents for passive capital — money you let someone else use (banks, stocks, bonds, mutual funds) that earns you interest through compound interest over time.
Jim Rohn says profits are better than wages for several reasons: you can start earning profits long before you're eligible to earn wages (which typically require being 15-16 years old); there is no limit to how much profit you can make, whereas wages are capped; and profits can double, triple, and quadruple rapidly. He summarizes it as: wages make you a living, but profits make you a fortune.
Passive capital is money you set aside and let someone else use — such as a financial institution, stocks, bonds, or mutual funds. They use your money to make a profit and pay you interest in return. The key mechanism that makes passive capital so powerful is compound interest. Jim Rohn teaches that if you consistently set aside 10 cents of every dollar as passive capital starting at age 15, you can become financially independent by age 35 — about 20 years.
Jim Rohn believes 20 years is enough time to become financially independent, using ages 15 to 35 as the benchmark. He says if you're not financially independent after 20 years, you probably have the wrong plan rather than the wrong country. The key requirements are having the right philosophy (invest first, then spend), consistently applying the 70/10/10/10 formula, developing active capital through profitable enterprises, and building passive capital through compound interest.
Jim Rohn warns against setting goals too low because low goals don't require you to grow, read, try, or stretch yourself. He advises setting goals that will inspire you, help you grow, change, develop, and become better than you are. The goal of goal-setting isn't just the achievement — it's who you become in the process of pursuing and achieving those goals.
Jim Rohn's four questions to ponder are: 1) Why? — Why should you work hard, take classes, read books, and push yourself through disciplines? 2) Why not? — Why not see how many books you can read, how valuable you can become, and how far you can go? 3) Why not you? — With good self-esteem, why can't you be the one to set goals, make progress, and achieve financial independence? 4) Why not now? — This is a good time to set your goals, work on yourself, get your finances in order, and start the process of personal development.
Jim Rohn recommends reframing how you think about paying bills and taxes. Instead of hating to pay bills, recognize that you're reducing your liabilities and increasing your assets — which is a positive thing. Regarding taxes, instead of resenting them, understand that taxes are how we care for and feed the system (the 'goose that lays the golden eggs'). Becoming a willing, even happy, participant in financial obligations reflects a healthy, empowered attitude toward money and society.
Jim Rohn uses the broken wagon example to teach children the basics of enterprise and profit. The lesson: find a broken wagon and pay $1 for it, bring it home, clean it up, sand it, paint it red until it shines, straighten the wheels, then sell it back in the neighborhood for $5. The child earns a $4 profit and deserves it because society now has a mended wagon. The lesson is that finding something, improving it, and selling it at a profit is a foundational American entrepreneurial principle — and anyone can do it.
Jim Rohn believes that nothing teaches character better than generosity — not classes, teachers, or books. He recommends starting the habit of giving when the amounts are small (like a dime out of a dollar) because it's easier to build the habit at that level. As amounts grow larger, the discipline of giving becomes more challenging, so establishing the mindset early is critical. Giving 10 cents of every dollar to charity, church, or people who can't help themselves builds the character trait of generosity that carries forward throughout life.
Jim Rohn shares that at age 25 he was broke, despite being a nice person — his financial plans had simply failed him. After meeting his mentor Mr. Shoaff, he completely changed his approach over the next six years and became financially independent. By age 31, he was a millionaire. However, by age 33, he was broke again. When he lost all his money, he discovered that his mentor was right — what was truly valuable was not the money itself, but what he had become to earn it: the skills, knowledge, and values he had developed. He rebuilt from that foundation.
Treat the past as a school. Let it teach you the mistakes you've made. Don't use the past as a burden to carry and don't use the past as a club to beat yourself to death.
There are two ways to face the future. One is with apprehension and the other is with anticipation. Most people face the future with apprehension — and here's why: they don't have it well designed.
If the promise is clear and powerful, the price is easy to pay.
One of the major reasons for setting goals is for what they make of you in achieving them.
Set a goal to become a millionaire — not for the money, but for what it will make of you to achieve it.
When I lost all my money, I found out my teacher was right. What was valuable was not the money. What was valuable was what I became to earn the money.
It's not what you get that makes you valuable. It's what you become.
Poor people spend their money and invest what's left. Rich people invest their money and spend what's left.
It really doesn't matter what the amount is. What's most important is not the amount. What's really important is the philosophy.
Wages will make you a living. Profits will make you a fortune.
I was broke at age 25 and I was a nice guy. You would have liked me. But my plans, especially my financial plan, left me broke.
If you're not financially independent after 20 years, you don't live in the wrong country. Probably what's happened is you have the wrong plan.
Financial independence is the ability to live from the income of your own personal resources.
Why not? Why not see how valuable you can become to the marketplace and to your friends and to your family? Why not see what you can make of yourself?
Don't set your goals too low so that you don't have to grow and you don't have to read and you don't have to stretch.
Developing the right attitude toward the past is foundational before designing your future
This is step one of goal setting; clarity about what you want is the starting point for designing your future
Putting goals on paper makes them concrete and actionable
Reviewing old lists shows you how much you've grown, changed, and matured over time
Celebrating completions (e.g., checking off a goal at the exact moment it's achieved) reinforces motivation
The primary value of a goal is what it makes of you in the process of achieving it, not the reward itself
Goals should inspire growth without requiring you to sacrifice your integrity
This is the core financial philosophy that separates wealth-builders from those who stay poor
Keeping spending to 70% of income is the foundational rule of the financial independence formula
Generosity builds character, and it is easiest to develop this habit when amounts are small
Wages make a living, but profits make a fortune; active capital is the engine of wealth creation
Compound interest over a sustained period is one of the fastest routes to financial independence
Starting at 15 gives you 20 years to reach financial independence by 35; but starting at any age still works
Your attitude toward financial obligations affects how you manage and grow your money
A positive attitude toward civic financial obligations keeps you mentally aligned with wealth-building rather than resentment
The right philosophy sets the direction for all your financial and life decisions
Financial habits formed early have a compounding effect; visual lessons are most effective for children
Early exposure to profit-making builds entrepreneurial thinking and financial independence habits
These questions are designed to dissolve resistance and motivate immediate action toward goals
Delaying the start of goal-setting and financial planning is the most common reason people fail to achieve independence
Jim Rohn's mentor who gave him tips on setting goals and financial philosophy that changed his life
"Mr. Shelf gave me some tips on setting goals that changed my life forever."
Referenced as a place Rohn used to go when he was broke, hawking his furniture and car
"I'm down at budget finance, hawking my furniture in my car one more time."
Used as an example to illustrate how children pay taxes on purchases
"When a child walks into 7-Eleven, buy something that costs a dollar, the proprietor says, give me seven more pennies."
Rohn mentions a book he plans to write for kids about financial literacy and taxes
"I'm going to write a new book, I think, for kids. I think the title is going to be, of course, kids should pay taxes."
Referenced for the philosophy that 'the borrower is servant to the lender'
"there's a bible philosophy that teaches the borrower is servant to the lender"