3 Things I Wish I Knew When I Was Broke | Vivian Tu | TED
TED
0:04 Picture this: you're 22, you just moved to New York City,
0:08 and you’re out at a bar with friends.
0:10 A couple of tequila shots, a lukewarm beer later,
0:14 you go to the bartender to close out your tab.
0:17 But then she says the three scariest words known to man:
0:25 “Your card declined.” It feels like everyone in the bar overhears.
0:32 On one particular night out in 2016,
0:35 I had to wait until 12:01 for the direct deposit from my paycheck
0:40 to actually hit my bank account to be able to pay my bar tab.
0:45 At the time, I was living paycheck to paycheck.
0:48 And if I’m being honest,
0:50 the embarrassment I felt that night would stay with me for years.
0:56 Even though I had a fancy job on Wall Street, my personal finances were a mess.
1:03 During the day, I would enact trades
1:05 on behalf of hedge funds worth billions of dollars.
1:08 And at night, I would go home and wonder if one
1:12 more pad thai order would set me over the financial edge.
1:17 Sadly, this is not a unique experience.
1:22 Many young people still feel hopelessly lost when it comes to our money.
1:28 And this is in part due to the existing financial system.
1:33 Personal finance education is not taught in K-12.
1:37 The past five decades of policy implementation has led
1:40 to a deep divide between the haves and the have-nots, and if we're being honest,
1:46 the financial-services industry, as it currently exists,
1:49 is really only set up and incentivized to help, well, the already wealthy.
1:56 But here's where the story starts to get really good.
2:00 There has never been a better time to get financially literate than right now.
2:06 Knowledge that was once locked behind
2:10 expensive advisors is available at your fingertips.
2:14 10 years after bar night,
2:15 I have become the financial educator I so desperately wish I had had back then.
2:21 I built my career teaching financial literacy,
2:23 like a friend, across social media.
2:26 And as it turns out,
2:28 that boiled-down language and those silly jokes and those funny memes,
2:32 they didn't make me any less credible.
2:35 But they sure did make me more understandable.
2:40 What started as just videos on social media has turned into a podcast,
2:45 not one but two books,
2:47 and if all goes according to plan, a full-blown tech startup.
2:51 The financial world has finally opened its doors wide.
2:55 But here are the three things I wish I had known to do all those years ago,
3:00 when I was so desperately broke and wanted so desperately to be very, very rich.
3:07 One, learn the language.
3:09 The financial language.
3:11 Two, build community around money.
3:15 And three, find modern solutions for modern problems.
3:20 So let's dive into that first point.
3:22 It's safe to say learning finance really is like learning a new language.
3:26 401(k), IRA, 529, FICO, APY, AGI.
3:31 Hello, can someone please help me?
3:36 But my ask of you is really simple.
3:39 Don't be afraid to be smart by looking dumb.
3:44 Ask what the words mean!
3:46 Don't be afraid to utilize resources like Investopedia or NerdWallet.
3:50 And most importantly, find a financial mentor that speaks your language.
3:55 Someone who has the industry chops to back up those smarts,
3:59 someone who never promises you anything that's too good to be true,
4:03 and certainly someone who never gives you
4:05 that weird feeling in the pit of your stomach.
4:08 Here are some of the ways that I
4:10 have connected with people looking for financial guidance.
4:13 First off, I nicknamed Jerome Powell "Fed Daddy" to explain rates lowering.
4:18 (Video) Fed Daddy just announced we’re lowering interest rates,
4:21 and a lot of people don't even know what that means,
4:24 much less what it means for them.
4:25 Translating headlines into action items.
4:27 (Video) The federal government didn't clock in today, but I did.
4:30 So here's how the government shutdown is going to impact you and your wallet.
4:34 And even breaking down how celebs, like Kendrick Lamar, get rich and stay rich.
4:39 (Video) Kendrick Lamar's family dancing in the "Not
4:41 Like Us" music video wasn't just a clapback, it was a genius investment.
4:45 When you understand the language, you understand what matters.
4:49 And the response to turning finance into fun-nance has been incredible.
4:56 And this leads us into our second point.
4:58 While it's on financial educators to meet
5:00 the next generation where and how they already live,
5:04 it's on the next generation to build their own financial community.
5:09 For years, we have been told talking about money is rude, tacky, taboo.
5:15 But the last time I checked, Bob and Steve seem to have no problem trading
5:22 investment tips as they're teeing off at hole three.
5:26 It turns out, it’s really only a faux pas when we do it.
5:31 It's time to change that.
5:33 I, like so many young people,
5:35 clock in daily for a full shift at the looking-at-my-phone factory.
5:41 And whether you spend all of your time
5:44 scrolling TikTok or reading Reddit threads, it's clear:
5:48 having conversations around money takes the power away
5:53 from the people up top and gives it back to us.
5:57 The internet has led to the creation of spaces like Fishbowl and Glassdoor,
6:01 where people can share true, real numbers,
6:04 honest struggles and genuine victories without shame or judgment.
6:08 And frankly, many of these conversations are still too raw to be had IRL.
6:14 This online anonymity is empowering people to work together,
6:19 with their digital accountabili-buddies, to make smarter financial choices.
6:25 And my hope is that, as this generation
6:28 gets more comfortable creating community around money talk,
6:32 the generation after us— they're going to grow up
6:36 seeing money discussed so openly and authentically that they
6:39 will enter adulthood with a level of financial
6:42 confidence that their parents could have only dreamed of.
6:46 And speaking of the future,
6:48 you’ve probably heard the phrase: modern problems require modern solutions.
6:52 It's never been more true.
6:54 If I’m not getting a pension like my dad,
6:56 and I can’t make a household’s ends meet on one income like my dad,
7:01 and I certainly don't plan on working the same job for 40 years like my dad,
7:05 why am I taking my dad's financial advice?
7:09 Or worse, using my dad's financial advisor?
7:14 My dad doesn't actually look like that, by the way.
7:16 He's going to be so mad if I don't say that.
7:18 Sorry, Dad.
7:19 Robo-advisors are making sophisticated
7:22 investment strategies accessible to everyone.
7:26 Online banks are offering competitive rates without
7:29 the burden of the overhead of brick-and-mortar branches.
7:33 And innovative apps are turning complex financial tasks into simple,
7:38 actionable things that you can do from the palm of your hand.
7:41 These new platforms are just as regulated and licensed,
7:44 and more often than not, they offer lower fees.
7:47 And it’s not just startup hubs or VCs that are taking notice.
7:52 Creators and educators are now turning into founders.
7:56 For my story, what started as just content has turned
7:59 into an app powered by AI— working in conjunction with certified human experts,
8:05 to provide guidance in plain English, like a friend,
8:08 and more importantly, continues to educate first and foremost.
8:13 New-age financial brands aren't just
8:15 a replacement for traditional financial services;
8:19 they're purpose-built for the way we live now.
8:23 Designed to help you save smarter, invest easier,
8:26 and build wealth faster than ever before.
8:30 The future of finance isn't coming.
8:32 It's already here and it's working for us.
8:36 So to wrap us up, a decade has passed since my horrific bar tab incident,
8:42 and I so desperately wish I could go back in time
8:45 and provide past-Vivian with some
8:47 of the solutions available to today-Vivian now.
8:52 This shift towards financial accessibility isn’t just changing individual lives;
8:56 it's building an ecosystem where everyone has a fair shot at prosperity.
9:02 And my dream is that, a decade from now,
9:05 the evolution in financial education will mean:
9:08 there are fewer declined credit cards at bar night,
9:11 a shrinking wealth gap and a financial future that is brighter than ever.
9:17 Thank you.
9:18 (Applause)