• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Home
About Us Contact Us Advertising
Articles
Budgeting Debt Frugal Insurance Investing Making Money Retirement Saving Money
Tips
Money Saving Tips Trash Audit
Make Money Forums Blogs
Create a Blog Control Panel All Entries All Blogs
Tools
Calculators Prescription Drug Coupons Online Savings Accounts Test Your Knowledge Financial Directory Credit Cards

SavingAdvice.com Blog

Bridging the gap between saving money and investing

Subscribe

 

Welcome Back, !

  • Home
    • Advertising
  • Tips
    • Money Saving Tips
    • Recycle, Reuse and Repurpose
  • Make Money
  • Credit Score Guide
  • Forums
  • Blogs
    • Create a Blog
  • Tools
  • Financial Basics
    • Back to Basics: Saving Money
    • Back to Basics: Beginners Guide to Retirement
    • Back to Basics: What Every Child Under 10 Should Know About Personal Finance
    • Back to Financial Basics: Investing In Stocks

Multiple Streams of Income Are a Common Denominator for Many Self-Made Millionaires

March 22, 2023 by Tom Corley

If you find value in these articles, please share them with your inner circle and encourage them to Sign Up for my Rich Habits Daily Tips/Articles. No one succeeds on their own. Thank You!
TOM@RICHHABITS.NET

Sixty-one percent of the self-made millionaires in my study were small business owners and 39% worked for some big company.

Of the 39%, most were senior executives at those big companies or high level salesmen and almost 100% of those senior executives/salesmen owned stock in their employer.

When I peeled back the layers of the financial lives of these two groups, I found that the one common variable they all shared was multiple streams of income.

In the small businesses, the owners had numerous people working for them, either providing services or selling products. In the small business world, those employees are called producers. Each one of those producers represented a stream of income to the small business owner.

For example, if a small business owner had ten producers, that represented ten streams of income, all working hard to make the small business owner rich. In many cases, the small business owners would then reinvest a portion of their profits into the business, growing the business and adding more producers; more streams of income. They would also invest a portion of their profits into investments that generated additional streams of income. Think retirement plans, real estate, stocks, bonds, annuities, etc.

And let’s not forget the elephant in the room.

At some point, those small business owners generated a huge windfall by selling their interest in their small business, realizing enormous capital gains.

In the big companies, the senior executives and salesmen earned a high salary plus they participated in various employer stock ownership plans offered by the big companies. Those stock ownership plans represented a future second stream of income that, when sold, almost always dwarfed their salaries, and was responsible for about 80% of the wealth they accumulated.

Like the small business owners, these big company senior executives would plow part of their salaries and stock gains into investments that generated additional streams of income. Once again, think retirement plans, real estate, stocks, bonds, annuities, etc.

Multiple streams of income, therefore, are a common denominator in building wealth. If you want to become rich, you must create multiple streams of income. That’s what self-made millionaires do. One stream of income is just not enough, if you want to be rich.

Tom Corley Headshot
Tom Corley

Tom Corley is an accountant, financial planner, public speaker, and author of the books “Effort-Less Wealth: Smart Money Habits At Every Stage of Your Life” and “RichKids: How to Raise Our Children to Be Happy and Successful in Life“.  Corley’s work has appeared on CNN, USA Today, The Huffington Post, SUCCESS Magazine, and many other media outlets and podcasts in the U.S. and 27 other countries. Tom is a frequent contributor to Business Insider and CNBC.

Reader Interactions

What did you think about this article?
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5.00 out of 5)
Loading...

Comments

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Primary Sidebar

    • Articles
    • Tips
    • Make Money
    • Credit Score Guide
    • Forums
    • Blogs
    • Tools
    • About
    • Contact

    Subscribe to Our Newsletter
    Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
    Your subscription has been successful.
    Copyright © 2025 SavingAdvice.com. All Rights Reserved.
    • Privacy Policy