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Summed
Summed Podcast
19 episodes
2 weeks ago

Each episode of Summed sums up one of the greatest money books of all time in less than 20 minutes. Master your money with lessons from the greatest and learn to "Invest Like the Best". Curated by humans, synthesized with AI.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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All content for Summed is the property of Summed Podcast and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Each episode of Summed sums up one of the greatest money books of all time in less than 20 minutes. Master your money with lessons from the greatest and learn to "Invest Like the Best". Curated by humans, synthesized with AI.


Powered by NotebookLM.

An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Technology
Arts,
Business,
Investing,
Books
Episodes (19/19)
Summed
Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits — Philip Fisher

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits summary—Philip Fisher’s classic on how to identify outstanding growth companies and hold them for years. In ~20 minutes, you’ll learn Fisher’s scuttlebutt research (talking to suppliers, customers, competitors), his famous 15-point checklist for management quality and runway, when to buy, add, or hold, and why “don’t sell too soon” is a powerful rule. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want a practical way to turn real-world insight into long-term investing edge.


About the author

Philip A. Fisher (1907–2004) was a pioneering growth investor whose ideas influenced legends like Warren Buffett—especially the focus on quality businesses, exceptional management, and long holding periods.


Key takeaways

  • Scuttlebutt method: learn from an ecosystem—customers, vendors, competitors, ex-employees.
  • 15-point Fisher checklist: size of market, competitive edge, sales organization, R&D effectiveness, profit margins, integrity/ability of management, and more.
  • Buy right, hold long: concentrate in a few great businesses; let compounding work.
  • Add on progress, not dips: increase when the business executes, not just when price falls.
  • Don’t over-diversify: too many holdings dilute attention and results.
  • When to sell: thesis broken, management deteriorates, or a clearly superior opportunity arises.


This week’s playbook

  1. Build a one-page scuttlebutt plan for a company you use: list 3 customers, 2 suppliers, 1 competitor to contact or research.
  2. Run Fisher’s 15-point checklist (adapted) and score your top idea 0–2 on each point.
  3. Write a hold thesis with 2–3 milestones; add only if milestones are met.
  4. Trim diworsification: consider consolidating small “why do I own this?” positions.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

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2 weeks ago
18 minutes 20 seconds

Summed
The Index Card — Helaine Olen & Jonathan Clements

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Index Card summary—a back-to-basics guide to simple, common-sense personal finance. Journalists Helaine Olen and Jonathan Clements lay out the rules that fit on one card: spend less than you earn, crush high-interest debt, automate saving, max out tax-advantaged accounts, invest in low-cost index funds, keep fees and taxes low, buy adequate insurance, and keep it simple so you actually stick with it. In ~20 minutes, you’ll get the no-fluff checklist to run your money on autopilot.


About the authors

  • Helaine Olen — Personal-finance journalist and author known for cutting through industry myths.
  • Jonathan Clements — Veteran personal-finance writer and author focused on low-cost, behavior-first investing.


Key takeaways

  • Live below your means and build a cushion first.
  • Pay off high-interest debt before investing aggressively.
  • Automate: savings, bill pay, and investments on payday.
  • Use tax-advantaged accounts (where available) to cut taxes.
  • Prefer low-cost index funds/ETFs; avoid complexity and high fees.
  • Insure big risks (health, disability, term life); skip gimmicks.
  • Keep it simple so you’ll keep doing it.


This week’s playbook

  1. Set a payday auto-transfer to high-yield savings and to a broad index fund.
  2. Do a debt triage: list balances/APRs; target the highest rate with automatic extra payments.
  3. Open or increase a tax-advantaged contribution (e.g., RA/TFSA/IRA/401(k) equivalent).
  4. Run a quick fee check on your funds; swap to lower-cost options if possible.
  5. Complete a basic insurance audit: health, disability, term life.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

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2 weeks ago
14 minutes 54 seconds

Summed
The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing — Taylor Larimore, Mel Lindauer & Michael LeBoeuf

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing summary—a straightforward handbook for building wealth with low-cost index funds, a simple three-fund portfolio, smart asset allocation, and ruthless control of fees and taxes. In 20 minutes, learn how to write an Investment Policy Statement (IPS), automate contributions and rebalancing, and protect against big risks (insurance) so you can stay the course through every market cycle. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want a proven, set-and-forget approach to investing.


About the authors

Taylor Larimore, Mel Lindauer & Michael LeBoeuf are longtime stewards of the Bogleheads community, distilling John C. Bogle’s principles—own the market at low cost, minimize taxes, and be disciplined—into practical steps any investor can follow.


Key takeaways

  • Three-fund portfolio: total stock, total international, total bond—diversified, cheap, effective.
  • Asset allocation first: match risk to your horizon and sleep-at-night level; write it into an IPS.
  • Costs & taxes kill returns: prefer low expense ratios, tax-efficient funds, and smart account placement.
  • Automate discipline: monthly contributions, dividend reinvestment, and calendar-based rebalancing.
  • Insure big risks: health, disability, and term life before chasing higher returns.
  • Stay the course: ignore forecasts; consistency beats cleverness.


This week’s playbook

  1. Draft a one-page Investment Policy Statement (goals, target allocation, contribution plan, rebalance rule).
  2. Build or migrate to a three-fund core using low-cost index funds/ETFs.
  3. Automate monthly buys and turn on dividend reinvestment.
  4. Set an annual rebalance reminder (or 5% bands).
  5. Do a quick insurance audit to cover catastrophic risks.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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2 weeks ago
14 minutes 33 seconds

Summed
Happy Money — Elizabeth Dunn & Michael Norton

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete Happy Money summary—a research-backed guide to spending for greater happiness. Psychologists Elizabeth Dunn (University of British Columbia) and Michael Norton (Harvard Business School) distill five principles—Buy Experiences, Make It a Treat, Buy Time, Pay Now/Consume Later, and Invest in Others, showing how to redirect the same dollars toward more joy, less stress, and better relationships. In ~20 minutes, you’ll learn practical ways to design your budget for well-being without spending more.


About the authors

  • Elizabeth Dunn, PhD — Social psychologist whose research explores how money and choices affect happiness.
  • Michael Norton, PhD — Behavioral scientist at Harvard Business School focused on spending, giving, and satisfaction.


Key takeaways

  • Buy Experiences: trips, classes, and shared moments outlast stuff.
  • Make It a Treat: scarcity boosts appreciation—rotate indulgences.
  • Buy Time: trade money for time (shorter commutes, outsourcing chores).
  • Pay Now, Consume Later: prepay to enjoy the anticipation; avoid debt drag.
  • Invest in Others: spending on people and causes reliably lifts happiness.
  • Same budget, better life: it’s allocation, not income, that often moves the needle.


This week’s playbook

  1. Swap one material purchase for an experience you’ll share with someone.
  2. Set a treat cadence (e.g., weekly coffee out) and keep it special.
  3. Buy an hour back: outsource one dreaded task and use the time intentionally.
  4. Prepay an upcoming event; block the date and enjoy the countdown.
  5. Send a surprise gift/donation—small, specific, and personal.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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3 weeks ago
14 minutes 59 seconds

Summed
One Up on Wall Street — Peter Lynch

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete One Up on Wall Street summary—Peter Lynch’s classic guide to finding tenbaggers by spotting everyday companies you understand, then doing focused, common-sense research. In ~20 minutes you’ll learn Lynch’s six stock categories (slow growers, stalwarts, fast growers, cyclicals, turnarounds, asset plays), how to craft a one-minute thesis, why story + numbers matters, and simple rules on valuation (including PEG checks), patience, and avoiding “diworsification.” Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want a practical way to turn real-life insights into better investing decisions.


About the author

Peter Lynch is the former manager of Fidelity’s Magellan Fund and a bestselling author known for translating professional investing into straightforward rules for individual investors.


Key takeaways

  • Invest in what you know: start with products, services, and trends you already notice.
  • Six stock types: know what you own—each type has different expectations and risks.
  • Tenbagger mindset: small, understandable businesses with long runways can compound massively.
  • Story + numbers: a 60-second thesis backed by a few key metrics (growth, margins, debt, cash).
  • PEG sanity check: growth should justify price; beware high P/E without high, durable growth.
  • Ignore macro noise: focus on company fundamentals and execution.
  • Avoid diworsification: add only what improves your edge or portfolio balance.
  • Hold with reasons: update your thesis; sell when it’s broken, not because of headlines.


This week’s playbook

  1. What-you-know sweep: list 5–10 companies you use and genuinely understand.
  2. Write a 60-second story for one idea + 3 numbers to track (revenue growth, operating margin, net debt/cash).
  3. Tag the type: categorize it (stalwart? fast grower?) and set expectations accordingly.
  4. Do a quick PEG check and a one-page pre-mortem: “What could kill this thesis?”
  5. Start a watchlist with price alerts and quarterly check-ins.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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3 weeks ago
21 minutes 43 seconds

Summed
Die With Zero — Bill Perkins

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete Die With Zero summary—Bill Perkins’s blueprint for maximizing life ROI: spending more on meaningful experiences while you’re healthiest, time-bucketing your life, giving earlier to loved ones, and designing a plan to avoid oversaving you’ll never use. In ~20 minutes, you’ll learn how to set a baseline safety floor (emergency fund + insurance/annuity options), convert money into memory dividends, and align your saving, spending, and giving with the right decade—so you don’t postpone living.


About the author:

Bill Perkins is an energy trader and hedge-fund manager known for applying expected-value thinking to personal decisions—arguing that the goal isn’t dying rich, but living richly.


Key takeaways:

  • Life ROI > Net worth: Optimize for memorable experiences, relationships, health.
  • Time buckets: Plan spending and experiences by decade (20s/30s/40s/50s+).
  • Memory dividends: Experiences pay ongoing returns in joy and identity—invest early.
  • Give sooner: Transfer some wealth when it has the highest utility (to kids/causes).
  • Safety floor: Hedge longevity/health risks with reserves, insurance, and annuity options.
  • Don’t oversave by default: Match savings rate to actual goals and timelines.

This week’s playbook:

  1. Draft five time buckets (now, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s+) and list one experience you’ll fund in each.
  2. Set a baseline safety number: emergency fund + insured risks; sanity-check against current savings.
  3. Schedule one memory-dividend experience this quarter (trip, skill, reunion) and pre-fund it.
  4. Plan giving-while-living: move a small, purposeful gift forward in time.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

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3 weeks ago
16 minutes 13 seconds

Summed
A Random Walk Down Wall Street — Burton G. Malkiel

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete A Random Walk Down Wall Street summary—Burton Malkiel’s classic case for low-cost index funds, broad diversification, and staying the course. In ~20 minutes, learn why most stock-picking and market-timing fail after fees and taxes, how to build a simple age-appropriate asset allocation, and the role of dollar-cost averaging, rebalancing, and tax-advantaged accounts. We also skim his take on bubbles, investor psychology, and why owning “the whole market” is the most reliable way to capture returns.


About the author

Burton G. Malkiel is an economist and longtime Princeton professor, best known for advancing the random walk/efficient-markets view and advocating low-fee index investing for everyday investors.


Key takeaways

  • Markets are hard to beat: prices absorb information; excess returns rarely persist after costs.
  • Own the market cheaply: total-market or S&P 500 index funds usually outperform active peers over time.
  • Allocate by risk/age: blend stocks, bonds (and optionally internationals/REITs) to match your tolerance and horizon.
  • Automate & rebalance: contribute on a schedule, reinvest dividends, and rebalance periodically.
  • Mind fees & taxes: expense ratios, turnover, and taxable churn are silent return killers.
  • Ignore the noise: bubbles and narratives tempt timing—discipline wins.


This week’s playbook

  1. Build a three-fund core: total stock, total international, and a broad bond fund.
  2. Automate monthly buys (DCA) and turn on dividend reinvestment.
  3. Set a target allocation and a simple rebalance rule (e.g., annually or at 5% bands).
  4. Max tax-advantaged accounts first; keep high-turnover assets in tax-sheltered buckets.
  5. If you must “play,” cap it at ≤10% and track it separately.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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4 weeks ago
19 minutes 44 seconds

Summed
The Automatic Millionaire — David Bach

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Automatic Millionaire summary—David Bach’s simple system for paying yourself first and letting wealth grow on autopilot. In ~20 minutes you’ll learn how to automate transfers on payday, fund tax-advantaged retirement accounts, build an emergency cushion, harness small daily savings (“Latte Factor”), and use set-and-forget rules (like automatic increases and biweekly payments) so your money works harder without willpower. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want a step-by-step plan to save more, invest consistently, and become an automatic millionaire over time.


About the author

David Bach is a bestselling personal-finance author and creator of the FinishRich framework. He’s known for turning complex money advice into straightforward habits anyone can automate.


Key takeaways

  • Pay yourself first: automate a slice of each paycheck into savings and retirement.
  • Make it automatic: scheduled transfers/investments beat willpower.
  • Latte Factor: small daily leaks compound—redirect them to long-term goals.
  • Use tax-advantaged accounts: reduce taxes, boost compounding.
  • Biweekly/round-up tactics: tiny, automatic boosts add up.

This week’s playbook (pick 1–3)

  1. Set a payday auto-transfer to high-yield savings (emergency fund) and to a low-cost index fund.
  2. Turn on auto-increase (1–2% per year) for retirement contributions.
  3. Do a Latte Factor sweep: cancel/trim one daily/weekly spend; reroute the same amount automatically.
  4. If applicable, switch to biweekly payments on large debts to shave interest and time.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
14 minutes 38 seconds

Summed
Nudge — Richard H. Thaler & Cass R. Sunstein

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete Nudge summary—how choice architecture uses gentle, freedom-preserving nudges to help people save more, pay down debt, budget better, and invest wisely. We break down the core tools—defaults, framing, salience, social norms, and commitment devices—and show practical ways to redesign your money environment so the wealth-building choice is the easy choice. Drawing on the authors’ “libertarian paternalism” approach, you’ll leave with simple, repeatable nudges you can set up today.


About the authors

  • Richard H. Thaler — Behavioral economist and 2017 Nobel Prize winner; pioneer of applying psychology to everyday financial decisions.
  • Cass R. Sunstein — Harvard Law professor and policy expert; co-architect of real-world nudge programs in government and business.


Key takeaways

  • Choice architecture matters: the way options are arranged changes outcomes.
  • Defaults are destiny: auto-enroll and auto-escalate savings; pick low-fee index funds as the default.
  • Framing & salience: present costs/benefits clearly (annualized costs, after-fee returns).
  • Social norms: show what “people like you” do to encourage better behavior.
  • Commitment devices: automate transfers, bill pay, and savings increases to defeat present bias.
  • Nudge, don’t shove: preserve freedom while guiding toward better choices.

This week’s playbook (pick 1–3)

  1. Upgrade your defaults: set or raise your retirement contribution and turn on auto-escalation.
  2. Automate good behavior: monthly transfer to a low-cost total-market index fund + bill autopay.
  3. Reframe spending: show big purchases as annual cost and % of take-home in your budget app.
  4. Use social proof: share a savings goal with a friend and report progress weekly.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
15 minutes 24 seconds

Summed
Richer, Wiser, Happier — William Green

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete Richer, Wiser, Happier summary—William Green’s guide to the mindsets, principles, and daily habits shared by great investors. You’ll learn why patience, simplicity, and temperament beat complexity; how to build a life that supports good decisions; and practical ways to copy what works—from long holding periods and circle-of-competence focus to reducing noise, fees, and forced errors. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want a behavior-first playbook for compounding both money and wisdom.


About the author

William Green is a financial journalist and author who has profiled many of the world’s most successful investors; his work distills their shared principles into practical rules you can apply today.


Key takeaways

  • Character compounds: humility, patience, and restraint drive outcomes.
  • Simplify: concentrate on what you understand; avoid unnecessary complexity.
  • Long game: hold great businesses for years; minimize churn and taxes.
  • Avoid unforced errors: cut noise, lower fees, and ignore short-term forecasts.
  • Design your environment: routines, checklists, and relationships that support rational choices.


This week’s playbook

  1. Noise diet: choose a weekly “no-market-news” window; replace with one investor essay or memo.
  2. Circle of competence audit: list 3 industries you truly understand; confine “serious” bets there.
  3. Hold-long rule: set a minimum intended holding period (e.g., 3–5 years) for core positions and document why.
  4. Fee sweep: move one holding to a lower-cost index/ETF alternative if possible.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
17 minutes 6 seconds

Summed
Just Keep Buying — Nick Maggiulli

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete Just Keep Buying summary—Nick Maggiulli’s data-driven playbook for building wealth through consistent saving and automated investing. In 20 minutes you’ll learn why saving rate beats stock picks, how to buy the market regularly instead of timing dips, when to prioritize debt payoff vs. investing, and how to use simple, low-cost index funds and rules to stay on track. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want evidence-based answers to the biggest money questions—so you can keep buying, keep compounding, and worry less.


About the author:

Nick Maggiulli is COO at Ritholtz Wealth Management and writes Of Dollars And Data, where he uses real data to test common money advice and turn it into practical rules.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
15 minutes 59 seconds

Summed
The Most Important Thing — Howard Marks

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Most Important Thing summary—Howard Marks’s distilled playbook for second-level thinking, risk control, and navigating market cycles. Drawn from his widely read client memos, the book explains the keys to successful investing—and the pitfalls that can destroy capital—using clear, real-world examples you can apply immediately.


About the author

Howard Marks is co-founder and co-chairman of Oaktree Capital Management and one of the most respected voices on market psychology and cycles. Warren Buffett famously said: “When I see memos from Howard Marks in my mail, they’re the first thing I open and read. I always learn something.”

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
14 minutes 43 seconds

Summed
The Millionaire Next Door — Thomas J. Stanley & William D. Danko

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Millionaire Next Door summary—a data-driven portrait of how ordinary people build extraordinary wealth by living below their means, prioritizing financial independence over status, and allocating time, energy, and money to what compounds. Drawing on Stanley and Danko’s landmark research, we unpack PAW vs. UAW (prodigious vs. under-accumulators of wealth), the dangers of economic outpatient care, and why modest homes, sensible cars, and simple systems beat flashy spending. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want a behavioral roadmap to long-term wealth.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
13 minutes

Summed
The Four Pillars of Investing — William J. Bernstein

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Four Pillars of Investing summary—Bernstein’s updated roadmap to building a winning, low-cost portfolio and avoiding the most common investor pitfalls. We break down the four pillars—theory, history, psychology, and the business of investing, and show how to use simple asset allocation, broad diversification, and brutally low fees/taxes to capture market returns over time. Based on the Second Edition (2023), this summary gives you the foundational knowledge to invest with discipline and design a portfolio you can actually stick with.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
21 minutes 25 seconds

Summed
Your Money or Your Life — Vicki Robin & Joe Dominguez

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete Your Money or Your Life summary—a nine-step, values-driven system to transform your relationship with money and pursue financial independence. We cover the core ideas popularized by Vicki Robin and the late Joe Dominguez: treating money as life energy, tracking every dollar, redefining “enough,” and using simple habits to get out of debt, grow savings, and invest intentionally. It’s a plain-English roadmap for spending less, living more, and aligning money with what matters—based on the fully revised edition that has sold over a million copies.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
15 minutes 22 seconds

Summed
The Little Book of Common Sense Investing — John C. Bogle

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Little Book of Common Sense Investing summary by John C. Bogle—the Vanguard founder’s plain-English playbook for capturing your fair share of stock market returns by owning low-cost index funds and holding for the long run. You’ll learn why fees, taxes, and churn are the real enemies of performance; why buying the entire market (via a total-market or S&P 500 index fund) tends to beat most investors after costs; and how to automate contributions, reinvest dividends, and rebalance simply to let compounding work. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners who want a set-and-forget path to wealth.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
24 minutes 19 seconds

Summed
The Simple Path to Wealth — J.L. Collins

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete The Simple Path to Wealth summary by J.L. Collins—a set-and-forget road map to financial independence and a rich, free life built on low-cost index funds and simple rules.


You’ll learn how to build “F-You Money,” clear high-interest debt, automate monthly buys into a total-market index fund (or low-fee ETF), and keep fees and taxes brutally low with tax-advantaged accounts and plain-vanilla rebalancing—while cutting through industry marketing myths and noise. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners, this book summary shows why staying the course beats market-timing and how a simple two-fund portfolio can compound real wealth with minimal effort.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

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1 month ago
23 minutes 15 seconds

Summed
I Will Teach You To Be Rich - Ramit Sethi

In this episode of Summed, we deliver a complete summary of Ramit Sethi's best seller: I Will Teach You To Be Rich —a no-guilt personal finance system built on automation, a Conscious Spending Plan, and low-cost index funds. In about 20 minutes, you’ll learn how to set up payday automation across a fee-free checking account and high-yield savings, crush bank and investment fees, optimize credit cards, and invest monthly in broad, low-fee ETFs so your money compounds on autopilot. Perfect for beginners and busy listeners, this book summary turns big ideas into simple steps you can apply today to build wealth the smart way.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
25 minutes 59 seconds

Summed
The Psychology of Money — Morgan Housel

In this episode we unpack Morgan Housel’s The Psychology of Money—a full, no-fluff book summary of the behavioral rules that actually build wealth. Learn why time, “enough,” and staying in the game beat IQ, and leave with simple, actionable steps to make your money work harder.

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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 month ago
19 minutes 39 seconds

Summed

Each episode of Summed sums up one of the greatest money books of all time in less than 20 minutes. Master your money with lessons from the greatest and learn to "Invest Like the Best". Curated by humans, synthesized with AI.


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An experiment in using AI to hack your life and make your money work for you.

(Education only; not financial advice.)


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.