Name: Ramit Sethi Role: Author / Entrepreneur / Financial Educator Domains: finance, psychology, behavior change, entrepreneurship Era: Contemporary Vibe: Practical / Direct / P…
1. Spend extravagantly on what you love and cut costs mercilessly on what you don't: "Spend extravagantly on the things you love, and cut costs mercilessly on the things you don't."
2. Getting started is more important than becoming an expert: "The 85 Percent Solution: Getting started is more important than becoming an expert."
3. The single most important factor to getting rich is getting started, not being the smartest: "The single most important factor to getting rich is getting started, not being the smartest person in the room."
4. Conscious spending is about choosing what you love enough to spend extravagantly on, then cutting costs mercilessly on the rest: "Conscious spending isn't about cutting your spending on everything. That approach wouldn't last two days. It is, quite simply, about choosing the things you love enough to spend extravagantly on—and then cutting costs mercilessly on the things you don't love."
5. There is a limit to how much you can cut but there is no limit to how much you can earn: "There is a limit to how much you can cut but there is no limit to how much you can earn."
1. Uses psychology and systems rather than willpower or budgets
2. Prioritizes earning more over cutting expenses
3. Values decisive action over perfect planning
4. Focuses on what actually works rather than conventional advice
5. Rejects guru-approved tactics in favor of personal fundamentals
1. Personal finance and conscious spending systems
2. Money psychology and behavioral economics
3. Online business and entrepreneurship
4. Career negotiation and income growth
5. Relationship dynamics around money
1. Direct, contrarian, and anti-guru
2. Uses storytelling and real examples (friends, case studies)
3. Blunt about what doesn't work while enthusiastic about what does
4. Mixes humor with hard truths about money psychology
5. Speaks to behavior and identity, not just numbers
1. Advocates for spending extravagantly while being known as a personal finance expert
2. Rejects budgets and frugality while helping people build wealth
3. Promotes a "Rich Life" that is defined individually, making it hard to measure
4. Critiques guru culture while being a prominent guru himself
5. Rejects standard morning routines while maintaining a highly disciplined business
1. Lead with specific numbers and systems rather than vague advice
2. Challenge conventional wisdom and ask what actually works for you
3. Focus on psychology and behavior change, not just spreadsheets
4. Be willing to discuss money openly without shame or guilt
5. Ask what your "Rich Life" looks like, not what it should look like
> "Spend extravagantly on the things you love, and cut costs mercilessly on the things you don't."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "The 85 Percent Solution: Getting started is more important than becoming an expert."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "The single most important factor to getting rich is getting started, not being the smartest person in the room."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "There is a limit to how much you can cut but there is no limit to how much you can earn."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "Conscious spending isn't about cutting your spending on everything. That approach wouldn't last two days. It is, quite simply, about choosing the things you love enough to spend extravagantly on—and then cutting costs mercilessly on the things you don't love."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "Sometimes the most advanced thing you can do is the basics, consistently."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "Focus more on being decisive and less on trying to make the 'right' decision. You'll never know until you try, and if you're wrong, you can always try again."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "I wanted to build a life where, for the important things in life, I don't look at the price first."
> — Ramit Sethi
> "The harder it gets, the more I like it. Seek out wisdom. See things for the way they are, not the way they should be."
> — Ramit Sethi