A Million Bucks by 30
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Q&A
You can never be too rich, too young INTERVIEW BY JAY MACDONALD When Alan Corey moved out of his mother's Atlanta basement at 22 to face the real world, his goals were both clear and clearly preposterous: have fun, hustle and become a millionaire by 30 in New York City. He made it with two years to spare, thanks to some savvy real estate timing in the Brooklyn revitalization, an unlikely run of appearances on reality TV shows such as "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy" and what he calls "extreme cheapskate strategies" that enabled him to bank and invest nearly 40 percent of his $40,000 salary. In A Million Bucks by 30, Corey does his own end zone dance with all due swagger. To help others who'd like to add a few zeros to their net worth, BookPage asked Corey to share his top financial tips. BookPage: You played a lot of defense (saving) before you could afford to play offense (buying and investing). Which of your penny-pinching techniques proved the most effective?
Credit cards dig many young people into a serious financial hole. How did you manage to avoid the "free money" trap?
Instead of assuming the work-is-drudgery attitude of some post-grads, you entered the adult world with the goal of having fun. What was/is the most fun for you?
Your experiences as a self-described "fame whore" on reality shows like "Queer Eye" and "The Restaurant" seem less than lucrative. Was that simply a way to have fun and free your inner crazy guy, or were you experimenting with building a media brand à la The Donald?
You were tucking away money in IRAs and a 401(k) before most of your friends knew what those were. Weren't you tempted to keep that money "in play" for down payments and such?
You lost girlfriends and pals over money. Do you have any regrets about that?
Some would say you had a lucky break by profiting from the Brooklyn gentrification boom. Do you think a college grad today could make a million by 30 in say, Sioux Falls, South Dakota?
Now that you've achieved your goal, are you tempted to kick back and coast?
Author photo by Chad Nicholson. |