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What We Do

“Sage” means wisdom, like “sage advice.” I want to help you build sage habits into your daily routine and yearly goals.

When I started this adventure in articles and videos to help others, it was mostly a chance to crystallize my own thoughts about the sage—and sometimes the very not sage—decisions and habits I had built over the past decades of adulthood.

Understand Money. This was the first topic I landed on as a bedrock for a sage lifestyle. How can you make smart financial decisions and create daily systems to enable your choices to create wealth over many years? From huge purchases and enormous income decisions, all the way down to daily expenditures that become impactful after hundreds of repetitions, I knew money was a bedrock component of wise living.

Get Organized. It turns out that to consistently make money and keep it, though, you need a plan. The plan requires components, and the components need deadlines and goals and miles and order. So it turns out that organizing all these parts of your money life and every other area become super important. Whether it’s keeping track of groceries so you can avoid eating out, or doing home maintenance that prevents a huge repair bill, or just being able to actually file a complete tax return, organization and money are inextricably linked.

Grow your Career. Once you get organized and see where all the dollars are going, you start to feel pretty good. You’re saving, prioritizing purchases that make you happy, and setting long-term goals. At some point, however, I see the same question materialize in the journey of almost everyone I work with: how can I go faster? That’s when you start to work on the income side of the equation. For most people, that will mean leveling-up in your career. Whether it’s getting a promotion, finding a new job, changing careers or starting a business of your own, we’re here to help.

Stay Healthy. Finally, a huge component of wise living and being a sage is how you treat your body and your health. You’ll either spend time, effort and money taking care of your health when you’re young, or you’ll spend even more time, effort, and money when you’re old, repairing the effects of the poor decisions and neglect when you were young.