Manage Your Finances Like a Professional Gambler: Small Things Add Up
Published on - January 4th, 2007 (by J.D. Roth) Here’s a guest entry from Tynan. This is the first of a series of posts about how a professional gambler looks at money. Look for additional installments in coming weeks.
I was eighteen, and a freshman in college. For the past few years I’d been making a few hundred dollars a month selling Palm Pilots on eBay. It was a lot of money for a teenager with no real expenses, but of course I spent it all. My knowledge of personal finance was fuzzy at best. Naturally I squandered any money I made.
Then, through a strange series of events, I became a professional gambler. It happened fast, and soon my “studies” were being neglected for long nights of blackjack, roulette, and video poker. Eventually I dropped out of school to make serious money, and thus began my real financial education.
There are a lot of analogs between gambling and real life finance, which should come as no surprise since gambling is simply the bizarre intersection of fun and finance. I learned more about personal finance, discipline, and math during my six years as a professional gambler than any other period of my life.
My hope is that through this series you’ll receive the same education, without the inconvenience of making piles of money.
When a gambler plays a game, he receives a payout. A 100% payout is what he’d get from a perfectly even game like flipping a coin. No one has an advantage. A 99% payout means that the gambler will lose, on average, 1% of what he bets. A 101% payout means that the gambler will earn 1% on what he bets. This may sound like a slight amount, but when betting tens of millions of dollars a year, that 2% spread between 99% and 101% represents the difference between going broke and living very comfortably.
As a gambler, I would implement changes to my playing habits. Each alteration might only increase my payout by .05%, but each .05% pushed me closer to the promised land of 101%. When I understood this concept, I realized that life is the same way. Either your spending habits are building your wealth or bleeding it — just like gambling.
For example, do you take money out of an ATM every week? If you do, that’s costing you an average of $2.91 per week (according to Bankrate). People don’t feel good emotionally taking out $160 at once instead of $40 a week, but that emotion has nothing to do with the real financial costs associated with the extra ATM fees. This irrational emotion is exactly what fuels casinos.
The profit in switching to a monthly withdrawal schedule is $104.76 ($2.91 * 3 * 12 ) per year. That negative emotion some people have is costing them $104.76 per year.
What about tipping 25% instead of 15%? If you’re an average American, you’re spending an additional $440 per year to feel generous. I’m not saying it’s not worth it — I’m just saying that it’s costing you.
Switching a credit card balance from 25% APR to a newly opened 10% APR card can save $1250 on a $5000 balance.
We ignore these habits and expenses on a daily basis, but as a professional gambler, small improvements in our habits are the difference between making a living and going bust. I learned my lessons fast and was a successful gambler for six years.
In real life, if we pay attention to our small habits and adjust them, they too can make a big difference. I’ve listed three changes that an average person could make. The benefit over ten years? Almost $18k — that’s big.
Look for future installments from Tynan in the weeks ahead.
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[...] Get Rich Slowly » Manage Your Finances Like a Professional Gambler: Small Things Add Up “As a gambler, I would implement changes to my playing habits. Each alteration might only increase my payout by .05%, but each .05% pushed me closer to the promised land of 101%. When I understood this concept, I realized that life is the same way. Either (tags: money) [...]
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[...] Manage Your Finances Like a Professional Gambler: Small Things Add Up A professional gambler’s tips for managing money. [...]
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Hi,
Tynan, simply ignore the jealous ones! The world is full of them!
Professional gambling is an honorable profession……however, it is NOT an easy one! Professional gambling requires every “disipline” known to man! Practice every known “disipline” and you can become expert at anything!
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Good article! The article triggers a lot of responses.
If you want to be rich, you have to have a certain attitude and discipline. The reachest people are in certain cases very cheap. Like it or not, their first question in mind: what is MY (potential) return on investment.
For me a reason to pay only 15% tip in a restaurant (Don’t blame me that your boss is paying you so poorly).
I rather spend money to charity than spending more on tips because this will give me a tax reduction and a win win situation.
People like alejandra, who published a comment, will never be rich because his/her emotions make the decisions.
Taking money out of the ATM and paying a fee is just giving money away. Plan ahead and get your cash in the grocery store when you do your groceries. There are several ways to get you cash without paying fees.
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[...] Manage Your Finances Like a Professional Gambler: Small Things Add Up A professional gambler’s tips for managing money. [...]
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I an not surprised by all the variety of opinions here. They are of course exactly that…opinions! and reflect the writers past experiences and knowledge or lack of it.
Perhaps you could all expand your real knowledge by reading a free (nothing for sale) website by a genuine professional gambler. Go: WIN3MILLION.COM
You will learn something of the real world.
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# whining waiter Said:
“Every waitperson I’ve ever met feels entitled to generous tips.”
And they tend to tip just as generously.
I’ve never waited tables except for 2 days at a kosher catering hall that I will not speak of again. I’ve spent some time bartending, both in a private party setting and at a real bar. I enjoy bar tending on tips alone far more than working in an open bar setting where I get a paid for the night and a tip from the host. Its a good system that keeps the waitstaff loyal to the customers before the owners. You hire spotters and keep a manager on the floor to prevent the waitstaff from stealing and everyone is happy.
If you don’t like it, don’t eat out.
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What I think Mr Tynan is trying to convey, is this: DISIPLINE! He is simply conveying the fact, that “costs” always cost something….and “saving” always saves something! Lets take the subject of tipping: He is precisely correct when he says, “tipping to feel generous”….the price of an item is already on your MENU…your server is already being PAID….tipping is simply another way for the business to avoid paying a decent wage!
If a person is NOT going to provide you with a 100% effort while on the job, that person should not be there to begin with!
A very, very wealthy businessman, (who was simply a dealer in scrap & junk), once taught me a valuable lesson: He said to me, “son, watch your pennies, the dollars will take care of themselves”!
I have a hunch Mr Tynan is saying the same thing! WATCH YOUR PENNIES, THE DOLLARS WILL TAKE CARE OF THEMSELVES!
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I guess I wouldn’t be described as a “professional” gambler, since I am a financial analyst by profession. However, I am a very successful online gambler. I have an extremely keen understanding of certain sports and have made nearly $150,000 in the last two years. There are gamblers that can be very successful over a long period of time. Don’t expect these people to reveal all of their secrets though.
I use an online-gambling site that has a very easy and hassle-free withdrawal process. I keep $2200 in my player’s account and withdraw my winnings every week to make it go back to $2200 ($2200 is a very important limit on one of the bets I use). I end each week with a positive profit margin nearly 80% of the time. If not, I deposit up to $2200. I’m extremely organized and have kept all weekly transactions in a spreadsheet for tax reasons. One of my keys is to find those “fat” lines that are based on people (fans of teams) that tend to bet on emotion. I’ve become extremely adept at using the “masses” irrational emotions against them among other things. It definitely takes the utmost discipline to be successful for a long period of time. I’m honestly not sure if this type of discipline can be learned either. That’s why I’m not sure if professional gambling techniques can be “truly” used to help your finances if you are not already extremely disciplined in the first place. I think this innate discipline (or lack-there-of), spills into almost everything concerning the art of making money.
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