Start Here Wayne Huizenga was a billionaire many times over. He was the owner of garbage behemoth Waste Management, AutoNation, and Blockbuster Video (he later sold Blockbuster for $8.4 billion). He also owned three major league sports teams: the Miami Dolphins (NFL), the Florida Marlins (MLB), and the Florida Panthers (NHL). If you Google Wayne''s name, you''ll see the words "founder" and "empire builder" again and again. What''s much less known about Wayne is that before he made billions, he was a poor failure who had dropped out of college. Wayne was the son of an immigrant father who beat him and his mother. His childhood was violent, chaotic, and shrouded in secrecy.
After his parents got divorced, Wayne watched his friends go off to college and take white-collar jobs, while he drifted from one low-wage job to another. In fact, after a six-month stint in the army, the newly married Wayne had to become a garbage man. One of his old friends recalled seeing Wayne on the job and thinking, "I better hit the books. It must be rough out there if Wayne''s already driving a garbage truck." So how did this floundering young man with no connections, no family, and no wealth become a billionaire? Did he grab himself by the bootstraps, camp out in a garage, and dream up a new company to rule them all? No, he took a job selling trash-hauling services door-to-door. He drove, he sold, and he studied his boss, Wilbur Porter, who ran Porter''s Rubbish Service, one of Broward County''s first major garbage firms. He figured if he studied a great founder, someday he could become one. Then one day, something clicked.
Why start a company when he could buy one that already works? For months, he pressed Porter to let him purchase a share of the business in an asset sale. Porter relented in 1962. He sold Wayne a snub-nosed truck and $500 worth of customers. By 1969, Wayne''s single truck had become a fleet that dwarfed Porter''s. He brought on partners and bought routes and companies from Key West to Tampa. Wayne''s climb continued from there. In 1972, he drove across the United States and bought out ninety haulers in nine months. Those early years taught him three things.
First, you don''t need a college degree to make more money than you can imagine. Second, there is incredible profit to be made by buying a small, boring business. And third? The power of creative financing. Wayne Huizenga, the kid who originally didn''t have two pennies to rub together, who couldn''t get a loan even if he begged for it, became a billionaire because of this one essential ingredient. It allowed him to own Waste Management, even though he wasn''t the founder. To the victors go the history books. Why don''t we hear more incredible stories like Wayne Huizenga''s? Because we''ve been lied to about who gets rich and how for decades. Today, we take off the blindfold.
This is a book about seeing opportunities for financial freedom all around you, in the overlooked and unassuming businesses that we all take for granted. As someone who specializes in making good, profitable deals, I can promise you that success doesn''t require flashy start-ups or cutting-edge new products. In fact, that''s where you lose money. Instead, you''ll see why finding a "Main Street business" with steady cash flow, acquiring it, and using the profits to live life on your terms is the smart, extremely underrated way to build extraordinary wealth. I will take your hand and show you how. But first, let''s define the lie before we can reveal the truth. The Wall Street Lie: How Americans Are Programmed to Stay Poor Have you ever felt like you''ll never make enough money? Like you''ve been dealt a lifelong sentence of financial stress, worry, and anxiety? That no matter how hard you work, you''ll never be able to relax and feel financially free? If so, you''re not alone. Billions of workers are hustling all over the world.
Trying to keep up with inflation, barely scraping by, and losing hope in the promise of retirement. But here''s the thing: it''s not their fault. All of us were programmed to be poor. Here''s how we''re taught to make money in America. First, sit still and listen to authority figures for eight hours a day until we''re eighteen years old. Then, go to college and take on $30,000-plus in unforgivable debt, in exchange for a degree. Without that piece of paper, we''re told, we will never succeed. We''re not allowed to gain real-world skills through unpaid internships (the ones where you actually do useful work instead of just theorizing) unless they''re officially tied to an educational program, because otherwise they''re considered illegal.
Then it''s graduation day. We''re finally allowed to join the working world. Soon after, we discover that most jobs do not, in fact, require a college degree. Nevertheless, we all compete for jobs that barely cover our bills, much less our debts. Our top performers pursue the two highest-paying yet least creative jobs: consulting and Wall Street. Or, they play the lottery by joining a start-up. One that requires sleeping on floors and racking up debt from venture capitalists. The concept of "golden handcuffs" becomes very real.
Most of us suspect this game is rigged. We can''t afford houses, we hate our jobs, and our loans keep stacking up. Yet we can''t stop playing. We have bills to pay, with very real consequences if we don''t. So, we stick to what we know. Keep my job, ask for a raise once a year, and look for another job that pays a bit more. When we stop wanting to play, the old guard gets mad at us for not working "hard enough" and "quietly quitting." No wonder so many do not trust the system.
As the proverb goes: Play stupid games, win stupid prizes. Fortunately, people are starting to wake up. They''ve decided to play a better game, one where they actually have a shot at freedom. Millions are leaving their jobs (risky!) and becoming freelancers (literally half of all workers in Gen Z). Why? Because we want autonomy, upside, and work that aligns with our values. There''s just one problem: freelancing is just like being an employee, in that it''s nearly impossible to build real wealth. A mistake smart people make is trying to get rich as a freelancer. I have bad news: this probably won''t work.
Why is this? Because of a simple rule that wealthy people follow. One that separates them from everyone else who struggles with money. I had to work for more than a decade in big finance to learn it. You will learn it in a few hours with this book. It will turn on what is called your reticular activating system, a bundle of nerves at our brain stem that filters out unnecessary information so the important stuff gets through. Once you see the truth of ownership, you cannot unsee it. Here''s your first and most important lesson: Your salary will never set you free. Your financial freedom can only come through ownership.
More specifically, through equity done the right way. This is not what most of us were taught. Every day in school all the way up to your first job, you''ve been trained like Pavlov''s dog to follow the path of non-ownership. You''ve been zapped and given treats to believe that a good job is the real key to financial stability. Lies. No matter how hard you work, you will forever be a cocker spaniel begging for biscuits. That''s because you are trading your time for money, which means it''s impossible for you to break free. Warren Buffett said it best: "If you don''t find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die.
" It''s time to shed those lies and run toward the truth. The good news is there''s a way out. And no, you don''t need to come up with a genius invention, buy crypto, or own apartment complexes in Miami. Instead, just like Wayne Huizenga, you''ll make a few strategic moves that will allow you to efficiently become an owner. And once you experience the freedom of ownership, you''ll never go back. Here''s the best part: it might not even cost you a dime to start. * * * The central argument of this book is that buying profitable, established, cash-flowing businesses is the most underrated path to wealth. One that, if you do it right and are willing to put in the work, not only pays you enough money to quit your job but also allows you to pay someone else to run it with you.
That''s right: you own the business, you make a full-time salary, but you''re potentially not stuck with another full-time job forever. And unlike buying a house, you won''t always need a big down payment to own this business. The previous owner may even hand you the keys to their legacy for less than you can imagine. But you have to understand the game. They''ll want these three things in return: 1. You''ll give them the ability to exit their business and retire. 2. You''ll keep their business and legacy alive.
3. You''ll give them a cut of future profits. Sound too good to be true? It''s not. This is a proven path that allows normal people to become wealthy. Everyone? No. Only those willing to do the work and dedicate themselves to the rarest of things: being a builder in a world of consumers. It''s what I''ve done, more than a hundred times. Which is how a small corner of the internet came to know me as "the chick who buys laundromats"-not my favorite title, but hey, I''ve been called worse.
I''ve also helped thousands of people just like you do it t.