From Middle Class to Millions

10 Money Moves Every Woman Needs to Make Now: Financial Independence for Women

29 min · 7 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 10 Money Moves Every Woman Needs to Make Now: Financial Independence for Women

Descripción

Building wealth as a woman requires more than a good income. It requires financial autonomy, and most women were never taught how to claim it. In this episode of From Middle Class to Millions, Shannon breaks down the 10 money moves every woman needs to make to protect her financial future, whether she is married, single, or somewhere in between. Shannon opens with a sobering history lesson: women in the U.S. could not open a credit card without a man's signature until 1974. That system left a legacy that still shows up in the gender wealth gap, the investing confidence gap, and the financial vulnerability too many women face today. The data backs it up. After divorce, women's household income drops by an average of 41%. Only 65% of women see themselves as investors compared to 76% of men. And 56% of women defer to their spouse on financial planning and investment decisions, leaving them exposed when life does not go as planned. The 10 money moves Shannon covers include knowing your net worth, building your own credit history, understanding your retirement accounts, protecting yourself with individual bank accounts, knowing your insurance coverage, planning for career interruptions, claiming your Social Security benefits, learning the basics of investing and compound interest, working with your own financial professional, and talking about money openly with other women. Financial independence is not about planning for failure. It is about showing up as a full participant in your own financial life. Ready to take control of your money and start building real wealth? Book a free discovery call [https://calendly.com/thewholebudget/60-min] with Shannon. Topics: financial independence for women, women and investing, wealth building, personal finance, money mindset, net worth, compound interest, retirement planning, credit score, financial autonomy, gender wealth gap, divorce and finances, financial coaching, budgeting, investing for beginners

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de From Middle Class to Millions!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

88 episodios

episode The $20,000 Vet Bill That Didn't Wreck Her Finances artwork

The $20,000 Vet Bill That Didn't Wreck Her Finances

In this episode of From Middle Class to Millions, Shannon breaks down the real definition of wealth, and it has nothing to do with Birkin bags, private jets, or champagne on Instagram. Drawing on Morgan Housel's The Psychology of Money, Shannon unpacks why true financial freedom is quiet, invisible, and felt rather than seen. Through three real client stories, an unexpected car repair, a $20,000 vet bill, and an out-of-pocket hormonal panel during perimenopause, Shannon shows the tangible difference between having a strong emergency fund and financial fluency versus spiraling into high-interest debt when life throws a curveball. She explains why understanding terms like debt to income ratio, credit utilization, and liquid assets isn't just financial jargon, it's the foundation that protects every dollar you're trying to build and invest for your future. This episode is for the high-earning woman who has the income, the promotions, and the raises, but still feels anxious and unsure if she's making the right money moves. Shannon makes the case that closing the wealth gap isn't about earning more, it's about financial literacy, money mindset, and building a strategy that gives you peace of mind, not panic, when the unexpected happens. Ready to build real financial confidence and a wealth strategy that fits your life? Book a free call with Shannon [https://calendly.com/thewholebudget/60-min].

18 de jun de 202627 min
episode Personal Finance Basics: 10 Money Terms to Build Wealth and Grow Your Net Worth artwork

Personal Finance Basics: 10 Money Terms to Build Wealth and Grow Your Net Worth

Your net worth is your scoreboard, not your salary. In this episode of From Middle Class to Millions, I break down the 10 personal finance and investing terms that quietly decide whether your net worth grows every year or just sits there spinning its wheels. Nobody asks you about your actual net worth. Not in school, not at home, not as an adult. You got handed a paycheck, a credit card, a 401k form, and a "good luck, go figure it out." So today I am giving you the nuggets on the 10 words that matter most for building wealth and reaching financial freedom. We cover net worth and why it beats income as the real measure of your money. We get into compound interest and why starting early with a small amount can beat starting later with more. I walk through liquid assets and the emergency fund that keeps a surprise from turning into debt. We look at your debt-to-income ratio and credit utilization, the numbers lenders check before they ever set your interest rate. Then we move to the growth side: index funds, dollar-cost averaging, expense ratios, and the tax-advantaged accounts like your 401k, traditional IRA, and Roth IRA that let you keep more of what you build. You are not bad with money. You are probably making good money. You are just missing the plan that ties it all together. Want all 10 terms turned into actual moves? Join my free live webinar, "Money in Plain English: : 10 Financial Terms Changing How People Think About Money", on Wednesday, June 17th at 7:00 p.m. EST. No jargon, just the words standing between you and a bigger net worth. Register here: webinar link [https://my.demio.com/ref/QmZb1Fcsf1FY4Gxj]

11 de jun de 202633 min
episode Wealth Building Strategies for High Earners: 401(k), HSA, and FIRE artwork

Wealth Building Strategies for High Earners: 401(k), HSA, and FIRE

In this special live episode of From Middle Class to Millions, Shannon Brome-Ward sits down with executive leadership psychologist and executive coach Dr. Nicole Bryan to talk about how to make your money work for you instead of working so hard for your money. Shannon and Dr. Nicole share their personal money stories, including how growing up in immigrant, blue collar households shaped their money mindset, and why they each shifted from chasing a high salary to building real wealth and net worth. You will learn practical wealth building strategies for high earners, including: * How to maximize your 401(k) with pre-tax contributions, employer match, and catch-up contributions * Why your health savings account (HSA) is a powerful, triple tax advantaged investment account * Employee benefits most people overlook, from legal services to mental health and therapy coverage * Real estate investing and using home equity to fund other investments * Stock market investing through brokerage accounts you can access before retirement * How tracking your expenses helps you redirect money toward investing and high yield savings * Working with a CPA to lower your taxable income and rethink that big tax refund * The fundamentals of FIRE (financial independence, retire early), the 4% rule, and how to calculate your number If you are a high-earning woman who wants your money to give you options, freedom, and choices, this episode is for you.

4 de jun de 20261 h 2 min
episode Employee Benefits You're Ignoring That Could Make You a Millionaire artwork

Employee Benefits You're Ignoring That Could Make You a Millionaire

If you have a W-2 job, you already have access to one of the most overlooked wealth-building strategies available: your full employee benefits package. In this episode, Shannon breaks down exactly how she walked away from a 20-year corporate career as a multimillionaire, and why the difference between employees who retire wealthy and those who don't has very little to do with their salary. Most people look at their paycheck and stop there. But your total compensation package is far bigger than your take-home pay, and learning how to maximize every piece of it is one of the fastest ways to keep more money in your pocket and redirect it toward building real wealth. Shannon covers six often-missed benefits that W-2 earners should be putting to work right now: * 401(k) match: This is your baseline, non-negotiable starting point for retirement savings. At a minimum, contribute enough to capture every dollar your employer matches. * Health Savings Account (HSA): A triple tax advantage that most people are using wrong. Stop treating it like a checking account. Invest the funds and leave them alone. * Paid time off (PTO): Rest is a wealth tool. Using your PTO protects your health, your relationships, and your ability to think clearly about your financial future. * Employee Assistance Program (EAP): Free or discounted access to legal counsel, mental health services, and financial coaching that most employees never touch. * Commuter and transportation benefits: Pre-tax dollars for transit, parking, and rideshare that go unclaimed every month. * Fitness, wellness, and credit union perks: Employer subsidies that free up cash you can funnel directly into investments, emergency savings, or your next wealth-building goal. Your job is your floor, not your ceiling. Whether you walk out on your own terms or the company walks you out first, the goal is to be financially prepared either way. Ready to stop guessing and start building a real wealth strategy around everything you already have? Book a call with Shannon at https://calendly.com/thewholebudget/60-min [https://calendly.com/thewholebudget/60-min] and let's map out your plan together. Enjoyed this episode? Rate and share it with any W-2 earner you know who is ready to stop leaving money on the table.

28 de may de 202626 min
episode 529 College Savings Plan: What to Open, How to Invest, and What Happens If Your Kid Skips College artwork

529 College Savings Plan: What to Open, How to Invest, and What Happens If Your Kid Skips College

My oldest is officially done with high school, and this week's episode was inspired by that milestone. I'm pulling back the curtain on how I funded college for my kids using a 529 plan and why I made the choices I did along the way. I cover the basics of how a 529 works, the tax advantages, contribution limits, and how the investment options inside the plan compare to your 401k or brokerage account. But more importantly, I get into the mindset behind the decision: why college savings was a priority in my household but never THE priority, and how I made sure I wasn't sacrificing my own retirement to fund someone else's future. I also bust the biggest myth that keeps people from opening a 529: what happens if your kid doesn't go to a four-year university. Spoiler, trade schools, apprenticeship programs, student loan repayment, and even a Roth IRA rollover are all on the table. Topics covered: * How 529 plans work and what they pay for * Annual gift tax exclusion and contribution strategies * Target date funds inside 529 plans * What to do with leftover 529 funds * Generational wealth transfer through education Ready to build a college savings strategy that doesn't derail your own financial future? Book a free call at the link below. Book your free discovery call: https://calendly.com/thewholebudget/60-min [https://calendly.com/thewholebudget/60-min]

21 de may de 202631 min