Jarrod Frankum: The Financial Habit That Separates Investors Who Survive Market Cycles From Those Who Don't cover art

Jarrod Frankum: The Financial Habit That Separates Investors Who Survive Market Cycles From Those Who Don't

Jarrod Frankum: The Financial Habit That Separates Investors Who Survive Market Cycles From Those Who Don't

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Jarrod Frankum started his real estate journey with nothing — no cash, no credit, and a $500-a-month budget he'd carried home from two years of campus ministry in Brazil. Seven years later, he owns six properties outright and holds an additional eight in partnership, runs a wholesaling and buy-and-hold business that funds his life across two continents, and attributes a significant part of his financial survival to implementing Profit First early and staying disciplined through multiple market cycles.This conversation tracks the full arc of Jarrod's story — from skateboarding through neighborhoods writing down addresses on his phone, to closing his first wholesale deal for just under $10K, to navigating the real market stress test of running a U.S. real estate business remotely from Brazil. Along the way, David and Jarrod dig into how Profit First helped Jarrod throttle income, take the emotion out of big deal closings, and build a financial cushion that carried him through the unexpected friction of running a business abroad.If you've ever closed a deal and wondered where the money went, or felt like you can't trust your bank account balance to tell you the truth, Jarrod's experience with multiple accounts, automatic distributions, and tax reserves will show you exactly what it looks like when the system does the thinking for you.This episode is for the real estate investor who is tired of operating in financial chaos and is ready to build something that actually holds up when the market gets cold.Episode Highlights[0:27] – Jarrod previews the Profit First mindset that helped him survive moving back to Brazil mid-business[1:17] – David introduces Jarrod and how they connected at a Nashville mastermind[1:54] – Jarrod's current exit strategies: wholesaling as the primary driver, buy-and-hold as the long-term play, and flips when the right deal comes along[3:16] – The Rich Dad Poor Dad moment that gave Jarrod goosebumps during an HVAC internship six months before graduating with a mechanical engineering degree[4:51] – Why Jarrod left America with almost nothing, did campus ministry in Brazil on $500 a month, and what that season taught him about contentment and grit[5:31] – How Jarrod found his first deal: skateboarding neighborhoods, hand-writing letters, buying stamps, and closing a $9,500 wholesale deal after three months[7:48] – What living with seven roommates in a no-AC house in South America taught him about fulfillment that had nothing to do with money[9:24] – The Gap and the Gain mindset: how Jarrod measures progress from where he started, not from where he wants to be[13:59] – Where Jarrod is today: six properties in his own entity, eight more in partnership, 0% interest deals, and a rental portfolio that funds his life in Brazil[17:18] – How Jarrod found Profit First in early 2020 and why his background managing 1099 income made the multiple-account framework immediately click[19:13] – The core problem Profit First solves: why a $10K balance can actually mean you have $87 to spend, and how multiple accounts eliminate that confusion[21:10] – How Jarrod uses Relay Bank to automate distributions on the 10th and 25th so the system runs without him touching it[23:16] – Why Profit First isn't just for good times: how it functions as stored grain for the winter when real estate cycles go cold[25:09] – How throttling income to twice-a-month distribution dates takes the emotion out of deal closings and prevents impulsive spending[28:02] – Jarrod's take on reinvesting more aggressively now: still paying himself, still funded on all accounts, but consciously directing more toward growth at 34[31:35] – Closing advice: the deal of a lifetime comes around once a month — stay consistent, stay faithful to what's working, and trust the systems5 Key TakeawaysContentment before cash flow is the foundation. Jarrod learned on $500 a month in Brazil that fulfillment isn't tied to income — and that mindset is what kept him from panicking when the business hit hard stretches. If you need a certain number in your account before you feel okay, the number will never be high enough.Getting started with almost nothing is an advantage if you treat it that way. Jarrod had no capital, no credit, and no connections — so he skateboarded neighborhoods, hand-wrote letters, and spent $300 on stamps before he had the money to spare. The lack of a safety net forced action, and that first $9,500 wholesale deal proved the model worked.Multiple accounts do the thinking so you don't have to. The reason Profit First works isn't just the percentages — it's that you never have to look at one number and guess what it means. When taxes, owner's pay, and operating expenses each have their own home, your bank balance finally tells the truth.Throttling income to set distribution dates removes the emotional trap of big deal closings. When a $10K wire hits and you have to wait until the 10th to access ...
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