How to Build Wealth From Zero: The Equation That Works for Everyone

Dennis VymerDecember 28, 20257 min read

You know what Warren Buffett, your grandmother with her savings account, and that coworker who complains they never have anything left over have in common?

They're all working with the same three ingredients. They just mix them differently.

Today we're going to talk about a simple equation that explains why some people build wealth and others don't — even when they earn the same amount.


Money vs. Wealth — What's the Difference?

This is a crucial distinction that most people don't understand.

Money (income) = what hits your bank account every month. Your paycheck, bonuses, side hustles.

Wealth = what you've built. Investments, real estate, savings. What remains even if you stop working tomorrow.

You can earn $150,000 a year and have zero wealth — because you spend it all.
And you can earn $50,000 a year and have millions in 20 years — because you understand the equation.

Income makes you rich on paper. Wealth makes you truly free.


The Wealth Equation

It's simple:

WEALTH = DISCIPLINE + INCOME + TIME

The Three Pillars of Wealth Equation

Three ingredients. No magic.

  • Discipline — consistency, regularity, the ability to stick to a plan
  • Income — how much you can invest (not how much you earn!)
  • Time — how long you let your money work

And here's the key insight:

When you weaken one component, you must strengthen the others.

Don't have a high income? You need more time and iron discipline.
Starting late? You need higher income or larger investment amounts.
No discipline? Then you've got a problem — because without it, the equation doesn't work at all.


Component #1: Time

Time is the only component you can't buy, negotiate, or hack.

Every day you delay costs you more than you think. Compound interest needs time to get going — the first few years look boring. But then...

A Simple Example

Two people invest $500 per month with an 8% annual return:

WhoStarts atStops at 60Total InvestedEnds With
SarahAge 25Age 35 (then stops)$60,000$680,000
MikeAge 35Age 60$150,000$520,000

Sarah invested 2.5× less money and has more. Why? Because she had a 10-year head start and then let compound interest do its work.

Chart comparing Sarah and Mike

Time isn't just important. It's irreplaceable.


Component #2: Income

Obviously — the more you earn, the more you can invest. That makes sense.

But watch out for the trap: higher income often means higher expenses.

New car, nicer apartment, fancier restaurants... Lifestyle has a tendency to grow along with your paycheck. It's called lifestyle creep and it's the silent killer of wealth.

What Works

When you get a raise or bonus:

  1. Add the first 50% to investments — before you get used to having it
  2. Enjoy the rest — guilt-free

This way you gradually raise your standard of living, but at the same time you accelerate wealth building.

It's not about having the highest income. It's about how much of it you can systematically convert into wealth.


Component #3: Discipline

This is the component that separates those who build wealth from those who just dream about it.

You can have:

  • 30 years of time
  • A great income
  • And still have nothing

How? Simple. Just invest inconsistently. Sometimes yes, sometimes no. "This month just didn't work out."

Why Discipline Is King

Discipline does two things:

1. Eliminates Emotions
You don't worry about whether the market is up or down. Every month, the payment goes through. Done. With regular investing (dollar-cost averaging), you sometimes buy high, sometimes buy low — and the average works out well.

2. Builds Habit
The first year is hard. The second year it's routine. By the third year, you don't even notice you're doing it.

Again, I'll quote my favorite idea from "Rich Dad, Poor Dad":

Pay yourself first!


How It Works in Practice: The Average American

Let's take Jake. He's 30, earns the median U.S. salary ($62,000/year, roughly $4,200/month after taxes), and wants to start building wealth.

Jake's Equation

ComponentJake's Situation
Time35 years until retirement — solid
IncomeAverage — room for optimization
DisciplineNone yet — needs to start

Jake calculates that he can invest $500/month (about 12% of his take-home pay).

What Happens in 35 Years?

With an 8% average annual return:

  • Total invested: $210,000 (income converted to investments)
  • Portfolio value: $1,050,000 (wealth)

Jake's portfolio growth

See the difference? Jake put in $210,000 — but his wealth is over $1 million. That extra $840,000 is the work of compound interest. That's the magic when you add time and discipline to the equation.

But what if Jake had started 10 years earlier?

  • Total invested: $270,000 (an extra $60,000)
  • Wealth: $2,100,000 (double!)

Those 10 extra years = over $1 million difference.


Find Your Balance

Here's the important thing nobody tells you:

There's no single right ratio. There's only one you can actually stick to.

Different Life Situations

SituationWhat ChangesHow to React
Baby arrivesLess money for investingLower the amount, but don't stop
Better jobMore incomeIncrease investments before you get used to the extra cash
Unexpected expenseOne-time hitKeep going, one month means nothing
PromotionMore money, less timeAutomate, so you don't have to think about it

Life changes. And your equation can change with it.


My Experience

It took me several iterations to find a system that works for me.

First attempts were... let's say optimistic. "I'll invest 50% of my income!" Lasted two months.

Then I tried the opposite. "I'll invest what's left over." Nothing was ever left over.

What works:

At the end of every month, I look back. What worked? What didn't? Do I need to adjust the amount? Is there something I can automate?

It's not about finding the perfect system right away. It's about finding a system you can stick to — and then fine-tuning it over time.

Changes come. Better job, new expenses, different priorities. And that's okay. What matters is that the basic habit — that discipline — remains.


Which Component Should You Strengthen?

Quick test:

Are you young (under 30)?
→ Your biggest weapon is time. Even a small amount now beats a large amount 10 years from now.

Do you have an average income?
→ Focus on discipline. Regular $300/month beats random $1,000 here and there.

Starting late?
→ You need to increase your income or investment amount. No one can give you time back — but you can compensate with larger volume.


The Bottom Line

Building wealth isn't about luck or a high income.

It's a simple equation:

WEALTH = DISCIPLINE × INCOME × TIME

Three components. When one weakens, you strengthen the others. When life throws obstacles, you adjust and keep going.

Income makes you a person with money.
The equation makes you a person with wealth.

And a person with wealth is free. That's what matters.


Have questions? Email me at vymerd@gmail.com.

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