The Rulebook for Financial Success: What Should’ve Been Taught in School
Key Takeaways
- Financial success isn’t a mystery — it’s about smart debt reduction, good money management skills, and building financial habits that compound.
- Pay off bad debts (like credit cards) first to free up cash flow.
- Use debt for growth — property, an investment account, or a managed fund investment portfolio — not toys that lose value.
- Structure loans for tax minimisation and long-term financial goals.
- Compounding interest, dividend reinvestment, and smart asset allocation help grow net worth over time.
- Avoid lifestyle creep, focus on discretionary spending, and keep buffers for flexibility.
- Financial freedom comes from a rulebook backed by strategy, not hype.
Introduction: The Wealth Game Has Rules — But Most People Are Playing Blind
No one teaches proper financial literacy programs in school. Most Aussies leave school knowing Pythagoras’ theorem but nothing about bank accounts, cashflow management, or risk and reward with money.
So they wing their finances — maxing out credit cards, struggling with debt reduction, or ending up with poor investment strategies.
The truth? There is a simple rulebook for building financial success. And once you learn the rules, financial freedom becomes a real path, not a dream.
1. Master the Debt Waterfall
The golden principle of money management skills: tackle debt in the right order.
Debt waterfall order:
- High-interest debts (credit cards, personal loans, car/boat loans)
- Owner-occupied home loan
- Investment loans (like property or an investment account — usually tax-deductible, so reduce these last)
This clears bad financial behaviours early and frees up cash flow, which you can then put towards investments that benefit from compound interest.
2. Use Debt Strategically — Not Emotionally
Debt isn’t the villain — but how you use it matters.
- Bad debt: fuels lifestyle creep and pays for things that drop in value.
- Good debt: funds smart investment strategies in assets that appreciate or generate income.
Rule of thumb: If you’re not building financial goals like financial freedom or growing net worth, don’t borrow for it.
3. Optimise for Tax Deductibility
Smart cashflow management means making the tax system work with you, not against you.
- Structure loans so investment debt is deductible
- Use offset bank accounts to keep interest costs down
- Avoid mixing personal and business borrowings
This is behavioural finance 101: lowering costs today means more compounding interest at work tomorrow.
4. Build Something That Compounds
Wealth grows through the power of time horizon and compounding interest. Short-term wins don’t cut it.
Think about building assets like:
- A managed fund investment portfolio with dividend reinvestment
- A diversified share or property portfolio with smart asset allocation
- A business or personal brand
- Even intellectual property
An income investor who focuses on compounding interest and risk and reward over 10+ years will see financial habits snowball into financial success.
5. Always Maintain Optionality and a Buffer
Optionality = having choices. Buffers = breathing room. Both are essential for financial freedom.
You’ll want:
- An emergency fund sitting in a flexible bank account
- Loan structures that can adapt
- Multiple income streams
- Exit strategies in business or investment accounts
Rigid financial habits break. Flexible investors thrive.
6. Plug the Budget Leaks
Debt reduction and wealth building aren’t just about income — it’s about how you handle discretionary spending.
- Cancel unused subscriptions
- Watch spending habits that create lifestyle creep
- Track cash flow with tech or apps
- Automate savings into your investment accounts
Good money management skills make success boring, repeatable, and automatic.
7. Get Good Advice — and Act on It
No one achieves financial freedom alone. Smart financial behaviors start with the right advisers.
- A broker who aligns with your investment strategies
- A tax adviser who structures for tax minimisation
- A financial adviser who understands behavioural finance and long-term money management skills
That’s how everyday people achieve financial goals, boost net worth, and avoid costly mistakes. At Mountway, we’ve worked with partners like Crown Money to help Aussies align their cashflow management and build smarter plans.
Conclusion: There’s No Magic — Just Rules That Work
This is financial literacy programs made simple: learn the rulebook, practice good financial habits, and let compounding interest do the heavy lifting.
Over years — not months — these investment strategies, buffers, and budgeting skills create real financial freedom.
At Mountway, we don’t sell hype. We help Australians write their personal rulebook.