Choosing to Prosper: Triumphing Over Adversity, Breaking Out of Comfort Zones, Achieving Your Life and Money Dreams
By Bola Sokunbi
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About this ebook
Overcome obstacles, achieve your life’s goals, and live your life on your own terms!
In Choosing to Prosper! Triumphing Over Adversity, Breaking Out of Comfort Zones, and Achieving Dreams, celebrated company founder and finance leader Bola Sokunbi delivers an uplifting and practical message of success and resilience in the face of formidable obstacles. The book challenges readers to examine their own financial and personal dreams and find the strength and resilience they need to achieve them. The author provides the tools readers need to build confidence, find their voice, and realize personal growth.
Imposter syndrome, mental health challenges, and common familial obstacles are all explored in the context of the author’s incredible and inspirational life experiences.
Readers will find:
- First-hand stories that highlight the challenges faced by women of color and proven ways to overcome them
- Expert and honest advice on how women can build a successful, career and/or a profitable, and flexible business depending on their chosen path
- Hands-on strategies for women to achieve their extraordinary goals and dreams
With a particular emphasis on the experiences of women of color as they seek to succeed in a world that seems stacked against them, Choosing to Prosper! is the perfect resource for women trying to navigate the challenges posed by modern life, career, and business.
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Choosing to Prosper - Bola Sokunbi
Choosing to Prosper
Triumphing over Adversity, Breaking out of Comfort Zones, Achieving Your Life and Money Dreams
Bola Sokunbi
Logo: WileyCopyright © 2022 by Bola Sokunbi. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per‐copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750‐8400, fax (978) 750‐4470, or on the web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748‐6011, fax (201) 748‐6008, or online at http://www.wiley.com/go/permission.
Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Further, readers should be aware that websites listed in this work may have changed or disappeared between when this work was written and when it is read. Neither the publisher nor authors shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.
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Library of Congress Cataloging‐in‐Publication Data is Available:
ISBN 9781119827368 (Hardback)
ISBN 9781119827382 (ePDF)
ISBN 9781119827375 (ePub)
Cover Design: Joyce Teo
Cover Image: © Angelito Jusay
This book is dedicated to the women in my family who came before me and set the stage for who I am and what I have accomplished today. To my grandmothers, my aunties, and my incredible mother. Thank you. I also dedicate this book to every woman choosing to prosper, and I hope my story and my journey so far serves as inspiration.
About the Author
Bola Sokunbi is a certified financial education instructor (CFEI), investor, finance expert, speaker, podcaster, influencer, and the founder and CEO of Clever Girl Finance, a personal finance platform created to empower women to achieve real wealth and live life on their own terms.
She started Clever Girl Finance in 2015 to provide women with the tools and resources she wished she had when she began her financial journey.
She is also the author of the bestselling books Clever Girl Finance: Ditch Debt, Save Money, and Build Real Wealth; Clever Girl Finance: Learn How Investing Works, Grow Your Money; and Clever Girl Finance: The Side Hustle Guide: Build a Successful Side Hustle and Increase Your Income.
Today, she lives with her husband and twins in New Jersey.
Acknowledgments
Writing a book is hard, and this one was particularly challenging because, unlike my three previous books, this is based on my personal story. Thank you to my parents for fact checking, sharing their own stories with me, and raising me to be who I am today, to my husband for encouraging me throughout this entire business building journey, to my twins who always tried to keep very quiet whenever Mommy was working on her book, and to my dearest and closest sister‐friends, who have never stopped supporting and cheering me on. From the texts and the phones calls encouraging me to keep going, to just always being there for me. I love and appreciate you.
To my advisors and big sisters, Maureen, Roshi, and Monique. Thank you, Maureen, for helping me lay out the initial outline for this book after I called you out of the blue to say I was stuck. Thank you, Roshi, for brainstorming book names with me over email, text message, and on the phone. And thank you, Monique, for reminding me about why I needed to write this book to share my voice. You have been with me on this journey, building Clever Girl Finance, and I appreciate you.
To my other amazing advisors, Dan, Jonathan, and Brent. Thank you for your advice, for constant words of encouragement, and for supporting this female‐owned and female‐focused business!
A massive thank‐you to the Clever Girl Finance team for holding down the fort while I spent months focused on writing. Thank you, Esther, Yazmir, Anita, Stacy, Carli, and Kat. And thank you to all our incredible writers and content creators. You make Clever Girl Finance work.
To my development editor, Cassidy Horton, thank you for your feedback and motivation and for helping to make this a book I'm proud of.
To my managing editor, Kevin Harreld, for pushing me to write this book now, and to the rest of the incredible Wiley team that has supported me on my journey as a now four‐time author—thank you so much.
Introduction: You Have to Tell Your Story
Be empowered and bold and know you have a voice that no one can make you bury.
As a child, I thought I would grow up to be a doctor. It was a big dream of mine. I would line up my dolls in my pretend doll hospital and treat them for made‐up ailments. I was a great doll doctor. But in real life, the sight of blood made me queasy and I quickly realized that career path was a no‐go for me. I wasn't sure what else I wanted to do until one day in high school in Nigeria, my dad brought a Compaq desktop computer home for our family. It was a massive thing with a standalone central processing unit that hummed and purred, but it was new and exciting. After spending hours and hours on the computer each weekend, I taught myself how to use MS DOS (Yup, it was the mid‐1990s!) from books my dad bought me. With my love for computers, I wound up deciding to study computer science and business with a certification in website development when I got to college. That decision was inspired by both my parents, who would always tell me, Bola, computers are the future, but if that doesn't work out, you can always fall back on business.
My dad was a PhD‐holding mathematician, econometrician, and later the head of the technology department at the government job where he worked. He was educated in Nigeria, Russia, and the United States. My mom, on the other hand, studied economics, had a master's degree in finance, and got her education in Nigeria, Austria, and the US. She worked in investment banking in Nigeria, building side hustles to earn extra income along the way.
At first glance, we were a pretty middle‐class Nigerian family. But there's a whole backstory behind how my parents got to where they were as the first generation of middle class in my family. While I go deeper into my family and personal background story throughout the course of this book, I'll set the stage here.
My dad didn't start primary 1 (the first grade) until he was 13 years old. The reason? My paternal grandfather was not a fan of colonial education (inherited from the British Colonial rule in Nigeria). It also cost a lot of money, which he didn't have. So instead of school, my dad worked on his father's farm to help support his family. It was only after much convincing, and well over a decade later, that my grandfather allowed him to go to the closest school in the next town a few miles away while my grandmother supported paying his school fees with the little money she made as a small‐goods trader. He made the journey to school every day on foot.
My mom, who was fortunate enough to start her schooling when she got to school age, met my dad and got married at 19 with only a high school diploma. She didn't start college until after she had her four children and was in her mid‐thirties. She came upon the realization that she needed to be able to stand on her own two feet financially, and she saw education as a pathway to get there.
Both of my parents come from polygamous families and had parents that were not formally educated, making them both the first generation to go to grade school, high school, and college in their respective families. Poverty was also a familiar experience for them both growing up. And as soon as they graduated from high school and were able to earn any form of wages doing odd jobs here and there, they were obligated to support their younger siblings. Knowing about my parents' backgrounds and all the sacrifices they'd made to give me and my brothers a better life than they had growing up, I knew I had to do well. That was all they asked of me.
So, over the course of 11 years after graduating college, I worked as a test engineer, a technology consultant, and a business analyst. In most cases, I was the only woman on my team or in my department. I faced all kinds of prejudice, sexism, and racism. I was underestimated and opposed because of my gender. I struggled to find peers or mentors in my workplace that I could relate to as a woman of color. And many times, I struggled with the isolation of being the only one: the only black person, the youngest person, the only woman. And so, I retreated into my shell and just focused on the job I needed to do. I focused on doing it well, so that when I called my parents, I could tell them everything was great.
But despite my challenges, I loved the work I did. I felt a sense of exhilaration for every problem I investigated and solved and for every solution and strategy I presented that was implemented—even when others took credit for my work. And for a while, I was pretty content, keeping to myself at work, making good money, climbing my career ladder slowly but surely, and doing well.
However, as time passed, I became less and less content, and I felt something was missing. Sure, my parents were proud of me and I was making decent money. But I wanted to be more than just a number in a payroll file managed by a human resources department that could pull my file and fire me at any time if the company hit a bump in the road. I was tired of retreating and conforming at work. I was also going through my own personal life transitions. I had gotten married, moved cities, and become a mother to my beautiful twins. Time was flying by and life was happening, and I wanted to make sure I was being intentional with my time and intentional with the pursuit of my goals.
When I started Clever Girl Finance in 2015, it was born out of my personal need to create a safe space for myself and other women to talk about building wealth, our careers, and our lives. Its foundation was established from the personal blogs I had written over the years where I talked about how I was spending, saving, and investing my money, challenges I was facing as a woman at work, the side hustles I was starting, and my dating relationships (among other topics I was interested in). I shared my writing with friends and colleagues, who in turn shared it with the women in their own lives who could also relate to my experiences and challenges. These women knew exactly what I was talking about and how I was feeling, because they were feeling it, too. It wasn't initially clear to me, but Clever Girl Finance evolved from those early days of me simply sharing my thoughts and experiences.
However, if you'd told the guarded and introverted me of 2015 that my life would pivot completely and I'd be the bold female founder at the helm of one of the largest personal finance platforms for women in the US—a business so many people told me wouldn't work—I would have thought you were crazy. And while the journey was far from easy, here I am, still looking around in amazement at how far I've come.
In full honesty, when I pitched this book to my publisher, I imagined myself writing a different kind of book than the one you currently hold in your hands. It was going to be another personal finance how‐to
book, the fourth book in the Clever Girl Finance series. I thought this only made sense, considering how successful the first three were. But then my publishing editor reviewed the pitch and said, This is great for a future book, but I really think it's time you write about your journey. People want to know you, and you have such an important story to tell.
The response was not a surprise to me at all. In fact, I already knew it was coming. This book you're reading now, in which you'll get to learn about my story and my journey, has been a topic of conversation since my very first book pitch. But I'd consistently resisted it because, for me, it was a major challenge I wasn't quite ready to face.
For one thing, the introverted me was holding back from the discomfort of opening up. There was the fear of allowing myself to be vulnerable in telling my story. And then there was the voice in the back of my head that kept telling me that to write my story now—a story still very much in progress—would be premature. So, I made excuses and told myself that I just needed to accomplish a few more goals and