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Episode 276: Darin Soat: The Problem with Finfluencers, and Why it Won’t Get Better Anytime Soon

Darin is the creator and host of "How Money Works", a YouTube channel with over 800 thousand subscribers that dispels myths about getting rich quick and aims to prevent people from losing their hard-earned money to fall for those traps. He also seeks to remove the black box of institutional finance, explaining institutional finance in ways that's understandable to a broad audience and uses his professional experience to add perspective. Prior to that Darin worked for about half a decade in investment banking, doing mergers and acquisitions and corporate finance advisory for healthcare and technology companies.


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If you’re in the world of finance, you’d know today’s guest from YouTube — but you’ve probably never heard his real name. However, today and for the first time, he chooses to associate his actual identity with his YouTube channel! It’s an honour to introduce to you, Mr. How Money Works himself, Darin Soat. On his YouTube channel, Darin combines captivating storytelling with high-quality, sensible information that helps you to make better financial decisions. Today, he joins us to explain How Money Works, why he chose to create his channel anonymously, and how he feels after his grand reveal. He describes how his channel informed his career as an investment banker, and gives us his insider breakdown of how influencer businesses work. Then, we dive deep into YouTube as we explore the problems with today’s financial influencers (finfluencers), how these problems are carried through to the crypto market, why it’s rare to find high-quality financial information on YouTube, and everything you need to know about the gamification of investing, creating passive income, and the ins and outs of investing from the perspective of one of YouTube’s top finfluencers, Darin Soat!


Key Points From This Episode:

(0:00:42) We’re thrilled to reveal the real identity behind How Money Works – Darin Soat!

(0:01:41) Darin’s professional background.

(0:04:33) A thorough description of How Money Works, straight from the source.

(0:07:08) Exploring Darin’s background in investment banking.

(0:11:05) How he chooses content for his YouTube channel.

(0:12:54) Why he created his channel anonymously, and how he feels after his reveal.

(0:14:54) How his channel impacted his work while he was still in investment banking.

(0:17:00) Darin’s summation of how influencer businesses work.

(0:21:17) The problems with today’s financial influencers on YouTube.

(0:27:11) How the aforementioned problems relate to the crypto market.

(0:32:03) His criteria for selecting sponsors for How Money Works.

(0:33:45) Why high-quality personal financial information is rarely seen on YouTube.

(0:36:25) Darin’s advice on side hustles and creating passive income.

(0:40:11) How financial influencers and the gamification of investing affect real-world investors.

(0:50:38) What everyone needs to know about investing, according to Darin.


Read The Transcript: 

Ben Felix: This is the Rational Reminder Podcast, a weekly reality check on sensible investing and financial decision-making from two Canadians. We're hosted by me, Benjamin Felix and Cameron Passmore, portfolio managers at PWL Capital.

Cameron Passmore: Welcome to episode 276. This week, we have an interesting and I would say a little different take for everybody. Got a chance to speak with Darin Soat, who is a YouTube finfluencer, I think is safe to say, Ben. Why don't you give us the backstory?

Ben Felix: Well, he's not a finfluencer, because he's been anonymous up until the release of this episode. This is a, I don't know what I would call it, a side quest of this episode is the fact that Darin is for the first time associating his actual identity as a person with his YouTube channel, How Money Works. How Money Works is a large YouTube channel that has 839,000 subscribers. As far as finance YouTube channels go, it's one of the larger ones. He has a great job covering a whole bunch of topics, but I mean, he talks about it when we asked him about the channel, he really tries to provide sensible information and debunk myths and combat the side hustle and passive income courses that people are always trying to sell. In a lot of ways, he's very aligned with the type of content that we try to produce. He just makes it more entertaining than we do.

Cameron Passmore: He's up against the algorithms of how the machinery works in these platforms. It's incredible.

Ben Felix: You watched the videos, he does a really good job with pace and with graphics. It really pulls you in and makes it interesting. Then he's able to work in storytelling with really high quality, sensible information that will help people make better decisions. I know Darin, because we're in a group chat, I guess, with a small handful of finance YouTubers. We chat in there occasionally and then Darin was at Future Proof, the conference that we were at recently and we met up there. He was already booked to come on the podcast before we met in California.

He brings a unique perspective. He's got a background in investment banking. He's very well-educated in finance. He's fairly philosophically aligned with the way that we think about providing information to people. He really does want to provide high-quality information that will truly help people make better decisions and avoid the hyped-up stuff that makes people make bad decisions.

I offered, or asked Darin a while ago if he would want to come on our podcast and just talk about the inside of, because he's, like I said before, he's not necessarily a finfluencer, but he's a large YouTuber. He does YouTube full-time. He knows how all of this stuff works inside and out, but he's also spent a lot of time covering the more typical financial influencers and the crypto pumpers and people selling courses and all that stuff.

I think he had some pretty interesting thoughts on how all of that stuff works and how people should approach it. I don't know if he has the solution for how to combat it, but it's a really hard solution. I mean, you hear Darin talk about it. It's like, you're fighting against this precisely designed algorithm designed to give you the information that you're looking for. If you're looking for bad information, for what we would consider bad information, the algorithm is going to feed it to you. People know that, so people wanting to provide bad information in the sense that it's not good for their viewers, but it's probably good for them, because it enriches them in some way, that content will be fed to you.

It's quite the situation on YouTube. We briefly talked about this while we were chatting with Darin that we're talking about YouTube, but if you take something then like TikTok and it's just that much worse. It's a scary state of how people obtain and consume information. I'm going on here, but that's my backstory for Darin.

Cameron Passmore: If you're a first-time listener or viewer from the How Money Works YouTube channel, great to have you here. Hope you find some value here.

Ben Felix: I think that's good. This is atypical episode, just in terms of the type of stuff that we're talking about, but I think it is important and useful information. Hopefully, people enjoy it.

Cameron Passmore: All right. Here's our conversation with Darin Soat.

***

 

Ben Felix: Darin Soat, welcome to the Rational Reminder Podcast.

Darin Soat: Thanks for having me.

Ben Felix: Darin, how do you describe your main YouTube channel, How Money Works?

Darin Soat: Yeah. The way I would describe it, it's really a platform I could basically make anything that I want to make. But I would say, a big focus of the content themes is trying to disprove a misconception people have about personal finance, or just talk about something that's interesting that's maybe not talked about enough. I try and use my professional experience that I had in banking to add a little bit of perspective to these things, so that it's not just a regurgitation of information. Maybe something I can add that's a little new.

I spend a lot of time researching these topics, or so now that I did previously, because it really is my full-time focus, but a big motivation of what I'm trying to do is dispel a lot of the myths behind maybe the side hustle culture, get-rich-quick schemes, stock picking, really in order to encourage people to make better financial decisions and ultimately, I'm motivated out of the fact that I really, really hate seeing people lose money, paying $500 for a course that is going to tell them either something that they could have learned from a YouTube video, or something that is not necessarily good for their own financial decision-making. Like for example, a trading course.

In addition to that, I can't really just make all my content about that, because what happens is your content really gets stale. I have to also talk about things like – I guess, I choose to talk about things like how much it would cost to make an iPhone in America and why BMW was planning on charging $18 a month for heated seats. Basically, the point of the story was telling people about the importance of recurring revenue.

I like to focus on things that I think people will come away with learning something new, ultimately trying to maybe teach people some of the things that I learned when I was in investment banking, in investment banking, and things that I personally had found valuable, or incredibly interesting, ultimately to help people make more informed decisions about maybe their own personal finances. Maybe they could apply it in their workplace, for example, talking about recurring revenue, maybe they're a business owner, how they could implement some recurring revenue model, or whatever.

Basically, if I were to summarize it, I would say, it's like, if I had the editorial section in Forbes, or Bloomberg, or what have you in video form. That's, I guess, the general synopsis of the channel.

Ben Felix: Interesting. What you described aligns pretty closely with what we try to do. I guess, it makes sense that we ended up talking here. You casually alluded a couple of times to your background in investment banking. Can you just say a little bit about that?

Darin Soat: Yeah. My career really did about half a decade was in investment banking. Coming out of college, I started at a small boutique investment bank that focused on healthcare transactions. Around COVID was when deal flow was really starting to dry up. There was not a lot of transaction work to do at the time, which is when I wanted to get into YouTube. I had a lot of time on my hands. I was inspired by some of the other creators out there, some of the more edutainment creators, like Wendover Productions, Real Engineering, but also, finance creators, like yourself and The Plain Bagel.

I used that inspiration to make my own channel, which at the time was compounded daily. When we talk about influencer businesses, we could talk about why I decided to change the name to How Money Works. At the same time, it was a YouTube channel. It wasn't making you money. Around your two and a half, I made the transition to a San Francisco-based technology investment bank. Founders were incredible. The opportunity just to get out to San Francisco and have exposure to business out here really, really not only was a huge learning experience for me, but it was a really big opportunity for my career.

Because around year four, or maybe three and a half, I made a transition to a boutique healthcare investment bank that I really admired. I think that's when I started to really get overwhelmed. The very, very smart people in it. Very grateful for the opportunity. I just got to the point, it was really a breaking point where I was working not only 90 hours a week to focus on banking work, but also, too, I had to spend what I had of what was called protected hours, which is an allocated time that I had available to just focus on anything that I wanted to.

As you guys know, most people probably spend that with their family. I had no other option but to focus on researching, writing, and creating a new YouTube video. That time was really focused on YouTube and preparing video for my video editor. Fortunately, that was outsourced at the time. I wasn't editing the video by then. It still just got really, really overwhelming. I remember anecdotally, there was a moment when I was so stressed out that I got the first draft of the video from my editor, and then I uploaded it straight to YouTube. I should have reviewed it, because it was riddled with spelling errors.

I made the decision to focus on this full-time once it really became a business that could sustain me. My passions are education and being creative. I don't think that there's a better way to do that than with YouTube. That's a long story about how I went from investment banking to focusing on this full-time. I don't regret it at all. I definitely enjoy doing this far more than banking.

I will say this, one of the things that I do miss about the professional world in banking is that you are surrounded by a bunch of people that can just give you this incredible perspective that I really didn't realize it, but was used frequently as fodder for my videos. I don't have that anymore. For example, I recently met up with a colleague of mine who I worked at. He was telling me that some VCs with some pretty broad mandates are giving their money to private equity buyout funds right now in order to actually get a return. That perspective is things that you only get when you are working directly for a bank. I'm just running a YouTube channel. I have to rely on just maybe talking with peers and reading the news.

Cameron Passmore: That's the question I had for you, Darin. How do you pick topics for your channel?

Darin Soat: I would say, it's really just keeping my head in the financial news, trying to keep up with all the interesting stuff that Harvard Business Review puts out. Anybody who watches my channel will know that I'm constantly referring back to reports from HBR. As I synthesize this information, then I can use it to make a video, be it maybe something that's based on my opinion, or something much more straightforward in terms of what the research says.

Again, I say some of it's a little bit editorial focused, where I synthesize this information. For example, one of my videos talks about how company loyalty is a thing of the past, and people who switch jobs every two years tend to earn more than their peers who just stay loyal to one particular company. That research I use to basically make the conclusion, you need to be selfish and look out for your own career. You need to look out for yourself. Those ideas, I would say, are the ones based more on opinion, whereas sometimes I just try and be straightforward about what's happening in the world of finance, just trying to present the facts on the Evergrande crisis.

Honestly, over time, you get a good feel of what your audience wants to hear, but you can't spend too much time just going over those same topics, because your content is going to get stale if you do. People are going to not listen to you anymore, if you just say the same thing over and over and over again. You have to be creative. You have to talk about something new and you have to talk about something that other people find valuable and interesting.

Ben Felix: Which is an interesting concept. When you think about something like – and we'll come back this later, but just a comment. When you think about something like personal finance, where what you should be doing is pretty straightforward and simple, but you can't really talk about that every day. How did you decide, or why did you create your channel anonymously?

Darin Soat: When I started the channel, I actually started it as Compounded Daily. The thinking behind doing that was because I believed at the time, having a name that somebody could recognize that had to relate with finance was an obvious way to brand the channel. At the time, finance channels were taking off and there was this desire to capture audiences, especially in the finance space. There was high CPMs at the time. Again, this was really around COVID, to bring it back to when I started the channel.

I heard a lot of feedback about what you talk about, chemistry. That was when I realized that maybe it's not too obvious what it's about to a general audience that I needed to change the name of the channel. And so, I did. I actually changed a few stylistic things, being a little bit more excited with the narration and also, reducing the amount of time it took to produce a video, using leveraging stock footage, like story blocks.

I think the real big reason why I wanted to remain anonymous with the YouTube channel was because I didn't want it to impact my ability to get hired at another investment bank, because at the time, the channel wasn't making money. I really had to focus on what was making me money, which was my job. If I talked about it, it would probably hurt my chances of getting a job. I thought the best course of action there was to just remain anonymous with it, until eventually, maybe one day it would become something that I could make a career.

Ben Felix: This is, as I understand it, your first time revealing your real identity connected to your channel. How does it feel? 

Darin Soat: It's a little nerve-wracking, but ultimately, it's about time. No, I mean, honestly, couldn't think of a better way to do it. I love the Rational Reminder Podcast. For my viewers who are going to be watching this, make sure to follow the Rational Reminder Podcast. It's incredible.

Cameron Passmore: Let's go back to your career in investment banking. How did your channel impact your work while you were still in investment banking?

Darin Soat: Yeah. I really tried to make a focus of prioritizing all my work in investment banking. Any bit of free time that I had at my banking job was used to maybe read something that could be used as research in one of my next videos. For the most part, it was incredibly difficult. It was actually some of the most stressful times of my life. On the flip side, I would say that being surrounded by some of those people gave you perspective into things that you just don't have perspective in if you aren't working in an investment bank.

You learn things that could be used as research or support for content in the videos that you're producing. Obviously, not anything deal-related. Anything to do with macroeconomic trends. I remember every Monday, we would have an update in the macro economy from people in our credit division. That was really, really nice to listen to, because it also was, it gave me perspective, and it really made you smarter when it came to anything about finance, or the economy. Ultimately, for me, it made me, I think, valuable in the content I produce. Hopefully, I could pass some of that value onto my viewers.

Ben Felix: That's really interesting. I can relate on some level, because when we started doing content, I was still heavily involved in meeting with clients. I've scaled that back. Not being in client meetings, you have less insight into what people are worried about and thinking about, so it makes a little harder to think of topics.

Darin Soat: Yeah. There's a lot that. CNBC, for example, doesn't capture – or any big news outlet doesn't capture what you just get from having conversations. For example, with private equity funds. Changes in credit. How they're organizing their capital stack for an acquisition, right? Some of the more in-depth things makes you a little bit smarter when it comes to putting these videos together. Again, isn't really talked about by the major news outlets.

Ben Felix: I want to move our conversation toward a topic that you've spent a lot of time covering it on your channel, which is financial influencers. You've just nailed coverage of this topic. I got a bunch of questions. How do influencer businesses work?

Darin Soat: The way influencer businesses really work is basically, it's marketing. It's selling your attention for some money. I could speak on it specifically on YouTube, which is how my business works is there's really two sources of revenue, which is AdSense and a paid video integration. For example, I work with companies like Morning Brew, or educational brands like Brilliant to advertise, do a one-minute advertising block on the video in exchange for some amount of cash.

One of the problems with that, especially on YouTube, is that you don't really have control over the audience. One of the things I was thinking of when I wanted to create a YouTube channel was I wanted to create a business that I could ultimately package up and bring to a liquidity event. At the time, it sounded like an incredible business idea. Then I could sell it. I could write off into the sunset and make my money, and so be it. I wanted to create a portfolio of channels. I started another channel called How History Works that talks about anything history-based.

What I learned real quickly was that there's this big thing in running a YouTube channel in that a lot of times, people want to hear the same person talk about things. There's this key-man risk where, for example, let me just explain it like this. On the History Channel, I had the writer, Sam, who's, he's really good at creative writing. Sam, I had him at the time do voiceovers for How History Works. I personally think that he is a better narrator than me, but there was so much audience pushback saying, “We need to hear you,” that it made it – I ultimately had to take the narration back over.

I quickly learned one of the good things about investment banking is you have a good understanding of what a healthy business looks like. You get a good sense for those good business vitals, if you will. Key-man risk is one of those things that's not good. Ultimately, creating the history channel was a way to diversify risk from How Money Works. Find the key man tied with both of those channels, it ultimately ended up being worse. Ultimately, it makes it so that it's not really a good liquidity event, right?

YouTube channels actually make for pretty bad businesses, if I'm honest. You don't have control over the algorithm. A lot of it is what you feel will be good content. Very often, I'm wrong about that. There's so many grifters out there talking about the formulas for making it on YouTube. You'll see thumbnail grifters on Twitter saying this thumbnail, or that thumbnail. I don't want to dismiss this idea that thumbnails aren't important, they are. What I am dismissing is this idea that there's a magic answer and that there's a clear formula for how YouTube works. There just isn't. It really is just trying your best to understand what your audience wants to hear.

Honestly, if you were to come along and try and buy something like that, you would realize really quickly that that is hard to replicate. It's hard to really get a feel for what my audience wants to understand. You can't really package it up, sell it. There is this big key man risk. Because of that, and again, going back to the try and understand good company vitals, I started a newsletter. I revived the name Compounded Daily, because a newsletter is very similar in the business of YouTube in the sense that you are selling advertising space. The challenge though is you don't have the algorithm that pushes your videos with the newsletter.

Instead, what you have to do is you really have to use word of mouth. On my own channel, I give people the video a day early, if they subscribe to my newsletter, and I also write an interesting story with that newsletter, hopefully scaling it to the point that I could actually start to monetize it. That eliminates, again, key-man risk. That eliminates some of the concerns about liquidity, if I wanted to sell it one day.

I look at the multiple that Morning Brew got for their newsletter. Obviously, that might be a little bit aspirational, but hopefully, one day there could be some sale that would make sense from a business perspective.

Ben Felix: Really interesting.

Cameron Passmore: Yeah. Sure is. What problems do you see with personal finance influencers on YouTube today?

Darin Soat: I think that there is still and will be for a long time, huge problems with personal finance influencers on YouTube. Where I like to start with this is just the psyche. I remember way back when, before I really started to study finance that I thought, basically, from Hollywood depictions that finance effectively meant day trading. As you can imagine, I was pretty disappointed when I was spending four years aligning logos on PowerPoints. It wasn't nearly as sexy as the stock charts and the candlesticks and all that.

If you think about a general audience, you got to ask, what do they want? They don't want someone telling them to diversify their portfolio. They want a moonshot. They want a winner. They want answers. They want the stock picks. Obviously, that's in conflict with what's sound financial advice. I would actually – I'm going for, I'm saying this, that's gambling. I think that's the most egregious example. Even financial advice that people may think sounds good, but might not be suitable for everyone isn't good.

I don't necessarily think discussing credit card benefits is necessarily a problem. But when you say invest passively in an S&P 500 index and call it good, a broad audience isn't necessarily suitable for that advice, right? To us, that's obvious. To a general audience, it's not. I guess, one of the things that I'm really focused on is I really feel like there is this divide, where you have the wealth advisors, the finance professionals, and then you have the general public. There's things that finance professionals will say like, this is obviously bad advice. This obviously doesn't make sense. You obviously shouldn't go all in on Palantir, or GameStop.

The truth is, is that there are so many people out there that just don't get that. Sometimes the most basic explanations have to be regurgitated over and over and over again. Getting back on point of why some of the other problems I see with personal finance influencers, one of the things that you will commonly see is they’re trying to appeal, again, to the psyche of fortune, wealth, and success by using extravagant things in their videos as props, usually in order to sell something, like a day trading course, or some investment class.

They'll rent Lamborghinis. They'll rent a mansion and say, “If I do this, so can you, for the price of $500.” The way I look at personal finances, I actually have that belief of The Index Card. There's a book by Harold Pollock, where he talks about an index card and he mentions that everything that you really need to know about personal finance should really fit on an index card. When people are selling these courses, it just makes me a little sick, because what are they selling? Well, if they're selling – here's an example. Some people will sell guides on how to set up a drop-shipping business. Well, you have to think, anybody, if you're selling a course to a general audience, then you should expect that they could follow through on those things that you're telling them to do.

If it's set up a drop-shipping course, okay, well, if I were to set up a drop shipping course, then so can anybody else. Then the barrier to entry is really low. The problem with businesses where the barriers to entry are really low is that it becomes very hard to make money from. When these people are selling courses to others, basically how to invest your money, how to create a side hustle business, anything along those lines, I think what they're doing is they're quite literally robbing people, because there's no way that somebody can take one of those courses. If you are paying to take one of those courses, you probably aren't somebody that really has what it takes to start a incredibly lucrative business, right?

If you are somebody that's paying to take those courses, you are somebody that's in need, and not somebody that really has so much capital that they just want an extra way to make money. It's one of the most frustrating things. One of the last things I'll say about this is everyone thinks it's only unsophisticated people that would fall for something like this, right? I just remember when I was younger, one of my parents who's very well educated telling me that, “Oh, the motley fool recommended these stocks right now.” I'm like, at the time, I don't know any better, right?

If you think about it, that's not just people who don't know any better, people who might not be uneducated falling for these things. It's very smart people as well. It's something that greatly concerns me. I think I've spent a great deal of my focus on my channel talking about the issues.

Ben Felix: Crazy. It's a self-selection type situation, where people who are prone to being scammed and are in need and are maybe desperate are the ones that the algorithm is going to send to the people who are offering scam courses.

Darin Soat: The advertising, too, you'll see these YouTube sponsorships from these get-rich-quick courses.

Ben Felix: Always. On my videos, on your videos, everywhere.

Darin Soat: Yeah. It sucks, because you can't keep up with just trying to say, “Oh, I don't want this particular ad on my channel.” On their end, they're particularly trying to get their videos on my channel, which is funny, because they haven't really watched my videos. I hope is my audience comes out realizing that the course was obviously a scam, and I take their money away from them anyway. Ultimately, I try not to have those ads on my videos.

Ben Felix: Can you affect that?

Darin Soat: Yeah, through AdSense.

Ben Felix: Oh, interesting. Never even looked into that. I'm a very amateur YouTuber. I don't know. A question that is obvious in my mind is a follow on to that discussion just now. How did the problems that you just talked about interact with crypto, or how do, how did, how do? I mean, it's ongoing, I guess?

Darin Soat: It's still ongoing. Again, I think you just have to go back to the psyche of the general public. Imagine this, you see Bitcoin get to a $1,000. You think, “Okay, whatever. So be it.” Then it goes to $5,000 and starts to get really serious. Then it goes to $25,000. Then people start paying attention. Then it goes to $65,000. Then now you have a bunch of people thinking that there's an industry. You have venture capitalists funding these projects, right? Taking these big coin allocations that they get, that they can immediately dump on the public market, so that they could pump their returns, but that's a whole another subject.

The thing about crypto is it's a lot easier to start a crypto project, which is unregulated. You could use it to pump a particular coin and dump that coin onto people who are less fortunate, if you will, because I got to think who else is buying some of those projects. Coffeezilla covers a lot of these, a lot of these crypto scams, where basically, what will happen is the founder of the project will hold on to a certain allocation of crypto. Then they will find some influencers that they will pay in order to bring attention to that crypto. Then they will sell that crypto to – they'll start slowly unwinding their position once the price goes up.

Obviously, there's some market manipulation there, but it's a lot easier to do than registering a security, maybe going public on the Toronto Stock Exchange, or some sort of a public exchange and then using influence to pump up the price of something in order to get some quick buck and make a quick return. Again, I think the problems with crypto is that, well, we could talk about the problems with crypto itself. I personally think none of it makes sense. A lot of people do have conviction that it works, very much like a religion. Because of that, there's this tribalism. If you think about the tribalism aspect of it, when people say, you must buy this stock, or this crypto and not other cryptos, I think that's directly aligned. I think that's intentional, because people realize that the more people that buy into a particular coin, the more the price will go up.

I think that the person who said it best was Jamie Dimon, when he said that it's like a decentralized Ponzi scheme, because I've yet to see and I should caveat, I guess, the only accepted thing to do is caveat that I don't know if blockchain technology, or crypto will have some application in the future. For now, I think that all it's doing is it's a way for people to use their influence to maybe get returns, and some people are making a lot of money on it, but I think a lot of people are losing a lot of money on it. More people are definitely losing a lot of money on it than are making money.

Ben Felix: It's a wealth transfer. I mean, if you look at the data on who's losing money, it's the unsophisticated retail investors.

Darin Soat: Obviously, it gives me a harbour when I see people on Twitter talk about how XYZ crypto is. Let's use Bitcoin, for example, is the greatest technology to be invented since the industrial revolution. I saw that one. I couldn't believe it. The thing is, these influencers have massive followings, and they say some things that are true. They report on news, and they have an audience that people find them entertaining.

They use that influence in order to pump up whatever crypto that they have. Part of it is just – it’s just so internally frustrating that sometimes I can't even verbalize it. I think for me, it's really just a lot of people are losing money on it. It's not a passive investment in the stock market, where over time, it should be a good investment. It's more so, it's really a gamble. You're seeing a lot of grifters lose people a lot of money, because of it.

Cameron Passmore: Were you offered crypto related sponsorships?

Darin Soat: I was. To this day, I still get offered crypto related sponsorships. Yeah, something that's worth mentioning about that is crypto companies will offer anywhere from two to three times more than the typical rate I will have for a sponsorship slot. For example, they will pay roughly $15,000 to $25,000 for an ad integration on one video on my channel.

Ben Felix: That's wild.

Darin Soat: Yeah. Obviously, I refuse. I don't believe in working with crypto for obvious reasons.

Ben Felix: You mentioned earlier some of the companies that you do work with. How do you choose which sponsors that you will take?

Darin Soat: I try and have a pretty strict criteria for selecting sponsors. Generally speaking, I don't like touching most things that are finance. My criteria is I like working with newsletters. I tend to find that those are pretty harmless. You could sign up for free. For them, their business is again, advertising, so they make money off selling space on the newsletter to advertisers. I basically won't work with anything that says, if you put your money in X, you can expect that money to grow.

No crypto apps. No art investing. I will not work with brokerages, like Robinhood, for obvious reasons. Because what I think then is I think that you are giving people the tools for their own financial destruction. That's not something that I personally am willing to do. I remember seeing – as a side note, I went to see the movie Dumb Money this past weekend. Before the movie, there was an advertisement for Robinhood. Robinhood, as a part of their advertisement, it was mentioned something along the lines of, “You got longs, you got shorts,” or something, as a way to say that we have all these different things, we have options. It's like, what are you trying to do? These people lose a lot of money from these things, right?

If you are somebody who has considerable amount, let's say you're an accredited investor, I might feel a little differently about that. For the most part, that advertisement is really trying to get to everybody. I mean, most Robinhood users don't have more than a $1,000 in their account. It really just is encouraging gambling in a way.

Cameron Passmore: Why is it harder for high-quality personal finance information to be seen on YouTube?

Darin Soat: It's because YouTube is an entertainment-first platform. It really is the house of Mr. Beast. One example I like to use is someone who is a good friend of mine and it's Patrick Boyle. If you look at his old lectures, where he might explain something like the Fama-French Five-Factor model, that probably doesn't get a lot of views, but it's something that's really important, maybe not for somebody to understand about their own personal finance. But if you're trying to learn something about finance, you should probably watch that video, instead of watching a day trading video. The issue with that is it's boring. While it might be interesting to somebody like yourself or me, to a general audience, it's not.

Basically, for his more current videos, he has to be more news related. He adds a little bit of comedy, dry humour to it. You have to do that, because if you think about how Mr. Beast operates his videos, every second is trying to keep the viewer watching for a little longer. If you're watching for a little longer, and that's more people that the video is pushed to. If the video is being pushed to more people, that's more people that watch the video, which is ultimately more revenue for Mr. Beast, which is more views, which leads to more revenue and more growth for his brand and more growth to his channel.

For example, he'll do something at the beginning where he says, “I'm about to throw these Lamborghinis into this grinder and crunch them up.” But you'll see that at the end of the video. Then in between, he'll do a bunch of other different things. The whole idea there is to keep people to watch the video for a long period of time. With that comes the fact that you have to basically compete with clickbait. I try not to use the word clickbait, but you really have to be competitive for clicks.

What I try and do is I try my best to balance, making sure that what I say is with the video title thumbnail is relevant to the video. Because if I'm not competing for clicks, then I'm not going to be seen over some of these more nefarious actors on YouTube. I have to in a way, find ways to be creative with my title that encourages people to click through. It's an incredibly hard thing, especially if you're a channel like mine that brings people in and says things that they don't want to hear. Like, it'll be harder for you to retire compared to prior generations. It's, you won't get rich quick. Then still get views. It's incredibly hard to do that.

Ultimately, you have to figure out how you can be competitive with others in YouTube. Really just comes down to being entertaining. Because again, YouTube is really an entertainment first platform. If you're not entertaining, then you will not make it on YouTube.

Ben Felix: You mentioned briefly earlier, side hustles. What do you think people need to understand about just the ideas of a side hustle, or of a passive income stream?

Darin Soat: One of the biggest grifts I've seen on YouTube is this idea that you shouldn't trade your time for money. You'll see a lot of these grifters sell these courses about other businesses that you could start up, how you could start buying real estate, and ultimately, renting that out, gain equity in that real estate, and so forth. The way I see it is, and one of the things that really gets me is trading your time for money is really, I think, other than having an investment that you could put maybe in the market, or putting your capital to work, in which case you're trading your capital for money, trading your time for money is really the only way to make money.

A lot of people have this idea that they want to work on a side hustle, because they want to make a little extra money. They want to start a drop-shipping course, because they could just let that operate. They can go to their day job and they can make money overnight, because they're going to be selling things on this drop-shipping website. Well, the problem is, is there are so many people, again, creating drop-shipping websites that it's so hard to actually be competitive there. If you really want to start getting people to buy your products, you really have to spend some time marketing yourself, right? Obviously, that takes a lot of time.

Let's say, you want to come home and drive Uber. Totally fine. But you should very, very well recognize that you're trading your time for money. In that sense, if you're willing to make a commitment to doing that, you're more than welcome to, but just understand that, again, you are trading more of your time for money. If you want to spend 90 hours a week in banking and then come home and make YouTube videos, you're more than welcome to do that, but not sure I would recommend it.

I think, what people really need to understand is that there's no easy way to make money. There's a lot of work. I mean, YouTube is a lot of work. You have to constantly be producing content. If you're not producing content, the algorithm is going to forget about you. If you are doing a side hustle, let's say you're mowing lawns, you can't just go and mow the same neighbour’s lawn every single day. It takes time for grass to go back. You have to get a portfolio of clients that you hope to mow lawns for. In order to grow that portfolio, you're going to be spending a lot of time building that up.

I really don't like this idea that it's really easy to just get into a side hustle that starts making money. It takes a lot of time. Takes a lot of capital in many cases, if you want to buy real estate. All things considered, it might be worth questioning whether or not it was really worth it to spend all that time to maybe start that side hustle, to go and mow lawns or whatever, instead of maybe working a little extra overtime at work in order to get more money that you can maybe put to work in a market.

I think one of the biggest myths out there and people are losing a lot of their money to buying courses about these secrets to side hustles. Truly, going back to what I said earlier, if everybody is doing them and they're so easy, then you're probably not going to make a lot of money. Another one I see is YouTube automation. This idea that you could use ChatGPT to come up with video topics and so forth. ChatGPT is creative to some extent, but it's really, really uncreative when everybody else is using the same thing and entering the same prompts. It's really hard to make a YouTube channel just based on ChatGPT, if you wanted to do that.

The use of AI to – that's become the new grift, is this idea that you could use AI to not only the graphics you use in videos, actually, some of the videos we will use AI generated graphic content for backgrounds and things like that. It's not something that could totally replace the creative process, which is huge grift people are trying to sell, again, for $500, somewhere along those lines.

Cameron Passmore: Further to that, what problems does access to what appears to be smart and successful people through social media cause for the all-time investors?

Darin Soat: I like to put myself in the shoes of the psyche of everyone, the people who are watching our content, or not just watching our content, but let's say, the psyche of everybody following the latest trend on Twitter and what's trending on Twitter, or I guess, X. One of the most dangerous things that I see out there is people who are treating people who sound smart as oracles of wisdom. To go back to Patrick, one of the videos that he did was the list of the Forbes 30 under 30 people who were indicted, or had some trouble going along with them, including Sam Bankman-Fried and Charlie Javice.

That just goes to show that just because somebody is renowned in something, just because somebody might be a good technologist, doesn't make them a good fintech entrepreneur. Just because somebody sounds really, really smart, that doesn't necessarily mean that they have the best investment advice, right? Just because Kevin O'Leary, or Mark Cuban feels very strongly about their crypto investments, doesn't necessarily mean that crypto is a good investment. I think people use this heuristic that because they're successful, they know what they're talking about. That's actually dangerous, because they're successful because maybe they had one really good investment, or maybe they were at the right place at the right time.

People really need to consider survivorship bias when trying to understand, is this person telling me something that is necessarily good for my investing decisions, or what have you? But one of the things that I could tell people is just because maybe somebody is an expert in astronomy, it doesn't mean that they're an expert in the stock market.

Ben Felix: Yeah. I mean, the survivorship bias point is huge, too. The expertise in one domain, not necessarily transferring to another is for sure important. But it's almost like, luck in one domain. If you think about survivorship bias, someone had a good outcome for whatever reason in one domain. That may not even make them a good source of information for their own domain, that people ascribe wisdom to them in other domains, because they were successful in one way. It's just a total mess. But it's so common to see people think that this wealthy person said I should do this. I've even had in comments in my videos, people have said, “Why would I listen to you? You're not even a billionaire, or not even a millionaire, or whatever.” It's like, what's that to do with anything?

Darin Soat: Many of these people made a lot of money based on just one investment. Good on them for making that investment. One example I like to use is every time Michael Burry tweets something, there's these Twitter accounts that will say, “Just in. Michael Burry said this.” Assuming that he has the answer. He knows. Obviously, to us, that's ridiculous. To a lot of people, he knows.

Ben Felix: How do you think people can overcome the allure of, I mean, stuff like what we were just talking about, but also, the financial influencers who are out there promising to make them rich? Are they doomed? We struggle with this, too. Because of the selection bias we talked about earlier. The people who want to get rich quick are not going to come and watch my channel talking about low-cost index funds.

Darin Soat: This is something I struggle with, right? Because the algorithm itself is going to put people in front of content they really want to see. I mean, the algorithm is incredible. If they want the answer, if they want to know how to get rich quick, they are going to get content that says that. How do you overcome the allure? Well, hopefully, what I try and do is I try my best to capture people by videos that they might click on and say, I have a video thumbnail called the passive income scam, which if you're watching videos on how to invest, or how to get passive income, you may click on my video. Because the more click data you get, the more people feel you're discredited.

Sometimes, the way I see it is it's like, do the ends justify the means here? If people view my video and ultimately, don't fall for some of these get rich quick courses. I don't want to say the answer is clickbait. I truly think the answer is people who understand – I am speaking to your audience here. People who understand personal finance and the important parts about personal finance, who maybe want to get into, who feel like they're also creative, who have charisma and feel like they could tell these stories in interesting ways that could help steer people away from getting scammed.

If you have that creative ability, then get started making content, please. I think, part of it is just more voices out there, talking people off the cliff, than there are voices trying to make a quick buck off the audience that is looking to invest, or stock pick, or what have you. I think it's a combination of more voices and also, just trying your best to be creatively competitive with getting exposure to these audiences and hopefully, discouraging them for making poor financial decisions.

Ben Felix: The clickbait thing is so tough. I think my second most viewed video is a video called Reasons to Avoid Index Funds. It's a little clickbaity. But in the video, I go through all the reasons that people give that you should avoid index funds, and I debunked them. That's my one video where there's so many comments saying, “This was clickbait. This is terrible, whatever.”

Darin Soat: It's an important message to get across. If ultimately, the message is more important than the title, then I say, go for it. Because it's like, where do you draw the line? Some YouTubers, for example, especially in the finance space, will have a video thumbnail that says something like, “It's all over.” Then you watch the video and it's just updated news about decisions that the Federal Reserve made. They decided to do a rate hike, or whatever. People are like, “Oh, is it really all over? I guess, it might be.” But ultimately, the information was good information. Thanks for sharing this, right?

People really don't get upset. The problem then becomes like, when you do a video that one day that’s like, “It's all over.” Another video, the same people with your thumbnail that says, “Invest now.” Then another video thumbnail the next day, “Why I'm selling all my socks,” or something like that. I don't know, it just looks like – it's a bad look. Ultimately, I don't want to say like, it's okay to do something like that. If you're trying to spread a good message that hopefully looks out for people's best interests, then sometimes you have to be a little bit competitive with those thumbnails.

Cameron Passmore: You mentioned Robinhood earlier made me think of this question. How do you think the gamification of investing has affected investors?

Darin Soat: When I think of this, I think the obvious one is the Subreddit Wall Street Beds. It's done a few things. I think a good example of this is, I think, I mentioned I went to see the movie Dumb Money. I was actually getting really frustrated when I was watching that movie, because the whole synopsis behind it was glorifying the retail investors sticking it to the man, sticking it to Wall Street. It talked about these people who were clearly in vulnerable positions. It literally talked about a nurse. It talked about an employee working for a GameStop retail store and two college students.

These people at the beginning, it said, okay, these people's net worth, negative hundreds of thousands of dollars, in some cases. Negative $50,000. Then it talked about these billionaires and how much wealth that they had. Billion. Gabriel Plotkin, a couple hundred million dollars. Nothing more than that. A little less than a billion. The whole movie was really glorifying, basically, treating these retail investors as doing something heroic, sticking it to the man, sticking it to Wall Street, rather than making a really, really bad financial decision for themselves. Ultimately, paid off for them, but they are a little lucky few. That's not a message that the movie gets across.

I think the gamification of investing has really distorted what investing should be. Investing should be something that's not immediate. You should be investing for the long term. You should be investing to really, for retirement. Ultimately, the gamification of it in apps like Robinhood have turned it into a contest to see who can make a lot of money really quickly. The flip side of that is it loses a lot of people, most people, a lot of money really quickly. Again, going back to that whole Dumb Money thing, the movie. I think a lot of the issue, too, is this misconception about really, who the antagonist is.

I know in the movie, they talked about Melvin Capital, a hedge fund. I think one of the things, and I honestly don't know who the LPs are in Melvin Capital, but one of the things that people tend to forget is that even in hedge funds, there's a lot of Main Street money. That's an important concept. When people feel like, there's this war between the retail investor and Wall Street, what they really don't realize is that many of the time, or very often, it's a war between Main Street and Main Street, retail investors versus retail investors.

You might have brought down Melvin Capital, but you also took down your teacher's pension funds. Obviously, they're much more diversified than that, but that's the point. I think it's done a couple of things. It's given people an incorrect understanding of what investing is. The second thing is, it's muddied this perception of financial institutions in what they are. Hedge funds, for example. I don't think that's necessarily a product of the gamification of investing. I think that was just me going on my soapbox about things that I don't like about the movie.

I think what it really comes down to is that it's really turned investing into gambling, and people are losing a lot of money. I don't know when, or if these companies will be held accountable for. Free-speech laws generally give them the right to advertise in ways that they want. I mean, but truly, struggle to see some of those advertisements, like the ones Robinhood is putting out and say, this is a good thing. I tend to think that it's actually not. It's actually pretty bad.

Ben Felix: My second last question for you. Throughout watching your videos, there's often references to what sensible investing actually does look like. There are always brief little references, but it's what you said earlier, you make it really entertaining, but then you insert these little tid bits. For our listeners, what do you think, in your opinion, are the main points that most people need to understand about investing?

Darin Soat: First of all, I need to say this. I really don't feel like I should have to say this, but I think this is something that needs to be said, because I like to talk about the things that are obviously considered investing. The first thing is, let's just debunk the myths. Investing will not make you rich. You invest for retirement. You don't invest to make a quick buck. Then, obviously, the more general things that everyone needs to say, which is you invest for the long term, invest broadly, diversify.

I think what people need to know about investing really comes down to this idea that you won't get returns overnight. You're in for the long game. Ultimately, you should have that expectation that it's not about playing a game. It's not about trying to make an extra dollar immediately. It's about preparing for a time in the future when you don't have income from, let's say, work, and you need some income. The whole idea is you invest, so that you can retire and have some income when you're unable to trade your time for money.

Ben Felix: Yes. It's a good way to explain it. It's also not a game, like you said, and the gamification stuff, it's become a game of not even necessarily trying to win. To use the Wall Street bets example, they get excited about sharing how much money they lost. It's gamifying losing money.

Darin Soat: Yeah. I don't particularly think that's funny.

Ben Felix: No, I don't either.

Darin Soat: I guess, some people do.

Cameron Passmore: Final question for you, Darin. How do you define success in your life?

Darin Soat: This is actually something that I really thought about around that period when I had finished investment banking. Really, the months leading up to that. I think, success for me is just joy, being happy in my life. I thought about, if I were to do a whole career in investment banking and I live a whole life doing that, I'm sure it would have been super lucrative. Probably could have made a lot of money. Wouldn't have had a lot of time to spend that money. Could have passed that money onto another generation, and who knows what they would have done with it. They would have lost it. Then the question is, was it really worth it? Was it really worth spending my entire life to make all that money?

There were parts that I did definitely feel fulfilled about in investment banking. Closing a deal, super exciting, especially when you go to the closing dinner with founders and things like that. For the most part, it was stressful. I couldn't imagine living my whole life doing something like that. I think what it comes down to in happiness for me is optimizing for happiness or joy. Finding what makes you fulfilled. For me, I genuinely enjoy being creative, hopefully encouraging people to make smarter decisions with their money using that creativity.

Ben Felix: Great answer. Well, Darin, we appreciate you coming onto our podcast to talk about your story and some of the things that you've spent a lot of time covering on your YouTube channel. It's been great.

Darin Soat: Awesome. Thanks for having me.

Cameron Passmore: It was great to see you again, Darin.

Darin Soat: Thanks, Cameron. Thanks, Ben.

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Links From Today’s Episode:

Rational Reminder on iTunes — https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-rational-reminder-podcast/id1426530582.
Rational Reminder Website — https://rationalreminder.ca/ 
Rational Reminder on Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/rationalreminder/
Rational Reminder on X — https://twitter.com/RationalRemind
Rational Reminder on YouTube — https://www.youtube.com/channel/
Rational Reminder Email — info@rationalreminder.ca
Benjamin Felix — https://www.pwlcapital.com/author/benjamin-felix/ 
Benjamin on X — https://twitter.com/benjaminwfelix
Benjamin on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjaminwfelix/
Cameron Passmore — https://www.pwlcapital.com/profile/cameron-passmore/
Cameron on X — https://twitter.com/CameronPassmore
Cameron on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/cameronpassmore/
Darin Soat on X — https://twitter.com/DarinSoat 
How Money Works — https://www.youtube.com/@HowMoneyWorks   
How Money Works on X — https://twitter.com/howmoneyworksyt 
Compounded Daily — https://www.compoundeddaily.com/  
How History Works — https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCb9mpGh9PQjFXOG_irzrFoA  
The Index Card — https://www.amazon.com/Index-Card-Personal-Finance-Complicated/dp/1591847680  
‘Reasons to Avoid Index Funds’ — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvGLnthJDsg