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Financial education from working with my 7 & 8 figure clientsπŸ’°πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

06/18/2026

Financing isn't always wrong. But going into debt for something that loses value every month means you're paying interest on a shrinking asset. Know the full cost before you sign. Not the monthly payment. The monthly payment is designed to make the total feel manageable.

πŸ›ŽοΈ Follow for more tips like this every week!

06/16/2026

Ever wondered what happens when two business partners stop seeing eye to eye?

Steve Parr, founder and lawyer at Parr Business Law, breaks down why a shareholder agreement is the one document every co-owned business needs before things get tense.

He explains what happens when partners can't agree anymore, and walks through the "shotgun clause," the mechanism that forces a clean break.

One partner names a price to buy the other out, and the second partner has to either accept it or flip it around and buy at that same price.

It's the kind of clause nobody thinks about until they desperately need it.

06/15/2026

Most successful business owners reach a point where building wealth isn't enough on its own.

Your donation, no matter the size, will be felt somewhere in your community.

Give back and make a difference.

06/11/2026

Another hold from the Bank of Canada. 2.25% πŸ€”

The economy shrank last quarter, inflation is sitting at 2.8%, and the job market is still soft. Cut rates and you fuel inflation. Raise them and you squeeze an already struggling economy. So they're holding.

But that isn't the whole picture.

Trump just signalled he's not renewing the USMCA ahead of the July 1st review. Meanwhile, Carney is at the G7 this week pushing trade diversification harder than ever 🌎

This is the stuff that actually moves the needle on your mortgage, your investments, and your plan πŸ“

What do you think about what the Prime Minister is doing? Let us know in the comments πŸ‘‡

06/10/2026

Every paycheque, money gets taken off for CPP. But most people have no idea what they're actually getting for it.

CPP is the Canada Pension Plan. You contribute, your employer matches it, and you collect a pension starting as early as age 60. The average payout is around $900 a month. The maximum is just over $1,300. Most people don't come close to the max.

That's a foundation. It's not a full retirement plan. The earlier you understand that gap, the more time you have to fill it with your own savings and investments.

These figures change yearly. As of January 2026 the maximum CPP retirement pension is $1,507/mo and the average is $925/mo (Source: Government of Canada).

πŸ›ŽοΈ Follow for more tips like this every week!

06/09/2026

Boutique firm or big firm? The answer might come down to how much you actually matter to them πŸ€”

06/08/2026

Most business owners build an empire with nothing protecting it.

The right structure means your wealth transfers on your terms, your assets are untouchable, and CRA has nothing to come for.

Get the structure right before they come knocking.

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06/05/2026

Steve Parr breaks down what inner work actually means.

It's reflection, honesty, and owning the habits and patterns you know aren't serving you.

The real work is extending how long you can sit in discomfort. Long enough for it to actually teach you something.

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06/03/2026

Great leaders are built on great relationships.

In today’s trailer for The Eh List, Steve Parr shares why the strongest opportunities often come from the people you surround yourself with. Whether you’re building a company, growing your career, or launching something new, your network can be one of your most valuable assets πŸ“ˆ

The relationships you invest in today can open doors, create opportunities, and provide the support needed to navigate challenges tomorrow.

πŸ—“οΈ Full episode drops tomorrow at 9am!

06/02/2026

Your offer letter says $55,000. Your bank account gets $3,500 a month. Federal tax, provincial tax, CPP, and EI all come off before you see anything 😬

The people who actually stick to a budget start from what lands in their account, not what the offer said. Everything else is just a number on paper πŸ“

Net pay is your real income. Build from there.

If this is something you wish you knew earlier, save it for the next time you're redoing your budget.

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