Simple Rich People
Simple Rich People teaches you how to think, act, and grow like the financially free — with simple, human-centered insights you can use today.
Simple Rich People
Episode 33 - The TMV Framework: Making Better Decisions with Time, Money, and Value
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The Time-Money-Value (TMV) framework helps you evaluate decisions with clarity and intention. In this episode, we explore how aligning your time and money with what truly matters leads to better choices, greater freedom, and a more fulfilling life.
Hello and welcome back to the Simple Rich People Podcast, a podcast that helps you foster a calm, positive relationship with personal finance. This is your guide, Shekha Chopra. In the previous episode, we explored how not all decisions deserve equal attention. We discussed how simple rich people conserve willpower, focus on high-impact decisions, and avoid getting consumed by the noise of everyday choices. Today we take that idea one step further. Because once you know how, once you know where to focus your energy, you still need a way to decide. You need a way to figure out the how. What is worth your time, your money, and your effort? I want to introduce you to the TMV framework, the Time Money Value Framework, or TMV, which helps guide decisions that align with the judicious use of money and the optimal use of time to your personal preferences. It is a simple but powerful framework. Three variables: time, money, value. And together they give you a holistic view of any decision. Let's break this down. The first variable in this framework is time, which is determined by how much time will this activity take? Not just in the moment, but across your day, your week, your month? And if you can extrapolate it even longer than that, to money. What is the financial cost? What will you need to spend to pursue this activity? And is that spend affordable or a stretch or currently out of bounds? The third leg of this framework is the most interesting one. What value does this activity bring to your life? And by value we mean what is the impact on your quality of life. This is subjective but not arbitrary. It reflects experience, growth, and meaning to your life. Let's take a simple example. A concert. Two people attend, one is there for entertainment, the other is an aspiring musician. Both may rate the experience as high value, but for different reasons. One for enjoyment, the other for learning and development. Value connects you to your self-awareness. And the more you use this framework, the better you become at estimating value. Time and money are relatively quantitative. They help assess feasibility. Value is qualitative and sharpens with use. This is why the TMV model works. The beauty of TMV is this: it strips away distractions. It facilitates you to focus on the essentials. What it costs, what it takes, and what it gives back. What it costs, money, what it takes, time, and what it gives back, value. And it makes you accountable to the one person this decision impacts the most. You let's take a practical example. Suppose you want to learn piano. The time could be estimated as fifteen to thirty minutes a day. For most people, that is manageable. Money, options vary. Private lessons, group classes, apps, self-learning, plus cost of a piano, which could also vary. And learning materials like books. Then let's look at the third variable, value. This is where it becomes interesting. If music matters to you, the value could be high. And when value is high enough, you often find the time and money. The purpose of evaluating time and money is not to discourage action, it is to prepare you. If something feels out of reach, you have options. You can delay, adjust, or quit creative. Creativity is the cornerstone of intelligent action. It is where grit passion and problem solving meet. A simple Sunnyville insight from our favorite simple rich people town of Sunnyville. A friend in Sunnyville once took his daughter to piano lessons while other parents waited outside on their phones. He sat inside the class. He listened, he learned. He participated quietly. He didn't pay any extra and he was not beating any rules. He had to be in the room along with the other parents, but he chose to listen to the teacher. He chose to pay attention as if he was the student. Pay attention to the teacher instead of a phone or answering emails at the time. He gave it his full attention. And he gained. He gained knowledge. He gained connection with his daughter. And he shared growth with his daughter. He wasn't gaming the system. He was simply maximizing value from time already spent. Among the three variables, value is often the most powerful because when something truly matters to you, you will find the time and the money. Writing, for example, takes time, a lot of it. But for someone who values it deeply, the investment feels natural. TMV doesn't have to be a complicated application. You don't need a spreadsheet, you don't need a software, you don't even need a notebook. A napkin will do at a coffee shop if the opportunity arises. On a walk, just write. Time, three options. There is affordable, option A, option B stretch, option C out of bounds. And then, and remember, as you evaluate, you're evaluating based on your current situation. Just factually, realistically, how you feel. There is subjectivity in this, and there is objectivity. You will be as objective as you can, and from and you will keep getting better from a subjective standpoint from as the more you apply. It's just like building a muscle. Second variable, money. Again, the same three parameters options. Affordable. Is it affordable? Can I afford it? Is it the stretch goal? I can make it happen, but I may have to, you know, um change my habits a bit, or is it out of bounds? It's it's it's not possible under the current scenario. No does not mean never, it just means either one has to be more creative or this is not the right time. The third is value, simple. Is it low, medium, or high? Nothing much more complicated than that. Can be can fit on a napkin quite nicely. Again, time, is it affordable? Stretch, out of bounds, money, affordable, stretch, out of bounds, value, low, medium, or high. That's it. The simple exercise does something powerful. It shows you what is realistically possible, where trade-offs exist and where creativity is required. Sometimes something feels out of reach, but strong desire and creative thinking can move it from out of bounds to stretch to affordable. That's right. These category evaluations are flexible. In my experience, the constraint has rarely been time or money. The real constraint is habits. When habits change, time appears and money aligns for most things. Opportunities expand. The TMB framework is more than a tool, it is a lens, a way to understand your current state, challenge your assumptions, and move towards your goals. It encourages curiosity, openness, and experimentation. And ultimately, it helps you move towards station Z. In closing reflection, we're all capable of more than we often realize. We are vessels of potential. The TMV framework helps simply helps bring that potential into focus. It asks, What do you truly value? And are your time and money aligned with that? Because when they are, life begins to feel intentional, aligned, and deeply fulfilling. If you've been enjoying this journey, share this episode with a friend who might benefit from it. And don't forget to click follow so you get a reminder when the next episode drops. Next week we'll continue building on this foundation and explore how households can think like high performing organizations using simple financial metrics. Stay tuned, this is your guide, Shekhar Jobra.