You learn a lot from failure. It’s a more instructive teacher than success.

Everyone makes mistakes with their investments. Warren Buffett started investing when he was 10. Do not let anyone convince you that every investment he’s made in his entire life was a winner. If I had to guess, I’m sure that he’s made a really bad investment or two in his time. No one picks a winner every single time, not even Warren Buffett.

The reason he became super-rich is due in part to the fact that he never gave up investing after making his mistakes. You shouldn’t either.

The fact that Mr. Buffett has been investing for the past 83 years also hasn’t hurt him. Take a page from his book. Once you’ve started down the investing road, don’t stray from the path. Invest – err – learn – repeat. That’s the key to getting good at anything.

You need to start investing today. My inexpert & amateur recommendation is that you start investing into your TFSA. Don’t be misled by the name – Tax Free Savings Account. This account is best used for investing your money, not saving your money.

If you invest $0 this year, then you’ll only be harming yourself. Procrastination is your enemy when it comes to investing your money for long-term growth. Think of how far ahead you’d be with your investing knowledge if you’d started 10 or 15 years ago. Let that be your impetus to stop dawdling and to start doing.

Start with $1/day. That’s $365 going into your TFSA. If you can swing $2/day, then that’s $730 working for you on a tax-free basis. And if you think anything less than $1,000/year isn’t worth attempting, then all you need to set aside is $3/day to have $1,095 working hard for you.

Invest your money…and learn from your failures. No one is expecting you to be perfect the first time out. As a matter of fact, it would be downright weird if you never made mistakes with your money. I’m not suggesting that you make money mistakes on purpose. I just don’t want you to be so paralyzed with fear of making mistakes that you never invest.

If you could remember when you learned to walk, then you’d remember how many times you tried and fell down. Each time, you got back up and you tried again. Your first forgotten lesson was that you couldn’t move both feet at the same time. You next lesson was probably that holding onto something made walking a lot easier. Couches, tables, a bigger person’s fingers – whatever was steady and handy was good enough. Next, you figured out that you could do it on your own but leaning too far back or too far forward resulted in toppling over. It took a bit of time, but eventually you got very, very good at walking. Now, you do it with barely a second thought.

Bottom line is that you mastered walking. The same can be said for investing. Try – fail – learn – repeat. You’ll make errors. So what? Make them quickly, learn from them, then never make the same one twice. Learn from others’ mistakes too. That’s a perfectly valid way to learn a lesson. Re-invest your dividends. Increase your automatic transfer amount as you’re able to do so. Max out your TFSA. Then max out your RRSP. Then open a brokerage account and invest money there too. It doesn’t have to, and very likely won’t, happen quickly but it will happen. So long as you start today.

If you’re 18 or over, open your TFSA. It’s easy. Every financial institution has made it a seamless process to open your TFSA online. Do you have one already? Great! Set up an automatic savings transfer. Every time you get paid, money goes into your TFSA. I would suggest $24/paycheque since we’re going into 2024. You can pick your own number, whatever your budget can bear. In 2024, the maximum TFSA contribution is $7,000. Don’t beat yourself up if you can’t put in the maximum contribution. Anything more than $0 is fantastic!

And if you’re under 18, you can’t legally open a TFSA. That shouldn’t stop you from opening a savings account at an online bank. (Most youth accounts at brick-and-mortar banks are free too, but don’t use a bank where you have to pay fees.) Put your money into your savings account. When you turn 18, open a TFSA then transfer the money over.

Everyone starts somewhere. Your journey won’t be the same as everyone else’s but you do need to start. And once you do, don’t stop. Keep that investment train chugging along by investing a portion of every paycheque for long-term growth.