What Odds On Set in Motion

When Matt told me he was writing a book, I supported him.
I also wasn’t sure what would come of it.
We had always believed in what we were doing. We had great clients. We were growing. We were already sharing our philosophy with the people we worked with. Part of me wondered if we really needed a book at all.
But Matt felt strongly about it. He wanted to put something out into the world that might help people see things more clearly. So we backed him.
The first line of the book was, “I want this book to change your life.”
That is a big statement. At the time, I didn’t know what to make of it. Turns out, that Odds On is unique – it is not only informative about investing, but it is also engaging on so many other levels.

Over the last ten years, we’ve kept notes from people who read it. Clients, advisors, students, friends, and plenty of people we had never met. Reading back through them now, what stands out is not that people liked the book.
It’s what they did after they read it.
- “I was completely engaged from the first paragraph and couldn’t put it down.”
- “I did not take one break from reading until I was finished, simply because I did not want to put it down.”
Some people found clarity.
- “I was up until after midnight reading your book, and it changed my entire perspective on investing strategies.”
- “Until I picked up your book, I was losing hope for our profession. Your book gave me a much needed breath of fresh air.”
- “We are gradually converting all our existing clients and spreading the word to others in our office.”
- “I found your story so inspiring that I am seriously thinking of leaving my current job to start something new.”
And some of the most meaningful notes had very little to do with investing.
People who had gone through their own medical challenges wrote to Matt after reading his story. They shared things they don’t usually share. That part of the book reached people in a different way.
The book also ended up in places we never expected. Conference rooms. Classrooms. Zoom calls. Podcasts. Libraries. We heard from someone connected to the management of a university endowment who asked their board to read it, hoping it might shape how they approached their decisions.

And then there are the stories that just stick with you.
One of my favorites came from an old friend of Matt’s he hadn’t seen in years. He gave the book to his doctor. The next time he saw him, the doctor walked into the room and skipped everything else. He just wanted to talk about the book.
“When he came into the room he did not ask me how I was doing, he immediately went to talking about the book.”
That’s when it hit me.
The book was doing something we couldn’t have done on our own. It was reaching people at the right time, in their own lives, in their own way.
Ten years later, I don’t think about whether the book was a success.
I think about the people who wrote in to us about it. The ones who made a change. The ones who saw things a little more clearly.
That doesn’t happen very often.
I’m glad Matt wrote it.
And I’m grateful for where it went.
Here’s to the next ten years of learning, sharing, and taking the long view.
