Ever notice how the wealthy seem obsessed with minimalism while those with less money are told to cut back on spending? Here’s the twist: many shopping habits that come naturally to people stretching every pound are exactly what expensive life coaches teach their wealthy clients.
I grew up outside Manchester, and my mum worked in retail. She taught me lessons about money that I later heard repeated in boardrooms and business seminars, only dressed up in fancier language. The difference? She learned them out of necessity. Others pay thousands to learn them by choice.
After years of running my own business and watching friends from home struggle while London boomed, I’ve noticed something fascinating. The shopping strategies that help people survive on tight budgets are often the same ones that help the wealthy stay wealthy.
1. They buy in bulk when it makes sense
Remember when buying toilet paper in bulk was seen as something only warehouse club members did? Now wealthy minimalists preach about the efficiency of bulk buying for essentials.
Growing up, we’d stock up on non-perishables whenever there was a good deal. Not because we were preppers, but because buying 12 tins of beans at 50p each beat paying 75p every week. Simple maths, really.
Life coaches now teach this as “strategic purchasing.” They tell clients to identify their consistent needs and buy ahead when prices are favorable. The only difference? One group does it at Costco with a membership card, the other at Aldi when they spot a special.
The principle remains the same: why pay more tomorrow for something you’ll definitely need?
2. They know the real value of things
My mum could tell you the price of milk at three different shops without checking. She knew when strawberries were overpriced and when that “special offer” wasn’t special at all.
This deep price awareness is now packaged as “market intelligence” by financial advisors. They encourage wealthy clients to understand true value, not just sticker prices.
People on tight budgets develop an internal calculator. They automatically convert prices into hours worked or compare them against alternatives. Is that branded cereal worth three times the store brand? Probably not.
I’ve mentioned this before, but watching successful business owners, I’ve noticed they think the same way. They just apply it to bigger purchases. Whether you’re comparing supermarket prices or investment opportunities, the skill is identical.
3. They repair instead of replace
YouTube is full of repair tutorials, and guess who watches them? Both the person fixing their toaster to save thirty quid and the millionaire who understands that consumption for consumption’s sake is a trap.
The sustainability movement has rebranded what working-class communities have always done: fix things. Sew on buttons. Glue the sole back on your shoe. Use that laptop until it genuinely dies, not just until the new model comes out.
Wealthy minimalists now pay consultants to teach them about “conscious consumption” and “extending product lifecycles.” But visit any working-class neighborhood and you’ll find people who’ve been doing this forever. Not for the environment (though that’s a bonus), but because throwing away something fixable is literally throwing away money.
4. They ignore status symbols
Here’s something I learned running my own business: the clients who insisted on meeting at the fanciest restaurants were usually the ones who paid late. The real money? Often drove five-year-old cars and wore the same watch for decades.
People managing on less learned long ago that designer labels don’t make your life better. That lesson costs others thousands in therapy and life coaching to understand.
When you’re choosing between branded trainers and paying the electricity bill, the choice is obvious. You learn quickly that status symbols are expensive fiction. The wealthy who stay wealthy eventually learn this too, just through a different route.
5. They plan purchases around cycles
January sales, end-of-season clearances, Black Friday (the real deals, not the fake ones). People on budgets know these cycles like farmers know seasons.
Financial advisors now teach wealthy clients about “cyclical purchasing strategies.” They create spreadsheets tracking when different items go on sale. But anyone who’s ever had to make twenty pounds stretch until payday has this knowledge built in.
You know when supermarkets mark down the bakery items. You know which day they reduce the meat. You plan major purchases around predictable sales. This isn’t bargain hunting as a hobby; it’s strategic financial management.
6. They use everything completely
That expensive life coach teaching clients about “maximizing resource utilization”? They’re describing what every careful shopper has always done.
Leftover chicken becomes soup. Vegetable scraps become stock. Old t-shirts become cleaning rags. Nothing gets wasted because waste is a luxury you can’t afford.
I recently read about a CEO who hired someone to help him “optimize household consumption.” The consultant taught him to meal plan, use leftovers creatively, and reduce food waste. The CEO paid thousands to learn what most people’s grandparents could have taught him for free.
7. They share and borrow within communities
The sharing economy isn’t new. It’s just been appified.
Growing up, everyone knew who had a drill, who could fix cars, who had a ladder you could borrow. You shared magazines, passed down clothes, and split bulk purchases with neighbors.
Now there are apps for this, and life coaches recommend “collaborative consumption” to reduce expenses and build community. But working-class neighborhoods have been running this system forever. No app needed, just a knock on the door and a promise to return the favor.
The bottom line
The shopping habits that help people survive on less are the same ones that help the wealthy build and maintain wealth. The difference isn’t in the strategies but in the choice versus necessity.
What strikes me most, having watched both sides, is how much wisdom exists in communities that are often dismissed as financially unsophisticated. These aren’t just survival tactics; they’re genuinely smart financial strategies.
Maybe instead of expensive life coaches, we should be learning from people who’ve mastered the art of stretching a pound. They’ve been running masterclasses in financial efficiency all along. We just weren’t paying attention.
The next time someone suggests you need to learn better financial habits, remember: some of the best money managers in the world are the people making ends meet on the least. They just don’t charge consulting fees to share their knowledge.













