"A good man leaves an inheritance to his children's children." — Proverbs 13:22 Robert Kiyosaki tells a story about two men hired to carry water from a river to their village. Both are paid for every bucket they carry. The first man works hard every day, carrying more buckets and earning more money. His income depends entirely on how much water he can carry. The second man carries buckets too—but after work, he starts building a pipeline. People laugh at him because he's working extra hours for no immediate reward. Eventually, though, water begins flowing through the pipeline whether he's carrying buckets or not. That's the difference between earning income and building assets. The Four Ways People Make Money In Cash Flow Friday, we discuss the four income quadrants: - Employee (E) – You work for a paycheck. - Self-Employed (S) – You own your job. - Business Owner (B) – Systems work for you. - Investor (I) – Money works for you. The left side (Employee and Self-Employed) is often the bucket. The right side (Business Owner and Investor) is the pipeline. There is nothing wrong with earning a paycheck. In fact, most pipelines begin with income earned from a job. The key is learning how to use today's income to build tomorrow's assets. Real Estate and Stocks: Building Pipelines Real estate can become a pipeline when properties generate income over time. Stocks can become pipelines when you own shares in companies that create value and grow. The goal isn't simply to make money—it's to create assets that continue producing value long after the initial work is done. What This Means for Us Recently, Grimes County approved a major semiconductor manufacturing project expected to bring billions of dollars in investment and thousands of jobs to our region. Whether you're studying business, engineering, finance, agriculture, construction, or technology, projects like this create opportunities. Some people will see the announcement and move on. Others will ask: