Automating your finances is a simple yet highly effective money-saving strategy that anyone can use. Besides paying your bills — whether those be credit card balances, student loans or rent — automatically, like Broyles does, you can also send your money straight from your paycheck or checking account to a retirement savings account, investment account or an emergency fund.

That way you’ll never even see the money and learn to live without it.

It allows you to build wealth effortlessly, says personal finance expert David Bach. “You’ll never forget a payment again — and you’ll never be tempted to skimp on savings because you won’t even see the money going directly from your paycheck to your savings accounts,” he writes in “The Automatic Millionaire

Plus, you’ll save time and simplify your life, says self-made millionaire Chris Reining, who reached the $1 million mark at age 35, thanks to automating his finances: “I automated my money years ago, and the benefit is I don’t have to make decisions about where my money should go, how much I should invest, what I can spend, do I have enough savings, and so on.”

Ultimately, that’s Broyles’ goal. The NFL player recognizes that a football career — and the paycheck that comes with it — “can all be gone in a split second,” so he’s planning for the worst and securing his future now.

“The goal was to play 10 years in the NFL,” he writes. “But financially, I planned like I wouldn’t make it past the next 10 minutes.”

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