I love reading about investing masters like Warren Buffett, who started with just $10,000 and turned Berkshire Hathaway into a multibillion-dollar conglomerate. Or Shelby Davis, who began with $50,000 and amassed a $900 million family fortune.

Inspirational stories of stock market success like these show me there's hope I'll be able to achieve my own personal financial goals. Faithful investors who stuck with Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) and IBM (NYSE:IBM) have been richly rewarded over the years. With careful analysis maybe I'll find the next McDonald's (NYSE:MCD), which grew from a single hamburger shop to worldwide prominence, to allow me to enjoy a life of leisure.

The one problem -- like fingernails across a chalkboard, it's so jarring -- is what if you don't have $50,000 to launch your investing career? What if your bank account doesn't have $5,000 in it, let alone $10,000, to start building your retirement nest egg? What if you can't tell the difference between a balance sheet and a balance beam? Are you doomed to a life of penury and misery?

The fact is, you don't need a large grubstake to begin your investing career. You don't have to have a trust fund as large as Paris Hilton's to start the process of securing your financial future. And you don't need an accountant's grasp of financial jargon to profit from the stock market. All you need is the willingness to begin and learn. A commitment to regular, small investments -- I'm talking as little as $50 or $100 a month, folks -- can be the start of a million-dollar retirement account.

Without question, the earlier you start, the easier it will be and the more money you'll actually accumulate. But if you're like me and put off investing until later in life, you still have the ability to achieve your goals. The idea is to start, but start now.

Put the power of compounding to work for you
Investing small sums of money on a regular basis can have powerful results down the road. Let's say you put away $100 a month and after you've saved up $1,000, you invested it so that you earned the market's average rate of return, or 11% a year. Then you continued to invest $100 each and every month and did so for 25 years, all the while earning the market's average return. At the end of 25 years, you would have amassed a nest egg of more than $165,000. Not too shabby.

But let's say that you earned 4% more than the market, or 15% per year. That nest egg would now grow to more than $325,000, and if you doubled the market's average, you would have a portfolio worth more than $1 million. It may be unreasonable to think of doubling the market over 25 years -- only the great Buffett has achieved such long-term results -- but it does point out the power of adding extra percentage points to your return. Now imagine the results you would enjoy if after a few years you were able to scrape together a few dollars extra each month to invest.

You can beat the market
Academics will tell you individual investors have little chance of beating the stock market. They say the Warren Buffetts, Shelby Davises, and Peter Lynches are the exceptions to the rule. They are what they call "outliers," people so far beyond the norm that they can be completely discounted. We at The Motley Fool think differently. Stock investing is not brain surgery. Finding good, undervalued companies is not as hard as the professionals want you to think. Learning to look at financial statements, while daunting at first, is really quite doable and, dare I say, enjoyable, too.

Motley Fool co-founder Tom Gardner created a whole service dedicated to helping you find great stocks that will become the foundation of your million-dollar portfolio. Just as important, his Hidden Gems small-cap stock newsletter will also make you a better, more informed, and knowledgeable investor. Through online discussions, investment lessons, and interviews with investing masters, opportunities abound to increase your knowledge and skill.

With the advent of the Internet, online discount brokers now make investing small amounts easy, and they do it at low cost. Sharebuilder.com is one service that lets you buy stocks for as little as $4. Ameritrade does it for around $10 and Scottrade does it for around $7. Holding down costs is an important part of maximizing your returns. So once you open your account, commit to putting that $50 or $100 away every month and put the magic of compounding to work for you.

So where do you find these great investments?

The secret sauce of investing: small-cap stocks
Even the mighty General Motors (NYSE:GM) started off as a small-cap stock -- that is, a company valued at more than $300 million but less than $2 billion -- and it is in that market segment that investors can hope to make the greatest returns. With small caps, investors have an edge because institutions tend to ignore them and analysts don't cover them, so by the time anyone realizes they're there, they've already grown much larger and have appreciated in price. They also have much simpler finances, making that daunting analysis we mentioned before that much easier.

So far, Hidden Gems has compiled a pretty remarkable record of finding those undiscovered, ignored small-cap companies. In less than two years, Tom's recommendations have outperformed the market by more than 5-to-1.

For example, CantelMedical (NYSE:CMN), a manufacturer of products for infection prevention and control, is up more than 52% since Tom recommended it less than six months ago. Funeral home operator AlderwoodsGroup (NASDAQ:AWGI), recommended by guest analyst Tom Jacobs, has appreciated more than 82% since it was offered to subscribers in October 2003. And members have benefited from Tom finding the value in these concealed jewels before the market or their competitors do. Consider that Hidden Gems investors realized a quick 64% profit when Group 1 Software was acquired by Pitney Bowes (NYSE:PBI) just three months after it was recommended.

So it is possible to make a more comfortable retirement for yourself, even if you have little money to start with or are starting late in life. It is possible to turn $100 into $1 million. The four keys to doing it are:

  1. Start now, today!
  2. Invest regularly; every month put away $250, $100, even $50.
  3. Look to the stock market for your best hope of realizing your dreams.
  4. Seek out undervalued small-cap stocks for your greatest returns.

You just have to commit to doing it now and doing it regularly. No amount is too small. Let's get started. There's no time to lose!

This article was originally published on March 9, 2005. It has been updated.

Tom Gardner is offering a 30-day risk-free trial to Hidden Gems, the small-cap stock newsletter dedicated to helping you find your inner millionaire.

Fool contributor Rich Duprey is still working on his first million and does not own any of the stocks mentioned in this article. Coca-Cola is a recommendation of Motley Fool Inside Value. The Motley Fool has adisclosure policy.