It's easy to gaze wistfully at wealthy people and wish you were one of them. Most people assume that millionairehood is well beyond them, but for many of us, it's actually quite achievable. And even if you don't get all the way to having a million dollars or more, you may be able to greatly boost your net worth and build a more secure financial future.

Learn about how people in average jobs reached the millionaire milestone -- because you may be able to follow their examples to wealth.

A woman smiling behind her desk

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Meet Sylvia Bloom

Sylvia Bloom worked for 67 years at a major New York City law firm, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton. Her death in 2016 made headlines because of her great generosity -- she left $6.24 million to the Henry Street Settlement social services organization as well as bequests to other organizations. She amassed $8.2 million over her life, and if you're assuming it's because she was a big-time Manhattan lawyer, you'd be wrong. She was a secretary from Brooklyn, who earned a college degree while working.

Like most of us, she was never taught anything about investing. But one day her boss asked her to have a particular stock purchased in his investment account. He did that many times, and Sylvia started buying a few shares of whatever he bought for herself, on the side. Like many of us, she learned about investing on her own, largely by just doing it. (It's better to read a lot about investing first, though.)

If you think about it, you probably have the same ability to amass a lot of money as she did: You have a decent brain, you have some income to invest (via a relatively ordinary job), and you have some time ahead of you. Time is actually critically important, because the longer your money can grow, the bigger your nest egg will be. Bloom's money was able to grow over decades and the table below shows how a modest single investment of just $1,000 can grow, at an average annual rate of 8%:

Over this period...

$1,000 will grow to:

5 years

$1,469

10 years

$2,159

15 years

$3,172

20 years

$4,661

25 years

$6,848

30 years

$10,063

35 years

$14,785

40 years

$21,724

45 years

$31,920

50 years

$46,902

55 years

$68,914

60 years

$101,257

65 years

$148,780

Source: Calculations by author.

If you start with, say, $10,000 instead of $1,000, and you have 30 years ahead of you, you might amass $100,630. And, of course, if you're investing meaningful sums every year instead of just once, your money can grow much faster. Check out the following table:

Growing at 8% for

$5,000 invested annually

$10,000 invested annually

$15,000 invested annually

10 years

$78,227

$156,455

$234,682

15 years

$146,621

$293,243

$439,864

20 years

$247,115

$494,229

$741,344

25 years

$394,772

$789,544

$1.2 million

30 years

$611,729

$1.2 million

$1.8 million

Calculations by author.

Lots of ordinary people have built extraordinary wealth

Bloom is only one of many ordinary people who surprised friends and neighbors by being worth millions upon their death -- by investing, living frugally, or both. Here are some others:

  • Oseola McCarty: She was a relatively poor woman in Mississippi who did laundry by hand for a living. She retired with $280,000 in the bank, and she made news with a $150,000 donation to the local university that she had never been able to attend.
  • Gladys Holm: Another secretary, Holm never earned more than $15,000 in annual salary. Like Bloom, she copied many of her boss's stock purchases and ended up leaving $18 million to a children's hospital.
  • Grace Groner: Again -- a secretary. She was orphaned early in life, lived to 100, and left more than $7 million to Lake Forest College. How did she do it? By buying and holding stock in the pharmaceutical company for which she worked. She started with three shares that cost her a total of $180, and ended up, via additional purchases and stocks splits over 75 years, with more than 100,000 shares. (It's best if we don't keep all our eggs in any one basket, though.)

There are lots of other ordinary people who have amassed extraordinary wealth, so don't think it's something that can't happen and can't happen to you.

What we can learn from all the Blooms in the world

Take a close look at many people who have built great fortunes, and unless they founded a hugely successful company, they probably got wealthy via the stock market. Few investments are likely to increase in value as briskly as stocks -- over the long run. The table below makes that clear, showing the average returns for stocks, bonds, bills, gold, and the dollar between 1802 and 2012.

Asset Class

Annualized Nominal Return

Stocks

8.1%

Bonds

5.1%

Bills

4.2%

Gold

2.1%

U.S. Dollar

1.4%

Source: Stocks for the Long Run, by Jeremy Siegel.

Of course, not every stock will soar, so you'll need to either learn enough to be able to zero in on the most promising stocks, or just stick with low-fee, broad-market index funds. There's no shame in that, and they can build great wealth over years.

Another key lesson is that you do need to be patient because most of these people's fortunes were amassed over several decades. That might be hard if you're already 65, but even then, you may still have a decade or more in which to be an active investor. And better still, if you have kids or grandkids, you might be able to help launch them into many decades of investing.

Most of these stealthy wealth-builders have another thing in common -- they lived life frugally. Some did so to a great degree, wearing threadbare old clothes, for example, but others did enjoy the finer things in life while keeping their spending in check. There are lots of ways to save money.

So don't let yourself assume that you'll never be rich. You can probably achieve much greater wealth than you would have thought you could.