5 LESSONS ABOUT HOW TO GET RICH FROM
BEST-SELLER "RICH DAD, POOR DAD"
If you have ever searched “best personal finance books to read” on Google, you have most likely seen the title “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” appear at the very top.
The book, written by Robert T. Kiyosaki and Sharon L. Lechter, has reportedly sold more than 32 million copies in 40 languages across 40 countries since it was published in 2002.
“Rich Dad, Poor Dad” is an allegorical
story about Robert Kiyosaki and his two dads, and how growing up with them
shaped his financial views.
The “poor dad” is Kiyosaki’s biological
father, a highly educated college professor. The “rich dad” is Kiyosaki’s best
friend’s father, a wealthy entrepreneur who owns dozens of businesses. Both
dads offer conflicting advice on money.
“Poor dad” mentality
“Poor dad” believes that one should work
for money as a single-salaried employee at a stable job, and that a person’s
wealth largely depends on their family background.
He believes that the most important things
you can do to financially survive (or accumulate wealth) is to read and learn
from successful people.
Many people think this mentality can trap a
person into working a job they don’t love, but willing to stick with because
they have to pay the bills.
“Rich dad” mentality
“Rich dad” advises Kiyosaki to get a job so
he can learn the skills required to be an entrepreneur. Wealth comes from
experience-based learning and multiple income streams.
When the “poor dad” encourages working your
way up the ladder, “rich dad” laughs and says, “Why not own the ladder?”
While the advice in “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” —
and from Kiyosaki himself — has garnered some controversial attention, the book
does offer a handful of powerful lessons that can be useful to anyone looking
broaden their views on money.
Here are some essential takeaways:
1. The rich buy assets, not liabilities
An asset is anything that puts money into
your pocket, like a bond or house (that you purchase or build and then rent out
to other people). A liability is anything that costs you money because it loses
value over time, like an expensive car or television set.
It’s important to be able to distinguish
the two. “The rich buy assets. The poor only have expenses. The middle class
buy liabilities they think are assets,” writes Kiyosaki.
2. Financial literacy can only be learned
through experience
The well-educated “poor dad” says,
“Studying hard and getting good grades is the only way to secure a good job at
a big company with excellent benefits. But the “rich dad” says that the most
important goal is to learn how money works so that you can make it work for you.
To be financially smart, Kiyosaki says you
must master accounting, investing, markets and the law. The more you broaden
your skills, the more successful you will be.
3. Learn to sell
In the book, a woman with a master’s degree
in English literature asks Kiyosaki how she can become a best-selling author.
He tells her to enroll in a sales-training
course.
Shocked by his answer, she says, “You
aren’t serious, are you...”
Kiyosaki picks up a book on the coffee
table and says, “There’s a reason successful books say ‘best-selling author,’
not ‘best-writing author.’”
Selling is a crucial skill if you want to
be rich, he explains. Get out of your comfort zone, practice selling and
network. If you don’t, you’ll never be able to run your own business.
4. Fear and self-doubt are your greatest
barriers to success
The primary difference between the rich and
the poor is how they manage fear.
“Poor dad” keeps it safe and avoids risks.
This perspective can be costly in the long-run.
“Often in the real world, it’s not the
smart who get ahead, but the bold,” says “rich dad.”
5. Always think in terms of opportunities
The “rich dad” forbids his kids from
saying, “I can’t afford it.” Instead, he tells them to say, “How can I afford
it?”
The first phrase shuts down a person’s
brain, and they no longer have to think. The second one opens up
“possibilities, excitement and dreams.”
It forces the brain to search for answers.
Kiyosaki learns that the “primary reason
the majority of the poor and middle class are fiscally conservative—which
means, ‘I can’t afford to take risks’—is that they have no financial
foundation.”
Finally
Most people would want to be rich – or at
least earn enough to not have to worry about meeting their bills every month.
However, many of us die without ever having this become our reality.
And then there are those who go to school to find a safe, reliable job, with benefits and a promotional structure, take that type of job, save their money little by little, pay their bills and expenses first, and then spend what they have left over last.
They repeat this cycle for the rest of
their working lives, but this ultimately never allows them to get ahead or
become financially independent.
Kiyosaki
grew up with two father figures: ‘Poor dad’ who was his real father and
died with bills to pay; and ‘rich dad’ who started with little before becoming
one of the richest men in Hawaii.
“I noticed that my poor dad was poor not
because of the amount of money he earned, which was significant, but because of
his thoughts and actions,”
The bottom line is that taking a calculated risk can help you to build wealth. And you become smarter with each experience.
Written By: David Njimu
Business
Consultant/ Business man
+254758387013/+254783297883
onlinecybersolutions1@gmail.com
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