Rich Dad Poor Dad Ebook
Rich Dad Poor Dad Ebook
Rich Dad Poor Dad Ebook
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ISBN: 978-1-61268-000-2
Cover photo credit: Seymour & Brody Studio
RICH
DAD
POOR DAD
What The Rich Teach Their Kids About Money—
That The Poor And Middle Class Do Not!
By Robert T. Kiyosaki
®
Best-selling Books
by Robert T. Kiyosaki
Rich Dad Poor Dad
What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money –
That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not
Rich Dad’s CASHFLOW Quadrant
Guide to Financial Freedom
Rich Dad’s Guide to Investing
What the Rich Invest in That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not
Rich Dad’s Rich Kid Smart Kid
Give Your Child a Financial Head Start
Rich Dad’s Retire Young Retire Rich
How to Get Rich and Stay Rich
Rich Dad’s Prophecy
Why the Biggest Stock Market Crash in History Is Still Coming…
And How You Can Prepare Yourself and Profit from It!
Rich Dad’s Success Stories
Real-Life Success Stories from Real-Life People
Who Followed the Rich Dad Lessons
Rich Dad’s Guide to Becoming Rich
Without Cutting Up Your Credit Cards
Turn Bad Debt into Good Debt
Rich Dad’s Who Took My Money?
Why Slow Investors Lose and Fast Money Wins!
Rich Dad Poor Dad for Teens
The Secrets About Money – That You Don’t Learn In School!
Escape the Rat Race
Learn How Money Works and Become a Rich Kid
Rich Dad’s Before You Quit Your Job
Ten Real-Life Lessons Every Entrepreneur Should Know
About Building a Multimillion-Dollar Business
Rich Dad’s Increase Your Financial IQ
Get Smarter with Your Money
Robert Kiyosaki’s Conspiracy of the Rich
The 8 New Rules of Money
Unfair Advantage
The Power of Financial Education
ix
Acknowledgments
How does a person say “thank you” when there are so many people
to thank? Obviously this book is a thank you to my two fathers, who
were powerful role models, and to my mom, who taught me love
and kindness.
The person most responsible for this book becoming a reality is my
wife Kim—my partner in marriage, business, and in life. She makes my
life complete.
xi
Contents
Introduction
Rich Dad Poor Dad........................................................................................1
Chapter One
Lesson 1: The Rich Don’t Work for Money....................................................9
Chapter Two
Lesson 2: Why Teach Financial Literacy?......................................................41
Chapter Three
Lesson 3: Mind Your Own Business.............................................................71
Chapter Four
Lesson 4: The History of Taxes and the Power of Corporations........................... 79
Chapter Five
Lesson 5: The Rich Invent Money................................................................91
Chapter Six
Lesson 6: Work to Learn—Don’t Work for Money.....................................115
Chapter Seven
Overcoming Obstacles...............................................................................129
Chapter Eight
Getting Started ..........................................................................................145
Chapter Nine
Still Want More? Here Are Some To Do’s....................................................167
Final Thoughts..........................................................................................173
Introduction
I had two fathers, a rich one and a poor one. One was highly
educated and intelligent. He had a Ph.D. and completed four years
of undergraduate work in less than two years. He then went on to
Stanford University, the University of Chicago, and Northwestern
University to do his advanced studies, all on full financial scholarships.
The other father never finished the eighth grade.
Both men were successful in their careers, working hard all their
lives. Both earned substantial incomes. Yet one always struggled
financially. The other would become one of the richest men in
Hawaii. One died leaving tens of millions of dollars to his family,
charities, and his church. The other left bills to be paid.
Both men were strong, charismatic, and influential. Both men
offered me advice, but they did not advise the same things. Both men
believed strongly in education but did not recommend the same course
of study.
If I had had only one dad, I would have had to accept or reject his
advice. Having two dads offered me the choice of contrasting points
of view: one of a rich man and one of a poor man.
Instead of simply accepting or rejecting one or the other, I found
myself thinking more, comparing, and then choosing for myself. The
problem was that the rich man was not rich yet, and the poor man
1
Introduction
was not yet poor. Both were just starting out on their careers, and
both were struggling with money and families. But they had very
different points of view about money.
For example, one dad would say, “The love of money is the root
of all evil.” The other said, “The lack of money is the root of all evil.”
As a young boy, having two strong fathers both influencing me
was difficult. I wanted to be a good son and listen, but the two fathers
did not say the same things. The contrast in their points of view,
particularly about money, was so extreme that I grew curious and
intrigued. I began to start thinking for long periods of time about
what each was saying.
Much of my private time was spent reflecting, asking myself
questions such as, “Why does he say that?” and then asking the same
question of the other dad’s statement. It would have been much
easier to simply say, “Yeah, he’s right. I agree with that.” Or to simply
reject the point of view by saying, “The old man doesn’t know what
he’s talking about.” Instead, having two dads whom I loved forced
me to think and ultimately choose a way of thinking for myself. As a
process, choosing for myself turned out to be much more valuable in
the long run than simply accepting or rejecting a single point of view.
One of the reasons the rich get richer, the poor get poorer, and
the middle class struggles in debt is that the subject of money is
taught at home, not in school. Most of us learn about money from
our parents. So what can poor parents tell their child about money?
They simply say, “Stay in school and study hard.” The child may
graduate with excellent grades, but with a poor person’s financial
programming and mindset.
Sadly, money is not taught in schools. Schools focus on scholastic
and professional skills, but not on financial skills. This explains how
smart bankers, doctors, and accountants who earned excellent grades
may struggle financially all of their lives. Our staggering national debt
is due in large part to highly educated politicians and government
officials making financial decisions with little or no training in the
subject of money.
2
Rich Dad Poor Dad
3
Introduction
5
Introduction
6
Rich Dad Poor Dad
7
Chapter One
9
Chapter One: Lesson 1
have gone to a different school with kids from families more like
mine. After grade six, these kids and I would go on to the public
intermediate and high school. There was no private school for them
or for me.
My dad finally put down the paper. I could tell he was thinking.
“Well, Son…,” he began slowly. “If you want to be rich, you have
to learn to make money.”
“How do I make money?” I asked.
“Well, use your head, Son,” he said, smiling. Even then I knew
that really meant, “That’s all I’m going to tell you,” or “I don’t know
the answer, so don’t embarrass me.”
A Partnership Is Formed
The next morning, I told my best friend, Mike, what my dad had
said. As best as I could tell, Mike and I were the only poor kids in this
school. Mike was also in this school by a twist of fate. Someone had
drawn a jog in the line for the school district, and we wound up in
school with the rich kids. We weren’t really poor, but we felt as if we
were because all the other boys had new baseball gloves, new bicycles,
new everything.
Mom and Dad provided us with the basics, like food, shelter,
and clothes. But that was about it. My dad used to say, “If you want
something, work for it.” We wanted things, but there was not much
work available for nine-year-old boys.
“So what do we do to make money?” Mike asked.
“I don’t know,” I said. “But do you want to be my partner?”
He agreed, and so on that Saturday morning, Mike became my
first business partner. We spent all morning coming up with ideas
on how to make money. Occasionally we talked about all the “cool
guys” at Jimmy’s beach house having fun. It hurt a little, but that hurt
was good, because it inspired us to keep thinking of a way to make
money. Finally, that afternoon, a bolt of lightning struck. It was an
idea Mike got from a science book he had read. Excitedly, we shook
hands, and the partnership now had a business.
10
Rich Dad Poor Dad
For the next several weeks, Mike and I ran around our neighborhood,
knocking on doors and asking our neighbors if they would save their
toothpaste tubes for us. With puzzled looks, most adults consented with a
smile. Some asked us what we were doing, to which we replied, “We can’t
tell you. It’s a business secret.”
My mom grew distressed as the weeks wore on. We had selected a
site next to her washing machine as the place we would stockpile our
raw materials. In a brown cardboard box that at one time held catsup
bottles, our little pile of used toothpaste tubes began to grow.
Finally my mom put her foot down. The sight of her neighbors’
messy, crumpled, used toothpaste tubes had gotten to her. “What are you
boys doing?” she asked. “And I don’t want to hear again that it’s a business
secret. Do something with this mess, or I’m going to throw it out.”
Mike and I pleaded and begged, explaining that we would soon
have enough and then we would begin production. We informed her
that we were waiting on a couple of neighbors to finish their toothpaste
so we could have their tubes. Mom granted us a one-week extension.
The date to begin production was moved up, and the pressure was
on. My first partnership was already being threatened with an eviction
notice by my own mom! It became Mike’s job to tell the neighbors to
quickly use up their toothpaste, saying their dentist wanted them to
brush more often anyway. I began to put together the production line.
One day my dad drove up with a friend to see two nine-year-old
boys in the driveway with a production line operating at full speed.
There was fine white powder everywhere. On a long table were small
milk cartons from school, and our family’s hibachi grill was glowing
with red-hot coals at maximum heat.
Dad walked up cautiously, having to park the car at the base of
the driveway since the production line blocked the carport. As he and
his friend got closer, they saw a steel pot sitting on top of the coals in
which the toothpaste tubes were being melted down. In those days,
toothpaste did not come in plastic tubes. The tubes were made of
lead. So once the paint was burned off, the tubes were dropped in the
small steel pot. They melted until they became liquid, and with my
11
Chapter One: Lesson 1
mom’s pot holders, we poured the lead through a small hole in the
top of the milk cartons.
The milk cartons were filled with plaster of paris. White powder
was everywhere. In my haste, I had knocked the bag over, and the
entire area looked like it had been hit by a snowstorm. The milk
cartons were the outer containers for plaster of paris molds.
My dad and his friend watched as we carefully poured the molten
lead through a small hole in the top of the plaster of paris cube.
“Careful,” my dad said.
I nodded without looking up.
Finally, once the pouring was through, I put the steel pot down
and smiled at my dad.
“What are you boys doing?” he asked with a cautious smile.
“We’re doing what you told me to do. We’re going to be rich,”
I said.
“Yup,” said Mike, grinning and nodding his head. “We’re partners.”
“And what is in those plaster molds?” my dad asked.
“Watch,” I said. “This should be a good batch.”
With a small hammer, I tapped at the seal that divided the cube
in half. Cautiously, I pulled up the top half of the plaster mold and a
lead nickel fell out.
“Oh, no!” my dad exclaimed. “You’re casting nickels out of lead!”
“That’s right,” Mike said. “We’re doing as you told us to do. We’re
making money.”
My dad’s friend turned and burst into laughter. My dad smiled
and shook his head. Along with a fire and a box of spent toothpaste
tubes, in front of him were two little boys covered with white dust
smiling from ear to ear.
He asked us to put everything down and sit with him on the front
step of our house. With a smile, he gently explained what the word
“counterfeiting” meant.
Our dreams were dashed. “You mean this is illegal?” asked Mike
in a quivering voice.
12
Rich Dad Poor Dad
13
Chapter One: Lesson 1
the sugar plantation. He’s not much different from me. He works for a
company, and I work for the government. The company buys the car for
him. The sugar company is in financial trouble, and Jimmy’s dad may
soon have nothing. Your dad is different, Mike. He seems to be building
an empire, and I suspect in a few years he will be a very rich man.”
With that, Mike and I got excited again. With new vigor, we began
cleaning up the mess caused by our now-defunct first business. As we
were cleaning, we made plans for how and when to talk to Mike’s dad.
The problem was that Mike’s dad worked long hours and often did not
come home until late. His father owned warehouses, a construction
company, a chain of stores, and three restaurants. It was the restaurants
that kept him out late.
Mike caught the bus home after we had finished cleaning up. He
was going to talk to his dad when he got home that night and ask him
if he would teach us how to become rich. Mike promised to call as soon
as he had talked to his dad, even if it was late.
The phone rang at 8:30 p.m.
“Okay,” I said. “Next Saturday.” I put the phone down. Mike’s dad
had agreed to meet with us.
On Saturday I caught the 7:30 a.m. bus to the poor side of town.
older than my mom. Across from the women sat a man in workman’s
clothes. He wore khaki slacks and a khaki shirt, neatly pressed but
without starch, and polished work boots. He was about 10 years older
than my dad. They smiled as Mike and I walked past them toward the
back porch. I smiled back shyly.
“Who are those people?” I asked.
“Oh, they work for my dad. The older man runs his warehouses,
and the women are the managers of the restaurants. And as you
arrived, you saw the construction supervisor who is working on a
road project about 50 miles from here. His other supervisor, who is
building a track of houses, left before you got here.”
“Does this go on all the time?” I asked.
“Not always, but quite often,” said Mike, smiling as he pulled up
a chair to sit down next to me.
“I asked my dad if he would teach us to make money,” Mike said.
“Oh, and what did he say to that?” I asked with cautious curiosity.
“Well, he had a funny look on his face at first, and then he said he
would make us an offer.”
“Oh,” I said, rocking my chair back against the wall. I sat there
perched on two rear legs of the chair.
Mike did the same thing.
“Do you know what the offer is?” I asked.
“No, but we’ll soon find out.”
Suddenly, Mike’s dad burst through the rickety screen door and
onto the porch. Mike and I jumped to our feet, not out of respect,
but because we were startled.
“Ready, boys?” he asked as he pulled up a chair to sit down with us.
We nodded our heads as we pulled our chairs away from the wall
to sit in front of him.
He was a big man, about six feet tall and 200 pounds. My dad was
taller, about the same weight, and five years older than Mike’s dad. They
sort of looked alike, though not of the same ethnic makeup. Maybe their
energy was similar.
15
Chapter One: Lesson 1
“Mike says you want to learn to make money? Is that correct, Robert?”
I nodded my head quickly, but with a little trepidation. He had
a lot of power behind his words and smile.
“Okay, here’s my offer. I’ll teach you, but I won’t do it classroom-
style. You work for me, I’ll teach you. You don’t work for me, I won’t
teach you. I can teach you faster if you work, and I’m wasting my time if
you just want to sit and listen like you do in school. That’s my offer. Take
it or leave it.”
“Ah, may I ask a question first?” I asked.
“No. Take it or leave it. I’ve got too much work to do to waste
my time. If you can’t make up your mind decisively, then you’ll never
learn to make money anyway. Opportunities come and go. Being able
to know when to make quick decisions is an important skill. You have
the opportunity that you asked for. School is beginning, or it’s over in
10 seconds,” Mike’s dad said with a teasing smile.
“Take it,” I said.
“Take it,” said Mike.
“Good,” said Mike’s dad. “Mrs. Martin will be by in 10 minutes.
After I’m through with her, you’ll ride with her to my superette and
you can begin working. I’ll pay you 10 cents an hour, and you’ll work
three hours every Saturday.”
“But I have a softball game today,” I said.
Mike’s dad lowered his voice to a stern tone. “Take it, or leave it,”
he said.
“I’ll take it,” I replied, choosing to work and learn instead of playing.
16
Rich Dad Poor Dad
Mike’s dad, whom I call my rich dad, owned nine of these little
superettes, each with a large parking lot. They were the early version
of the 7-Eleven convenience stores, little neighborhood grocery stores
where people bought items such as milk, bread, butter, and cigarettes.
The problem was that this was Hawaii before air-conditioning was
widely used, and the stores could not close their doors because of the
heat. On two sides of the store, the doors had to be wide open to the
road and parking lot. Every time a car drove by or pulled into the
parking lot, dust would swirl and settle in the store. We knew we had
a job as long as there was no air-conditioning.
For three weeks, Mike and I reported to Mrs. Martin and worked
our three hours. By noon, our work was over, and she dropped three little
dimes in each of our hands. Now, even at the age of nine in the mid-
1950s, 30 cents was not too exciting. Comic books cost 10 cents back
then, so I usually spent my money on comic books and went home.
By Wednesday of the fourth week, I was ready to quit. I had
agreed to work only because I wanted to learn to make money from
Mike’s dad, and now I was a slave for 10 cents an hour. On top of
that, I had not seen Mike’s dad since that first Saturday.
“I’m quitting,” I told Mike at lunchtime. School was boring, and
now I did not even have my Saturdays to look forward to. But it was
the 30 cents that really got to me.
This time Mike smiled.
“What are you laughing at?” I asked with anger and frustration.
“Dad said this would happen. He said to meet with him when
you were ready to quit.”
“What?” I said indignantly. “He’s been waiting for me to get
fed up?”
“Sort of,” Mike said. “Dad’s kind of different. He doesn’t teach like
your dad. Your mom and dad lecture a lot. My dad is quiet and a man
of few words. You just wait till this Saturday. I’ll tell him you’re ready.”
“You mean I’ve been set up?”
“No, not really, but maybe. Dad will explain on Saturday.”
17
Chapter One: Lesson 1
me anything. You are a crook like everyone in town thinks you are.
You’re greedy. You want all the money and don’t take care of your
employees. You made me wait and don’t show me any respect. I’m
only a little boy, but I deserve to be treated better.”
Rich dad rocked back in his swivel chair, hands up to his chin,
and stared at me.
“Not bad,” he said. “In less than a month, you sound like most
of my employees.”
“What?” I asked. Not understanding what he was saying, I
continued with my grievance. “I thought you were going to keep
your end of the bargain and teach me. Instead you want to torture
me? That’s cruel. That’s really cruel.”
“I am teaching you,” rich dad said quietly.
“What have you taught me? Nothing!” I said angrily. “You haven’t
even talked to me once since I agreed to work for peanuts. Ten cents an
hour. Hah! I should notify the government about you. We have child
labor laws, you know. My dad works for the government, you know.”
“Wow!” said rich dad. “Now you sound just like most of the people
who used to work for me—people I’ve either fired or who have quit.”
“So what do you have to say?” I demanded, feeling pretty brave
for a little kid. “You lied to me. I’ve worked for you, and you have not
kept your word. You haven’t taught me anything.”
“How do you know that I’ve not taught you anything?” asked rich
dad calmly.
“Well, you’ve never talked to me. I’ve worked for three weeks and
you have not taught me anything,” I said with a pout.
“Does teaching mean talking or a lecture?” rich dad asked.
“Well, yes,” I replied.
“That’s how they teach you in school,” he said, smiling. “But
that is not how life teaches you, and I would say that life is the best
teacher of all. Most of the time, life does not talk to you. It just sort
of pushes you around. Each push is life saying, ‘Wake up. There’s
something I want you to learn.’”
19
Chapter One: Lesson 1
20
Rich Dad Poor Dad
21
Chapter One: Lesson 1
22
Rich Dad Poor Dad
24
Rich Dad Poor Dad
25
Chapter One: Lesson 1
“Look,” said rich dad, “taxes are just one small section on learning
how to have money work for you. Today, I just wanted to find out if
you still have the passion to learn about money. Most people don’t.
They want to go to school, learn a profession, have fun at their work,
and earn lots of money. One day they wake up with big money
problems, and then they can’t stop working. That’s the price of only
knowing how to work for money instead of studying how to have
money work for you. So do you still have the passion to learn?” asked
rich dad.
I nodded my head.
“Good,” said rich dad. “Now get back to work. This time, I will
pay you nothing.”
“What?” I asked in amazement.
“You heard me. Nothing. You will work the same three hours
every Saturday, but this time you will not be paid 10 cents per hour.
You said you wanted to learn to not work for money, so I’m not going
to pay you anything.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
“I’ve already had this conversation with Mike and he’s already
working, dusting and stacking canned goods for free. You’d better
hurry and get back there.”
“That’s not fair,” I shouted. “You’ve got to pay something!”
“You said you wanted to learn. If you don’t learn this now, you’ll
grow up to be like the two women and the older man sitting in my
living room, working for money and hoping I don’t fire them. Or like
your dad, earning lots of money only to be in debt up to his eyeballs,
hoping more money will solve the problem. If that’s what you want,
I’ll go back to our original deal of 10 cents an hour. Or you can do
what most adults do: Complain that there is not enough pay, quit,
and go looking for another job.”
“But what do I do?” I asked.
Rich dad tapped me on the head. “Use this,” he said. “If you use
it well, you will soon thank me for giving you an opportunity and
you will grow into a rich man.”
26
Rich Dad Poor Dad
I stood there, still not believing what a raw deal I was handed. I came
to ask for a raise, and somehow I was instead working for nothing.
Rich dad tapped me on the head again and said, “Use this. Now
get out of here and get back to work.”
27
Chapter One: Lesson 1
and security. If you don’t, you’ll wind up like Mrs. Martin and most of
the people playing softball in this park. They work very hard for little
money, clinging to the illusion of job security and looking forward to a
three-week vacation each year and maybe a skimpy pension after forty-
five years of service. If that excites you, I’ll give you a raise to 25 cents
an hour.”
“But these are good hardworking people. Are you making fun of
them?” I demanded.
A smile came over rich dad’s face.
“Mrs. Martin is like a mother to me. I would never be that cruel.
I may sound unkind because I’m doing my best to point something out
to the two of you. I want to expand your point of view so you can see
something most people never have the benefit of seeing because their
vision is too narrow. Most people never see the trap they are in.”
Mike and I sat there, uncertain of his message. He sounded cruel,
yet we could sense he was trying to drive home a point.
With a smile, rich dad said, “Doesn’t that 25 cents an hour sound
good? Doesn’t it make your heart beat a little faster?”
I shook my head no, but it really did. Twenty-five cents an hour
would be big bucks to me.
“Okay, I’ll pay you a dollar an hour,” rich dad said, with a sly grin.
Now my heart started to race. My brain was screaming, “Take it.
Take it.” I could not believe what I was hearing. Still, I said nothing.
“Okay, two dollars an hour.”
My little brain and heart nearly exploded. After all, it was 1956
and being paid $2 an hour would have made me the richest kid in
the world. I couldn’t imagine earning that kind of money. I wanted to
say yes. I wanted the deal. I could picture a new bicycle, new baseball
glove, and the adoration of my friends when I flashed some cash.
On top of that, Jimmy and his rich friends could never call me poor
again. But somehow my mouth stayed shut.
The ice cream had melted and was running down my hand. Rich
dad was looking at two boys staring back at him, eyes wide open and
brains empty. He was testing us, and he knew there was a part of
28
Rich Dad Poor Dad
our emotions that wanted to take the deal. He understood that every
person has a weak and needy part of their soul that can be bought,
and he knew that every individual also had a part of their soul that was
resilient and could never be bought. It was only a question of which
one was stronger.
“Okay, five dollars an hour.”
Suddenly I was silent. Something had changed. The offer was too
big and ridiculous. Not many grown-ups in 1956 made more than
that, but quickly my temptation disappeared, and calm set in. Slowly,
I turned to my left to look at Mike. He looked back at me. The part
of my soul that was weak and needy was silenced. The part of me that
had no price took over. I knew Mike
People’s lives are had gotten to that point too.
forever controlled “Good,” rich dad said softly. “Most
by two emotions: people have a price. And they have a
fear and greed. price because of human emotions named
fear and greed. First, the fear of being
without money motivates us to work hard, and then once we get that
paycheck, greed or desire starts us thinking about all the wonderful
things money can buy. The pattern is then set.”
“What pattern?” I asked.
“The pattern of get up, go to work, pay bills; get up, go to work,
pay bills. People’s lives are forever controlled by two emotions: fear
and greed. Offer them more money and they continue the cycle by
increasing their spending. This is what I call the Rat Race.”
“There is another way?” Mike asked.
“Yes,” said rich dad slowly. “But only a few people find it.”
“And what is that way?” Mike asked.
“That’s what I hope you boys will learn as you work and study
with me. That is why I took away all forms of pay.”
“Any hints?” Mike asked. “We’re kind of tired of working hard,
especially for nothing.”
“Well, the first step is telling the truth,” said rich dad.
“We haven’t been lying,” I said.
29
Chapter One: Lesson 1
“I did not say you were lying. I said to tell the truth,” rich
dad retorted.
“The truth about what?” I asked.
“How you’re feeling,” rich dad said. “You don’t have to say it
to anyone else. Just admit it to yourself.”
“You mean the people in this park, the people who work for you,
Mrs. Martin, they don’t do that?” I asked.
“I doubt it,” said rich dad. “Instead, they feel the fear of not
having money. They don’t confront it logically. They react emotionally
instead of using their heads,” rich dad said. “Then, they get a few
bucks in their hands and again, the emotions of joy, desire, and greed
take over. And again they react, instead of think.”
“So their emotions control their brain,” Mike said.
“That’s correct,” said rich dad. “Instead of admitting the truth
about how they feel, they react to their feelings and fail to think.
They feel the fear so they go to work, hoping that money will soothe
the fear, but it doesn’t. It continues to haunt them and they return
to work, hoping again that money will calm their fears, and again it
doesn’t. Fear keeps them in this trap of working, earning money,
working, earning money, hoping the fear will go away. But every day
they get up, and that old fear wakes up with them. For millions of
people that old fear keeps them awake all night, causing a night of
turmoil and worry. So they get up and go to work, hoping that a
paycheck will kill that fear gnawing at their soul. Money is running
their lives, and they refuse to tell the truth about that. Money is in
control of their emotions and their souls.”
Rich dad sat quietly, letting his words sink in. Mike and I heard
what he said but didn’t understand fully what he was talking about.
I just knew that I often wondered why grown-ups hurried off to
work. It did not seem like much fun, and they never looked that
happy, but something kept them going.
Realizing we had absorbed as much as possible of what he was
talking about, rich dad said, “I want you boys to avoid that trap.
That is really what I want to teach you. Not just to be rich, because
being rich does not solve the problem.”
30
Rich Dad Poor Dad
money.’ Yet they’ll work at a job for eight hours a day. That’s a denial of
truth. If they weren’t interested in money, then why are they working?
That kind of thinking is probably more psychotic than a person who
hoards money.”
As I sat there listening to my rich dad, my mind flashed back to
the countless times my own dad said, “I’m not interested in money.”
He said those words often. He also
So many people say, covered himself by always saying,
“Oh, I’m not “I work because I love my job.”
interested in money.” “So what do we do?” I asked. “Not
Yet they’ll work work for money until all traces of fear
at a job for and greed are gone?”
eight hours a day. “No, that would be a waste of time,”
said rich dad. “Emotions are what make
us human. The word ‘emotion’ stands for ‘energy in motion.’ Be
truthful about your emotions and use your mind and emotions in
your favor, not against yourself.”
“Whoa!” said Mike.
“Don’t worry about what I just said. It will make more sense in
years to come. Just be an observer, not a reactor, to your emotions.
Most people do not know that it’s their emotions that are doing the
thinking. Your emotions are your emotions, but you have got to learn
to do your own thinking.”
“Can you give me an example?” I asked.
“Sure,” replied rich dad. “When a person says, ‘I need to find
a job,’ it’s most likely an emotion doing the thinking. Fear of not
having money generates that thought.”
“But people do need money if they have bills to pay,” I said.
“Sure they do,” smiled rich dad. “All I’m saying is that it’s fear that
is all too often doing the thinking.”
“I don’t understand,” said Mike.
“For example,” said rich dad. “If the fear of not having enough
money arises, instead of immediately running out to get a job, they
instead might ask themselves this question: ‘Will a job be the best
32
Rich Dad Poor Dad
solution to this fear over the long run?’ In my opinion, the answer is
no. A job is really a short-term solution to a long-term problem.”
“But my dad is always saying, ‘Stay in school and get good grades,
so you can find a safe, secure job,’” I interjected, somewhat confused.
“Yes, I understand he says that,” said rich dad, smiling. “Most people
recommend that, and it’s a good path for most people. But people make
that recommendation primarily out of fear.”
“You mean my dad says that because he’s afraid?”
“Yes,” said rich dad. “He’s terrified that you won’t earn enough
money and won’t fit into society. Don’t get me wrong. He loves you
and wants the best for you. I too believe an education and a job are
important, but it won’t handle the fear. You see, that same fear that
makes him get up in the morning to earn a few bucks is the fear that
is causing him to be so fanatical about your going to school.”
“So what do you recommend?” I asked.
“I want to teach you to master the power of money, instead of
being afraid of it. They don’t teach that in school and, if you don’t
learn it, you become a slave to money.”
It was finally making sense. He wanted us to widen our views
and to see what the Mrs. Martins of this world couldn’t see. He used
examples that sounded cruel at the time, but I’ve never forgotten
them. My vision widened that day, and I began to see the trap that
lay ahead for most people.
“You see, we’re all employees ultimately. We just work at different
levels,” said rich dad. “I just want you boys to have a chance to avoid
the trap caused by those two emotions, fear and desire. Use them in
your favor, not against you. That’s what I want to teach you. I’m not
interested in just teaching you to make a pile of money. That won’t
handle the fear or desire. If you don’t first handle fear and desire, and
you get rich, you’ll only be a highly paid slave.”
“So how do we avoid the trap?” I asked.
“The main cause of poverty or financial struggle is fear and
ignorance, not the economy or the government or the rich. It’s
self-inflicted fear and ignorance that keep people trapped. So you
33
Chapter One: Lesson 1
boys go to school and get your college degrees, and I’ll teach you
how to stay out of the trap.”
The pieces of the puzzle were appearing. My highly educated dad
had a great education and a great career, but school never told him
how to handle money or his fear of it. It became clear that I could
learn different and important things from two fathers.
“So you’ve been talking about the fear of not having money. How
does the desire for money affect our thinking?” Mike asked.
“How did you feel when I tempted you with a pay raise? Did you
notice your desires rising?”
We nodded our heads.
“By not giving in to your emotions, you were able to delay
your reactions and think. That is important. We will always have
emotions of fear and greed. From here on in, it’s imperative for you
to use those emotions to your advantage, and for the long term to not
let your emotions control your thinking. Most people use fear and
greed against themselves. That’s the start of ignorance. Most people
live their lives chasing paychecks, pay raises and job security because
of the emotions of desire and fear, not really questioning where those
emotion-driven thoughts are leading them. It’s just like the picture of
a donkey dragging a cart with its owner dangling a carrot just in front
of its nose. The donkey’s owner may be going where he wants to, but
the donkey is chasing an illusion. Tomorrow there will only be another
carrot for the donkey.”
“You mean the moment I picture a new baseball glove, candy and
toys, that’s like a carrot to a donkey?” Mike asked.
“Yes, and as you get older, your toys get more expensive—a new
car, a boat, and a big house to impress your friends,” said rich dad
with a smile. “Fear pushes you out the door, and desire calls to you.
That’s the trap.”
“So what’s the answer,” Mike asked.
“What intensifies fear and desire is ignorance. That is why rich
people with lots of money often have more fear the richer they get.
Money is the carrot, the illusion. If the donkey could see the whole
picture, it might rethink its choice to chase the carrot.”
34
Rich Dad Poor Dad
35
Chapter One: Lesson 1
It hurts the poor people the most, so they have worse health than
those with money. Because the doctors raise their fees, the attorneys
raise their fees. Because the attorneys’ fees have gone up, schoolteachers
want a raise, which raises our taxes, and on and on and on. Soon there
will be such a horrifying gap between the rich and the poor that chaos
will break out and another great civilization will collapse. History
proves that great civilizations collapse when the gap between the haves
and have-nots is too great. Sadly, America is on that same course
because we haven’t learned from history. We only memorize historical
dates and names, not the lesson.”
“Aren’t prices supposed to go up?” I asked.
“In an educated society with a well-run government, prices should
actually come down. Of course, that is often only true in theory.
Prices go up because of greed and fear caused by ignorance. If schools
taught people about money, there would be more money and lower
prices. But schools focus only on teaching people to work for money,
not how to harness money’s power.”
“But don’t we have business schools?” Mike asked. “And haven’t
you encouraged me to go for my MBA?”
“Yes,” said rich dad. “But all too often business schools train
employees to become sophisticated bean-counters. Heaven forbid a bean-
counter takes over a business. All they do is look at the numbers, fire
people, and kill the business. I know this because I hire bean-counters.
All they think about is cutting costs and raising prices, which cause more
problems. Bean-counting is important. I wish more people knew it, but
it, too, is not the whole picture,” added rich dad angrily.
“So is there an answer?” asked Mike.
“Yes,” said rich dad. “Learn to use your emotions to think, not
think with your emotions. When you boys mastered your emotions
by agreeing to work for free, I knew there was hope. When you again
resisted your emotions when I tempted you with more money, you
were again learning to think in spite of being emotionally charged.
That’s the first step.”
“Why is that step so important?” I asked.
36
Rich Dad Poor Dad
“Well, that’s up to you to find out. If you want to learn, I’ll take
you boys into the briar patch, a place almost everyone else avoids. If
you go with me, you’ll let go of the idea of working for money and
instead learn to have money work for you.”
“And what will we get if we go with you. What if we agree to
learn from you? What will we get?” I asked.
“The same thing Brer Rabbit got,” said rich dad, referring to the
classic children’s story.
“Is there a briar patch?” I asked.
“Yes,” said rich dad. “The briar patch is our fear and greed.
Confronting fear, weaknesses, and neediness by choosing our own
thoughts is the way out.”
“Choosing our thoughts?” Mike asked, puzzled.
“Yes. Choosing what we think rather than reacting to our emotions.
Instead of just getting up and going to work because not having the
money to pay your bills is scaring you, ask yourself, ‘Is working harder
at this the best solution to this problem?’ Most people are too afraid to
rationally think things through and instead run out the door to a job
they hate. The Tar Baby is in control. That’s what I mean by choosing
your thoughts.”
“And how do we do that?” Mike asked.
“That’s what I will teach you. I’ll teach you to have a choice of
thoughts rather than a knee-jerk reaction, like gulping down your
morning coffee and running out the door.
“Remember what I said before: A job is only a short-term
solution to a long-term problem. Most people have only one problem
in mind, and it’s short-term. It’s the bills at the end of the month,
the Tar Baby. Money controls their lives, or should I say the fear and
ignorance about money controls it. So they do as their parents did.
They get up every day and go work for money, not taking the time to
ask the question, ‘Is there another way?’ Their emotions now control
their thinking, not their heads.”
“Can you tell the difference between emotions thinking and the
head thinking?” Mike asked.
37
Chapter One: Lesson 1
“Oh, yes. I hear it all the time,” said rich dad. “I hear things like,
‘Well, everyone has to work.’ Or ‘The rich are crooks.’ Or ‘I’ll get
another job. I deserve this raise. You can’t push me around.’ Or ‘I like
this job because it’s secure.’ No one asks, ‘Is there something I’m
missing here?’ which would break through the emotional thought
and give you time to think clearly.”
As we headed back to the store, rich dad explained that the rich
really did “make money.” They did not work for it. He went on to
explain that when Mike and I were casting five-cent pieces out of
lead, thinking we were making money, we were very close to thinking
the way the rich think. The problem was that creating money is legal
for the government and banks to do, but illegal for us to do. There are
legal ways to create money from nothing, he told us.
Rich dad went on to explain that the rich know that money is an
illusion, truly like the carrot for the donkey. It’s only out of fear and
greed that the illusion of money is held together by billions of people
who believe that money is real. It’s not. Money is really made up. It
is only because of the illusion of confidence and the ignorance of the
masses that this house of cards stands.
He talked about the gold standard that America was on, and that
each dollar bill was actually a silver certificate. What concerned him
was the rumor that we would someday go off the gold standard and
our dollars would no longer be backed by something tangible.
“If that happens, boys, all hell will break loose. The poor, the
middle class, and the ignorant will have their lives ruined simply
because they will continue to believe that money is real and that the
company they work for, or the government, will look after them.”
We really did not understand what he was saying that day, but
over the years, it made more and more sense.
38
Rich Dad Poor Dad
brain, work for free, and soon your mind will show you ways of
making money far beyond what I could ever pay you. You will see
things that other people never see. Most people never see these
opportunities because they’re looking for money and security, so that’s
all they get. The moment you see one opportunity, you’ll see them
for the rest of your life. The moment you do that, I’ll teach you
something else. Learn this, and you’ll avoid one of life’s biggest traps.
Mike and I picked up our things from the store and waved
goodbye to Mrs. Martin. We went back to the park, to the same
picnic bench, and spent several more hours thinking and talking.
We spent the next week at school thinking and talking, too. For
two more weeks, we kept thinking, talking, and working for free.
At the end of the second Saturday, I was again saying goodbye
to Mrs. Martin and looking at the comic-book stand with a longing
gaze. The hard thing about not even getting 30 cents every Saturday
was that I didn’t have any money to buy comic books. Suddenly, as
Mrs. Martin said goodbye to Mike and me, I saw her do something I’d
never seen her do before.
Mrs. Martin was cutting the front page of the comic book in half.
She kept the top half of the comic book cover and threw the rest of the
book into a large cardboard box. When I asked her what she did with
the comic books, she said, “I throw them away. I give the top half of
the cover back to the comic-book distributor for credit when he brings
in the new comics. He’s coming in an hour.”
Mike and I waited for an hour. Soon the distributor arrived, and
I asked him if we could have the comic books. To my delight, he said,
“You can have them if you work for this store and do not resell them.”
Remember our old business partnership? Well, Mike and I revived
it. Using a spare room in Mike’s basement, we began piling hundreds
of comic books in that room. Soon our comic-book library was open
to the public. We hired Mike’s younger sister, who loved to study, to be
head librarian. She charged each child 10 cents admission to the library,
which was open from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. every day after school.
The customers, the children of the neighborhood, could read as many
39
Chapter One: Lesson 1
comics as they wanted in two hours. It was a bargain for them since a
comic cost 10 cents each, and they could read five or six in two hours.
Mike’s sister would check the kids as they left to make sure they
weren’t borrowing any comic books. She also kept the books, logging
in how many kids showed up each day, who they were, and any
comments they might have. Mike and I averaged $9.50 per week
over a three-month period. We paid his sister one dollar a week and
allowed her to read the comics for free, which she rarely did since she
was always studying.
Mike and I kept our agreement by working in the store every
Saturday and collecting all the comic books from the different stores.
We kept our agreement to the distributor by not selling any comic
books. We burned them once they got too tattered. We tried opening
a branch office, but we could never quite find someone as trustworthy
and dedicated as Mike’s sister. At an early age, we found out how hard
it was to find good staff.
Three months after the library first opened, a fight broke out in
the room. Some bullies from another neighborhood pushed their
way in, and Mike’s dad suggested we shut down the business. So
our comic-book business shut down, and we stopped working on
Saturdays at the convenience store. But rich dad was excited because
he had new things he wanted to teach us. He was happy because we
had learned our first lesson so well: We learned to make money work
for us. By not getting paid for our work at the store, we were forced
to use our imaginations to identify an opportunity to make money.
By starting our own business, the comic-book library, we were in
control of our own finances, not dependent on an employer. The best
part was that our business generated money for us, even when we
weren’t physically there. Our money worked for us.
Instead of paying us money, rich dad had given us so much more.
40
Chapter Two
In 1990, Mike took over his father’s empire and is, in fact,
doing a better job than his dad did. We see each other once or twice
a year on the golf course. He and his wife are wealthier than you
could imagine. Rich dad’s empire is in great hands, and Mike is now
grooming his son to take his place, as his dad had groomed us.
In 1994, I retired at the age of 47, and my wife Kim was 37.
Retirement does not mean not working. For us, it means that, barring
unforeseen cataclysmic changes, we can work or not work, and our
wealth grows automatically, staying ahead of inflation. Our assets
are large enough to grow by themselves. It’s like planting a tree. You
water it for years, and then one day it doesn’t need you anymore. Its
roots are implanted deep enough. Then the tree provides shade for
your enjoyment.
Mike chose to run the empire, and I chose to retire.
Whenever I speak to groups of people, they often ask what I would
recommend that they do. “How do I get started?” “Is there a book
you would recommend?” “What should I do to prepare my children?”
“What is your secret to success?” “How do I make millions?”
41
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
42
Rich Dad Poor Dad
Most people fail to realize that in life, it’s not how much money
you make. It’s how much money you keep. We’ve all heard stories
of lottery winners who are poor, then suddenly rich, and then poor
again. They win millions, yet are soon back where they started. Or
stories of professional athletes, who at the age of 24 are earning
millions, but are sleeping under a bridge 10 years later.
I remember a story of a young basketball player who a year ago
had millions. Today, at just 29, he claims his friends, attorney, and
accountant took his money, and he was forced to work at a car
wash for minimum wage. He was fired from the car wash because
he refused to take off his championship ring as he was wiping off
the cars. His story made national news and he is appealing his
termination, claiming hardship and discrimination. He claims that
the ring is all he has left and if it was stripped away, he’ll crumble.
I know so many people who became instant millionaires. And
while I am glad some people have become richer and richer, I caution
them that in the long run, it’s not how much money you make. It’s
how much you keep, and how many generations you keep it.
So when people ask, “Where do I get started?” or “Tell me how to
get rich quick,” they often are greatly disappointed with my answer.
I simply say to them what my rich dad said to me when I was a little
kid. “If you want to be rich, you need to be financially literate.”
That idea was drummed into my head every time we were together.
As I said, my educated dad stressed the importance of reading books,
while my rich dad stressed the need to master financial literacy.
If you are going to build the Empire State Building, the first thing
you need to do is dig a deep hole and pour a strong foundation. If
you are going to build a home in the suburbs, all you need to do is
pour a six-inch slab of concrete. Most people, in their drive to get
rich, are trying to build an Empire State Building on a six-inch slab.
Our school system, created in the Agrarian Age, still believes
in homes with no foundation. Dirt floors are still the rage. So kids
graduate from school with virtually no financial foundation. One day,
sleepless and deep in debt in suburbia, living the American Dream,
43
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
44
Rich Dad Poor Dad
45
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
46
Rich Dad Poor Dad
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Expenses
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
47
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Expenses
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
Now that assets and liabilities have been defined through pictures,
it may be easier to understand my definitions in words. An asset is
something that puts money in my pocket. A liability is something
that takes money out of my pocket. This is really all you need to
know. If you want to be rich, simply spend your life buying assets. If
you want to be poor or middle class, spend your life buying liabilities.
Illiteracy, both in words and numbers, is the foundation of
financial struggle. If people are having difficulties financially, there is
something that they don’t understand, either in words or numbers.
The rich are rich because they are more literate in different areas
than people who struggle financially. So if you want to be rich and
maintain your wealth, it’s important to be financially literate, in
words as well as numbers.
48
Rich Dad Poor Dad
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Job
Salary
Expenses
Taxes
Rent
Food
Transportation
Clothes
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
49
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
INCOME STATEMENT
Job Income
Salary
Expenses
Taxes
Mortgage Payment
Car Payment
Credit Card Payment
School Loan Payment
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
Mortgage
Car Loans
Credit Card Debt
School Loans
50
Rich Dad Poor Dad
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Rental Income
Dividend
Interest
Royalties
Expenses
Taxes
Mortgage Payment
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
Real Estate Mortgage
Stocks Consumer Loans
Bonds Credit Cards
Notes
Intellectual
Property
51
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
52
Rich Dad Poor Dad
53
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Expenses
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
54
Rich Dad Poor Dad
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Expenses
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
They’re now trapped in the Rat Race. Pretty soon a baby comes
along and they work harder. The process repeats itself: Higher
incomes cause higher taxes, also called “bracket creep.” A credit
card comes in the mail. They use it and max it out. A loan company
calls and says their greatest “asset,” their home, has appreciated in
value. Because their credit is so good, the company offers a bill-
consolidation loan and tells them the intelligent thing to do is clear
off the high-interest consumer debt by paying off their credit card. And
besides, interest on their home is a tax deduction. They go for it, and
pay off those high-interest credit cards. They breathe a sigh of relief.
Their credit cards are paid off. They’ve now folded their consumer
debt into their home mortgage. Their payments go down because they
extend their debt over 30 years. It is the smart thing to do.
Their neighbor calls to invite them to go shopping. The Memorial
Day sale is on. They promise themselves they’ll just window shop, but
they take a credit card, just in case.
55
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
I run into this young couple all the time. Their names change, but
their financial dilemma is the same. They come to one of my talks to
hear what I have to say. They ask me, “Can you tell us how to make
more money?”
They don’t understand that their trouble is really how they choose
to spend the money they do have. It is caused by financial illiteracy
and not understanding the difference between an asset and a liability.
More money seldom solves someone’s money problems.
Intelligence solves problems. There is a saying a friend of mine says
over and over to people in debt: “If you find you have dug yourself
into a hole… stop digging.”
As a child, my dad often told us that the Japanese were aware
of three powers: the power of the sword, the jewel, and the mirror.
The sword symbolizes the power of weapons. America has spent
trillions of dollars on weapons and, because of this, is a powerful
military presence in the world.
The jewel symbolizes the power of money. There is some degree
of truth to the saying, “Remember the golden rule. He who has the
gold makes the rules.”
The mirror symbolizes the power of self-knowledge. This self-
knowledge, according to Japanese legend, was the most treasured
of the three.
All too often, the poor and middle class allow the power of
money to control them. By simply getting up and working harder,
failing to ask themselves if what they do makes sense, they shoot
themselves in the foot as they leave for work every morning. By not
fully understanding money, the vast majority of people allow its
awesome power to control them.
If they used the power of the mirror, they would have asked
themselves, “Does this make sense?” All too often, instead of trusting
their inner wisdom, that genius inside, most people follow the crowd.
They do things because everybody else does them. They conform,
rather than question. Often, they mindlessly repeat what they have
been told: “Diversify.” “Your home is an asset.” “Your home is your
56
Rich Dad Poor Dad
biggest investment.” “You get a tax break for going into greater debt.”
“Get a safe job.” “Don’t make mistakes.” “Don’t take risks.”
It is said that the fear of public speaking is a fear greater than
death for most people. According to psychiatrists, the fear of public
speaking is caused by the fear of ostracism, the fear of standing out,
the fear of criticism, the fear of ridicule, and the fear of being an
outcast. The fear of being different prevents most people from seeking
new ways to solve their problems.
That is why my educated dad said the Japanese valued the power of
the mirror the most, for it is only when we look into it that we find
truth. Fear is the main reason that people say, “Play it safe.” That goes
for anything, be it sports, relationships,
A person can be highly careers, or money.
educated, professionally It is that same fear, the fear
successful, and of ostracism, that causes people
financially illiterate. to conform to, and not question,
commonly accepted opinions or
popular trends: “Your home is an asset.” “Get a bill-consolidation
loan, and get out of debt.” “Work harder.” “It’s a promotion.”
“Someday I’ll be a vice president.” “Save money.” “When I get a raise,
I’ll buy us a bigger house.” “Mutual funds are safe.”
Many financial problems are caused by trying to keep up with the
Joneses. Occasionally, we all need to look in the mirror and be true to
our inner wisdom rather than our fears.
By the time Mike and I were 16 years old, we began to have
problems in school. We were not bad kids. We just began to separate
from the crowd. We worked for Mike’s dad after school and on
weekends. Mike and I often spent hours after work just sitting at a
table with his dad while he held meetings with his bankers, attorneys,
accountants, brokers, investors, managers, and employees. Here was
a man who had left school at 13 who was now directing, instructing,
ordering, and asking questions of educated people. They came at his
beck and call, and cringed when he didn’t approve of them.
57
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
Here was a man who had not gone along with the crowd. He was
a man who did his own thinking and detested the words, “We have
to do it this way because that’s the way everyone else does it.” He also
hated the word “can’t.” If you wanted him to do something, just say,
“I don’t think you can do it.”
Mike and I learned more sitting in on his meetings than we did
in all our years of school, college included. Mike’s dad was not book-
smart, but he was financially educated and successful as a result. He
told us over and over again, “An intelligent person hires people who
are more intelligent than he is.” So Mike and I had the benefit of
spending hours listening to and learning from intelligent people.
But because of this, Mike and I couldn’t go along with the
standard dogma our teachers preached, and that caused problems.
Whenever the teacher said, “If you don’t get good grades, you won’t
do well in the real world,” Mike and I just raised our eyebrows.
When we were told to follow set procedures and not deviate from the
rules, we could see how school discouraged creativity. We started to
understand why our rich dad told us that schools were designed to
produce good employees, instead of employers. Occasionally, Mike
or I would ask our teachers how what we studied was applicable in
the real world, or why we never studied money and how it worked.
To the latter question, we often got the answer that money was not
important, that if we excelled in our education, the money would
follow. The more we knew about the power of money, the more
distant we grew from the teachers and our classmates.
My highly educated dad never pressured me about my grades, but
we did begin to argue about money. By the time I was 16, I probably
had a far better foundation with money than both my parents. I could
keep books, I listened to tax accountants, corporate attorneys, bankers,
real estate brokers, investors, and so forth. By contrast, my dad talked
to other teachers.
One day my dad told me that our home was his greatest investment.
A not-too-pleasant argument took place when I showed him why I
thought a house was not a good investment.
58
Rich Dad Poor Dad
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
RICH DAD
Home
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
POOR DAD
Home
59
Chapter Two: Lesson 2
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Expenses
Mortgage Payment
Property Tax
Insurance
Maintenance
Utilities
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
Mortgage
60
Rich Dad Poor Dad
• When it comes to houses, most people work all their
lives paying for a home they never own. In other words,
most people buy a new house every few years, each time
incurring a new 30-year loan to pay off the previous one.
• Even though people receive a tax deduction for interest
on mortgage payments, they pay for all their other
expenses with after-tax dollars, even after they pay off
their mortgage.
• My wife’s parents were shocked when the property taxes
on their home increased to $1,000 a month. This was
after they had retired, so the increase put a strain on their
retirement budget, and they felt forced to move.
• Houses do not always go up in value. I have friends who
owe a million dollars for a home that today would sell
for far less.
• The greatest losses of all are those from missed opportunities.
If all your money is tied up in your house, you may be forced
to work harder because your money continues blowing
out of the expense column, instead of adding to the asset
column—the classic middle-class cash-flow pattern. If a
young couple would put more money into their asset column
early on, their later years would be easier. Their assets would
have grown and would be available to help cover expenses.
All too often, a house only serves as a vehicle for incurring a
home-equity loan to pay for mounting expenses.
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Income
Income Income
Income
Expenses
Expenses
Expenses
Expenses
Assets
Assets Liabilities
Liabilities Assets
Assets Liabilities
Liabilities
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Chapter Two: Lesson 2
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Expenses
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
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INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Expenses
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
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to becoming rich. Keep doing that, and your asset column will grow.
Keep liabilities and expenses down so more money is available to
continue pouring into the asset column. Soon the asset base will be
so deep that you can afford to look at more speculative investments:
investments that may have returns of 100 percent to infinity;
$5,000 investments that are soon turned into $1 million or more;
investments that the middle class calls “too risky.” The investment is
not risky for the financially literate.
If you do what the masses do, you get the following picture:
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Work for the Company
(Salary)
Expenses
Work for the Government
(Taxes)
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
Work for the Bank
(Mortgage)
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It was pretty confusing at first, but after reading it, it began to make
some sense:
Wealth is a person’s ability to survive so many number of days
forward—or, if I stopped working today, how long could I survive?
Unlike net worth—the difference between your assets and liabilities,
which is often filled with a person’s expensive junk and opinions of what
things are worth—this definition creates the possibility for developing
a truly accurate measurement. I could now measure and know where
I was in terms of my goal to become financially independent.
Although net worth often includes non-cash-producing assets,
like stuff you bought that now sits in your garage, wealth measures
how much money your money is making and, therefore, your
financial survivability.
Wealth is the measure of the cash flow from the asset column
compared with the expense column.
Let’s use an example. Let’s say I have cash flow from my asset
column of $1,000 a month. And I have monthly expenses of $2,000.
What is my wealth?
Let’s go back to Buckminster Fuller’s definition. Using his
definition, how many days forward can I survive? Assuming a 30-day
month, I have enough cash flow for half a month.
When I achieve $2,000 a month cash flow from my assets, then
I will be wealthy.
So while I’m not yet rich, I am wealthy. I now have income
generated from assets each month that fully cover my monthly
expenses. If I want to increase my expenses, I first must increase my
cash flow to maintain this level of wealth. Also note that it is at this
point that I’m no longer dependent on my wages. I have focused on,
and been successful in, building an asset column that has made me
financially independent. If I quit my job today, I would be able to
cover my monthly expenses with the cash flow from my assets.
My next goal would be to have the excess cash flow from my
assets reinvested into the asset column. The more money that goes
into my asset column, the more my asset column grows. The more
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my assets grow, the more my cash flow grows. And as long as I keep my
expenses less than the cash flow from these assets, I grow richer with
more and more income from sources other than my physical labor.
As this reinvestment process continues, I am well on my way to
becoming rich. Just remember this simple observation:
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Chapter Three: Lesson 3
security, they had nothing to fall back on. What they thought were
assets could not help them survive in a time of financial crisis.
I assume most of us have filled out a credit application to buy
a house or a car. It’s always interesting to look at the “net-worth”
section because of what accepted banking and accounting practices
allow a person to count as assets.
One day when I wanted a loan, my financial position did not
look too good. So I added my new golf clubs, my art collection,
books, electronics, Armani suits, wristwatches, shoes, and other
personal effects to boost the number in the asset column.
But I was turned down because I had too much investment real
estate. The loan committee didn’t like that I made so much money
from rent. They wanted to know why I did not have a normal job
with a salary. They did not question the Armani suits, golf clubs,
or art collection. Life is sometimes tough when you do not fit the
standard profile.
I cringe every time I hear someone say to me that their net worth
is a million dollars or $100,000 dollars or whatever. One of the main
reasons net worth is not accurate is simply because, the moment you
begin selling your assets, you are taxed for any gains.
So many people have put themselves in deep financial trouble
when they run short of income. To raise cash, they sell their assets.
But their personal assets can generally be sold for only a fraction of
the value that is listed on their personal balance sheet. Or if there is
a gain on the sale of the assets, they are taxed on the gain. So again,
the government takes its share, thus reducing the amount available to
help them out of debt. That is why I say someone’s net worth is often
“worth less” than they think.
Start minding your own business. Keep your daytime job, but
start buying real assets, not liabilities or personal effects that have no
real value once you get them home. A new car loses nearly 25 percent
of the price you pay for it the moment you drive it off the lot. It is
not a true asset even if your banker lets you list it as one. My $400
new titanium driver was worth $150 the moment I teed off.
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Chapter Three: Lesson 3
simply another pretty car. It means she used her financial intelligence
to afford it.
Instead, most people impulsively go out and buy a new car, or
some other luxury, on credit. They may feel bored and just want a
new toy. Buying a luxury on credit often causes a person to eventually
resent that luxury because the debt becomes a financial burden.
After you’ve taken the time and invested in and built your own
business, you are now ready to learn the biggest secret of the rich—
the secret that puts the rich way ahead of the pack.
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Chapter Four: Lesson 4
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Corps. He loved the idea so much that both he and my mom worked
for the Peace Corps, training volunteers to go to Malaysia, Thailand,
and the Philippines. He always strived for additional grants and budget
increases so he could hire more people, both in his job with the
Education Department and in the Peace Corps.
From the time I was about 10 years old, I would hear from my rich
dad that government workers were a pack of lazy thieves, and from my
poor dad I would hear how the rich were greedy crooks who should be
made to pay more taxes. Both sides had valid points. It was difficult to
go to work for one of the biggest capitalists in town and come home to
a father who was a prominent
My rich dad did not see government leader. It was not easy to
Robin Hood as a hero. know which dad to believe.
He called Robin Hood Yet when you study the history
a crook. of taxes, an interesting perspective
emerges. As I said, the passage of taxes
was only possible because the masses believed in the Robin Hood
theory of economics: Take from the rich, and give to everyone else.
The problem was that the government’s appetite for money was so
great that taxes soon needed to be levied on the middle class, and
from there it kept trickling down.
However, the rich saw an opportunity because they don’t play
by the same set of rules. The rich knew about corporations, which
became popular in the days of sailing ships. The rich created the
corporation as a vehicle to limit their risk to the assets of each voyage.
The rich put their money into a corporation to finance the voyage.
The corporation would then hire a crew to sail to the New World to
look for treasure. If the ship was lost, the crew lost their lives, but the
loss to the rich would be limited only to the money they invested for
that particular voyage.
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Chapter Four: Lesson 4
The diagram that follows shows how the corporate structure sits
outside your personal income statement and balance sheet.
CORPORATION
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
PERSONAL
INCOME STATEMENT
Expenses Income
Expenses
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Rich Dad Poor Dad
The poor and middle class don’t have the same resources. They sit
there and let the government’s needles enter their arm and allow the
blood donation to begin. Today, I am constantly shocked at the number
of people who pay more taxes, or take fewer deductions, simply because
they are afraid of the government. I have friends who have had their
businesses shut down and destroyed, only to find out it was a mistake
on the part of the government. I realize all that. But the price of working
from January to May is a high price to pay for that intimidation. My
poor dad never fought back. My rich dad didn’t either. He just played the
game smarter, and he did it through corporations—the biggest secret of
the rich.
You may remember the first lesson I learned from my rich dad.
I was a little boy of 9 who had to sit and wait for him to choose to talk
to me. I sat in his office waiting for him to get to me. He was ignoring
me on purpose. He wanted me to recognize his power and to desire to
have that power for myself one day. During all the years I studied and
learned from him, he always reminded me that knowledge is power.
And with money comes great power that requires the right knowledge
to keep it and make it multiply. Without
If you work for money, that knowledge, the world pushes you
you give the power to around. Rich dad constantly reminded
you employer. Mike and me that the biggest bully was
If money works for you, not the boss or the supervisor, but the tax
you keep the power and man. The tax man will always take more
control it. if you let him. The first lesson of having
money work for you, as opposed to you
working for money, is all about power. If you work for money, you give
the power to your employer. If money works for you, you keep the
power and control it.
Once we had this knowledge of the power of money working
for us, he wanted us to be financially smart and not let anyone or
anything push us around. If you’re ignorant, it’s easy to be bullied.
If you know what you’re talking about, you have a fighting chance.
That is why he paid so much for smart tax accountants and attorneys.
It was less expensive to pay them than to pay the government. His
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Chapter Four: Lesson 4
best lesson to me was: “Be smart and you won’t be pushed around as
much.” He knew the law because he was a law-abiding citizen and
because it was expensive to not know the law. “If you know you’re
right, you’re not afraid of fighting back.” Even if you are taking on
Robin Hood and his band of Merry Men.
My highly educated dad always encouraged me to land a good job
with a strong corporation. He spoke of the virtues of “working your
way up the corporate ladder.” He didn’t understand that, by relying
solely on a paycheck from a corporate employer, I would be a docile
cow ready for milking.
When I told my rich dad of my father’s advice, he only chuckled.
“Why not own the ladder?” was all he said.
As a young boy, I did not understand what rich dad meant by
owning my own corporation. It was an idea that seemed impossible
and intimidating. Although I was excited by the idea, my inexperience
wouldn’t let me envision the possibility that grown-ups would someday
work for a company I would own.
The point is that, if not for my rich dad, I would have probably
followed my educated dad’s advice. It
Each dollar was merely the occasional reminder of
in my asset column my rich dad that kept the idea of
was a great employee, owning my own corporation alive and
working hard to make kept me on a different path. By the time
more employees I was 15 or 16, I knew I wasn’t going to
and buy the boss continue down the path my educated
a new Porsche. dad recommended. I didn’t know how I
was going to do it, but I was determined
not to head in the direction most of my classmates were heading.
That decision changed my life.
It was not until my mid-twenties that my rich dad’s advice began
to make more sense to me. I was just out of the Marine Corps and
working for Xerox. I was making a lot of money, but every time I
looked at my paycheck, I was disappointed. The deductions were so
large and, the more I worked, the greater they became. As I became
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Chapter Four: Lesson 4
and my Porsche was the proof. By using the lessons I learned from my
rich dad, I was able to get out of the proverbial Rat Race at an early
age. It was made possible because of the strong financial knowledge I
had acquired through rich dad’s lessons.
Without this financial knowledge, which I call financial intelligence
or financial IQ, my road to financial independence would have been
much more difficult. I now teach others in the hope that I may share
my knowledge with them.
I remind people that financial IQ is made up of knowledge from
four broad areas of expertise:
1. Accounting
Accounting is financial literacy or the ability to read numbers.
This is a vital skill if you want to build an empire. The more
money you are responsible for, the more accuracy is required,
or the house comes tumbling down. This is the left-brain
side, or the details. Financial literacy is the ability to read and
understand financial statements which allows you to identify
the strengths and weaknesses of any business.
2. Investing
Investing is the science of “money making money.” This
involves strategies and formulas which use the creative
right-brain side.
3. Understanding markets
Understanding markets is the science of supply and demand.
You need to know the technical aspects of the market, which are
emotion-driven, in addition to the fundamental or economic
aspects of an investment. Does an investment make sense or does
it not make sense based on current market conditions?
4. The law
A corporation wrapped around the technical skills of
accounting, investing, and markets can contribute to explosive
growth. A person who understands the tax advantages and
protections provided by a corporation can get rich so much
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• Tax advantages
A corporation can do many things that an employee cannot,
like pay expenses before paying taxes. That is a whole area of
expertise that is very exciting. Employees earn and get taxed,
and they try to live on what is left. A corporation earns,
spends everything it can, and is taxed on anything that is
left. It’s one of the biggest legal tax loopholes that the rich
use. They’re easy to set up and are not expensive if you own
investments that are producing good cashflow. For example,
by owning your own corporation, your vacations can be
board meetings in Hawaii. Car payments, insurance, repairs,
and health-club memberships are company expenses. Most
restaurant meals are partial expenses, and on and on. But it’s
done legally with pre-tax dollars.
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Chapter Five: Lesson 5
There are huge changes up ahead. In the coming years, there will
be more people just like the young inventor Alexander Graham Bell.
There will be a hundred people like Bill Gates and hugely successful
companies like Microsoft created every year, all over the world. And
there also will be many more bankruptcies, layoffs, and downsizings.
So why bother developing your financial IQ? No one can answer
that but you. Yet I can tell you why I myself do it. I do it because it
is the most exciting time to be alive. I’d rather be welcoming change
than dreading change. I’d rather be excited about making millions than
worrying about not getting a raise. This period we are in now is a most
exciting time, unprecedented in our world’s history. Generations from
now, people will look back at this period of time and remark at what an
exciting era it must have been. It was the death of the old and birth of
the new. It was full of turmoil, and it was exciting.
So why bother developing your financial IQ? Because if you do,
you will prosper greatly. And if you don’t, this period of time will be
a frightening one. It will be a time of watching some people move
boldly forward while others cling to worn-out life preservers.
Land was wealth 300 years ago. So the person who owned the
land owned the wealth. Later, wealth was in factories and production,
and America rose to dominance. The industrialist owned the wealth.
Today, wealth is in information. And the person who has the most
timely information owns the wealth. The problem is that information
flies around the world at the speed of light. The new wealth cannot be
contained by boundaries and borders as land and factories were. The
changes will be faster and more dramatic. There will be a dramatic
increase in the number of new multimillionaires. There also will be
those who are left behind.
I find so many people struggling today, often working harder,
simply because they cling to old ideas. They want things to be the way
they were, and they resist change. I know people who are losing their
jobs or their houses, and they blame technology or the economy or
their boss. Sadly, they fail to realize that they might be the problem.
Old ideas are their biggest liability. It is a liability simply because they
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fail to realize that while that idea or way of doing something was an
asset yesterday, yesterday is gone.
One afternoon I was teaching how to invest using a board game
I had invented, CASHFLOW®, as a teaching tool. A friend had brought
someone along to attend the class. This friend of a friend was recently
divorced, had been badly burned in the divorce settlement, and was now
searching for some answers. Her friend thought the class might help.
The game was designed to help people learn how money works.
In playing the game, they learn about the interaction of the income
statement with the balance sheet.
You can play CASHFLOW They learn how cash flows between
Classic on the web at the two and how the road to wealth
www.richdad.com and is through striving to increase your
learn how money works. monthly cash flow from the asset
column to the point that it exceeds
your monthly expenses. Once you accomplish this, you are able to get
out of the Rat Race and out onto the Fast Track.
As I have said, some people hate the game, some love it, and
others miss the point. This woman missed a valuable opportunity to
learn something. In the opening round, she drew a “doodad” card
with the boat on it. At first she was happy. “Oh, I’ve got a boat.”
Then, as her friend tried to explain how the numbers worked on her
income statement and balance sheet, she got frustrated because she
had never liked math. The rest of her table waited while her friend
continued explaining the relationship between the income statement,
balance sheet, and monthly cash flow. Suddenly, when she realized
how the numbers worked, it dawned on her that her boat was eating
her alive. Later on in the game, she was also downsized and had a
child. It was a horrible game for her.
After the class, her friend came by and told me that she was upset.
She had come to the class to learn about investing and did not like
the idea that it took so long to play a silly game.
Her friend attempted to tell her to look within herself to see if
the game reflected her in any way. With that suggestion, the woman
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demanded her money back. She said that the very idea that a game
could be a reflection of her was ridiculous. Her money was promptly
refunded, and she left.
Since 1984, I have made millions simply by doing what the
school system does not do. In school, most teachers lecture. I hated
lectures as a student. I was soon bored, and my mind would drift.
In 1984, I began teaching via games and simulations, and I still rely
on these tools today. I always encourage adult students to look at games
as reflecting back to them what they know and what they need to learn.
Most importantly, games reflect behavior. They are instant feedback
systems. Instead of the teacher lecturing you, the game is giving you a
personalized lecture, one that is custom-made just for you.
The friend of the woman who left later called to give me an
update. She said her friend was fine and had calmed down. In her
cooling-off period, she could see some slight relationship between the
game and her life. Although she and
Games reflect behavior. her husband did not own a boat, they
They are instant did own everything else imaginable.
feedback systems. She was angry after their divorce,
both because he had run off with a
younger woman and because, after
twenty years of marriage, they had accumulated little in the way of
assets. There was virtually nothing for them to split. Their twenty
years of married life had been incredible fun, but all they had
accumulated was a ton of doodads.
She realized that her anger at doing the numbers—the income
statement and balance sheet—came from her embarrassment about
not understanding them. She had believed that finances were the
man’s job. She maintained the house and did the entertaining, and he
handled the finances. She was now quite certain, that in the last five
years of their marriage, he had hidden money from her. She was angry
at herself for not being more aware of where the money was going, as
well as for not knowing about the other woman.
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thing to happen, you might wait for a long time. It’s like waiting for all
the traffic lights to be green for five miles before you’ll start your trip.
As young boys, Mike and I were constantly told by my rich dad that
“money is not real.” Rich dad occasionally reminded us of how close we
came to the secret of money on that first day we got together and began
“making money” out of plaster of paris. “The poor and middle class work
for money,” he would say. “The rich make money. The more real you
think money is, the harder you will work for it. If you can grasp the idea
that money is not real, you will grow richer faster.”
“What is it?” was a question Mike and I often came back with.
“What is money if it is not real?”
“What we agree it is,” was all rich dad would say.
The single most powerful asset we all have is our mind. If it is
trained well, it can create enormous wealth seemingly instantaneously.
An untrained mind can also create extreme poverty that can crush a
family for generations.
In the Information Age, money is increasing exponentially. A few
individuals are getting ridiculously rich from nothing, just ideas and
agreements. If you ask many people
The single most who trade stocks or other investments
powerful asset we all for a living, they see it done all the
have is our mind. time. Often, millions can be made
If it is trained well, instantaneously from nothing. And
it can create by nothing, I mean no money was
enormous wealth. exchanged. It is done via agreement: a
hand signal in a trading pit, a blip on
a trader’s screen in Lisbon from a trader’s screen in Toronto and back
to Lisbon, a call to my broker to buy and a moment later to sell.
Money did not change hands. Agreements did.
So why develop your financial genius? Only you can answer that.
I can tell you why I have been developing this area of my intelligence.
I do it because I want to make money fast. Not because I need to, but
because I want to. It is a fascinating learning process. I develop my
financial IQ because I want to participate in the fastest game and
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biggest game in the world. And in my own small way, I would like to
be part of this unprecedented evolution of humanity, the era where
humans work purely with their minds and not with their bodies.
Besides, it is where the action is. It is what is happening. It’s hip.
It’s scary. And it’s fun.
That is why I invest in my financial intelligence, developing the most
powerful asset I have. I want to be with people moving boldly forward.
I do not want to be with those left behind.
I will give you a simple example of creating money. In the early
1990s, the economy of Phoenix, Arizona, was horrible. I was watching a
TV show when a financial planner came on and began forecasting doom
and gloom. His advice was to save money. “Put $100 away every month,”
he said. “In 40 years you will be a multimillionaire.”
Well, putting money away every month is a sound idea. It is one
option—the option most people subscribe to. The problem is this: It
blinds the person to what is really going on. It causes them to miss major
opportunities for much more significant growth of their money. The
world is passing them by.
As I said, the economy was terrible at that time. For investors,
this is the perfect market condition. A chunk of my money was
in the stock market and in apartment houses. I was short of cash.
Because people were giving properties away, I was buying. I was not
saving money. I was investing. Kim and I had more than a million
dollars in cash working in a market that was rising fast. It was the best
opportunity to invest. The economy was terrible. I just could not pass
up these small deals.
Houses that were once $100,000 were now $75,000. But instead
of shopping with local real estate agents, I began shopping at the
bankruptcy attorney’s office, or the courthouse steps. In these
shopping places, a $75,000 house could sometimes be bought for
$20,000 or less. For $2,000, which was loaned to me from a friend
for 90 days for $200, I gave an attorney a cashier’s check as a down
payment. While the acquisition was being processed, I ran an ad
advertising a $75,000 house for only $60,000 and no money down.
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The phone rang hard and heavy. Prospective buyers were screened
and once the property was legally mine, all the prospective buyers
were allowed to look at the house. It was a feeding frenzy. The house
sold in a few minutes. I asked for a $2,500 processing fee, which
they gladly handed over, and the escrow and title company took over
from there. I returned the $2,000 to my friend with an additional
$200. He was happy, the home buyer was happy, the attorney was
happy, and I was happy. I had sold a house for $60,000 that cost me
$20,000. The $40,000 was created from money in my asset column
in the form of a promissory note from the buyer. Total working time:
five hours.
So now that you are on your way to becoming more financially
literate and skilled at reading numbers, I will show you why this is
an example of money being invented.
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
$40,000 $20,000
Note Mortgage
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During this depressed market, Kim and I were able to do six of these
simple transactions in our spare time. While the bulk of our money was
in larger properties and the stock market, we were able to create more
than $190,000 in assets (notes at 10 percent interest) in those six “buy,
create, and sell” transactions. That comes to approximately $19,000
a year income, much of it sheltered through our private corporation.
Much of that $19,000 a year goes to pay for our company cars, gas,
trips, insurance, dinners with clients, and other things. By the time the
government gets a chance to tax that income, it’s been spent on legally
allowed pre-tax expenses.
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
Savings
How long would it take
you to save $40,000?
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And it may not work in your area. The market conditions may be
different. But the example illustrates how a simple financial process can
create hundreds of thousands of dollars, with little money and low risk.
It is an example of money being only an agreement. Anyone with a
high school education can do it.
Yet most people won’t. Most people listen to the standard advice of
“Work hard and save money.”
For about 30 hours of work, approximately $190,000 was created
in the asset column, and no taxes were paid.
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1. Accounting
Accounting is financial literacy, or the ability to read
numbers. This is a vital skill if you want to build
businesses or investments.
2. Investing
Investing is the science of money making money.
3. Understanding markets
Understanding markets is the science of supply and
demand Alexander Graham Bell gave the market what it
wanted. So did Bill Gates. A $75,000 house offered for
$60,000 that cost $20,000 was also the result of seizing
an opportunity created by the market. Somebody was
buying, and someone was selling.
4. The law
The law is the awareness of accounting corporate, state and
federal regulations. I recommend playing by the rules.
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were paid, I put a little less than $40 in my pocket at the end of each
month. Hardly exciting.
A year later, the depressed Oregon real estate market had begun to
pick up. California investors, flush with money from their still booming
real estate market, were moving north and buying up Oregon and
Washington. I sold that little house for $95,000 to a young couple
from California who thought it was a bargain. My capital gains of
approximately $40,000 were placed into a 1031 tax-deferred exchange,
and I went shopping for a place to put my money. In about a month, I
found a 12-unit apartment house right next to the Intel plant in
Beaverton, Oregon. The owners lived in Germany, had no idea what
the place was worth, and again, just
The problem with wanted to get out of it. I offered
“secure” investments $275,000 for a $450,000 building. They
is that they are often agreed to $300,000. I bought it and held
sanitized, that is, it for two years. Utilizing the same
made so safe that the 1031-exchange process, we sold the
gains are less. building for $495,000 and bought a
30-unit apartment building in Phoenix,
Arizona. We had moved to Phoenix by then to get out of the rain, and
needed to sell anyway. Like the former Oregon market, the real estate
market in Phoenix was depressed. The price of the 30-unit apartment
building in Phoenix was $875,000, with $225,000 down. The cash
flow from the 30 units was a little over $5,000 a month.
The Arizona market began moving up and, a few years later, a
Colorado investor offered us $1.2 million for the property.
The point of this example is how a small amount can grow into
a large amount. Again, it is a matter of understanding financial
statements, investment strategies, a sense of the market, and the laws.
If people are not versed in these subjects, then obviously they must
follow standard dogma, which is to play it safe, diversify, and only
invest in secure investments. The problem with “secure” investments is
that they are often sanitized, that is, made so safe that the gains are less.
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not afraid of losing. But losers are. Failure is part of the process of
success. People who avoid failure also avoid success.
I look at money much like my game of tennis. I play hard, make
mistakes, correct, make more mistakes, correct, and get better. If
I lose the game, I reach across the net, shake my opponent’s hand,
smile, and say, “See you next Saturday.”
There are two kinds of investors:
1. The first and most common type is a person who buys a
packaged investment. They call a retail outlet, such as a real
estate company, a stockbroker, or a financial planner, and they
buy something. It could be a mutual fund, a REIT, a stock or
a bond. It is a clean and simple way of investing. An analogy
would be a shopper who goes to a computer store and buys a
computer right off the shelf.
2. The second type is an investor who creates investments.
This investor usually assembles a deal in the same way a
person who buys components builds a computer. I do not
know the first thing about putting components of a computer
together, but I do know how to put pieces of opportunities
together, or know people who know how.
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one reason, and it was not for the benefits. I was a shy person, and the
thought of selling was the most frightening subject in the world. Xerox
has one of the best sales-training programs in America.
Rich dad was proud of me. My educated dad was ashamed. Being
an intellectual, he thought that salespeople were below him. I worked
with Xerox for four years until I overcame my fear of knocking on
doors and being rejected. Once I could consistently be in the top five
in sales, I again resigned and moved on, leaving behind another great
career with an excellent company.
In 1977, I formed my first company. Rich dad had groomed
Mike and me to take over companies. So I now had to learn to form
them and put them together. My first product, the nylon-and-Velcro
wallet, was manufactured in the Far East and shipped to a warehouse
in New York, near where I had gone to
Job is an acronym for school. My formal education was
“Just Over Broke.” complete, and it was time to test my
wings. If I failed, I would go broke.
Rich dad thought it best to go broke before 30. “You still have time
to recover” was his advice. On the eve of my 30th birthday, my first
shipment left Korea for New York.
Today, I still do business internationally. And as my rich dad
encouraged me to do, I keep seeking the emerging nations. Today my
investment company invests in South American countries and Asian
countries, as well as in Norway and Russia.
There is an old cliché that goes: “Job is an acronym for ‘Just Over
Broke.’” Unfortunately, I would say that applies to millions of people.
Because school does not think financial intelligence is an intelligence,
most workers live within their means. They work and they pay the bills.
There is another horrible management theory that goes, “Workers
work hard enough to not be fired, and owners pay just enough so that
workers won’t quit.” And if you look at the pay scales of most companies,
again I would say there is a degree of truth to that statement.
The net result is that most workers never get ahead. They do what
they’ve been taught to do: Get a secure job. Most workers focus on
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working for pay and benefits that reward them in the short term, but
are often disastrous in the long run.
Instead, I recommend to young people to seek work for what they
will learn, more than what they will earn. Look down the road at
what skills they want to acquire before choosing a specific profession
and before getting trapped in the Rat Race.
Once people are trapped in the lifelong process of bill-paying,
they become like those little hamsters running around in those metal
wheels. Their little furry legs are spinning furiously, the wheel is
turning furiously, but come tomorrow morning, they’ll still be in
the same cage. Great job.
In the movie Jerry Maguire starring Tom Cruise, there are many
great one-liners. Probably the most memorable is: “Show me the
money.” But there is one line I thought most truthful. It comes from
the scene where Tom Cruise is leaving the firm. He has just been fired,
and he is asking the entire company, “Who wants to come with me?”
And the whole place is silent and frozen. Only one woman speaks up
and says, “I’d like to, but I’m due for a promotion in three months.”
That statement is probably the most truthful statement in the whole
movie. It is the type of statement that people use to keep themselves busy,
working away to pay bills. I know my educated dad looked forward to his
pay raise every year, and every year he was disappointed. So he would go
back to school to earn more qualifications so he could get another raise.
Then, once again, there would be another disappointment.
The question I often ask people is, “Where is this daily activity
taking you?” Just like the little hamster, I wonder if people look at
where their hard work is taking them. What does the future hold?
In his book The Retirement Myth, Craig S. Karpel writes: “I visited
the headquarters of a major national pension consulting firm and met
with a managing director who specializes in designing lush retirement
plans for top management. When I asked her what people who don’t
have corner offices will be able to expect in the way of pension income,
she said with a confident smile, ‘The Silver Bullet’.
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I say, “I’m not interested in going to the gym, but I go because I want
to feel better and live longer.”
Unfortunately, there is some truth to the old statement, “You can’t
teach an old dog new tricks.” Unless a person is used to changing, it’s
hard to change.
But for those of you who might be on the fence when it comes
to the idea of working to learn something new, I offer this word
of encouragement: Life is much like going to the gym. The most
painful part is deciding to go. Once you get past that, it’s easy. There
have been many days I have dreaded going to the gym, but once I am
there and in motion, it is a pleasure. After the workout is over, I am
always glad I talked myself into going.
If you are unwilling to work to learn something new and instead
insist on becoming highly specialized within your field, make sure the
company you work for is unionized. Labor unions are designed to
protect specialists. My educated dad, after falling from grace with
the governor, became the head of the teachers union in Hawaii. He
told me that it was the hardest job he ever held. My rich dad, on the
other hand, spent his life doing his best to keep his companies from
becoming unionized. He was successful. Although the unions came
close, rich dad was always able to fight them off.
Personally, I take no sides because I can see the need for and
the benefits of both sides. If you do as school recommends, become
highly specialized. Then seek union protection. For example, had I
continued with my flying career, I would have sought a company that
had a strong pilots union. Why? Because my life would be dedicated
to learning a skill that was valuable in only one industry. If I were
pushed out of that industry, my life’s skills would not be as valuable
to another industry. A displaced senior pilot—with 100,000 hours of
heavy airline transport time, earning $150,000 a year—would have a
hard time finding an equivalent high-paying job teaching in school.
Skills do not necessarily transfer from industry to industry. Skills the
pilots are paid for in the airline industry are not as important in, say,
the school system.
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The same is true even for doctors today. With all the changes in
medicine, many medical specialists are needing to conform to medical
organizations such as HMOs. Schoolteachers definitely need to be
union members. Today in America, the teachers union is the largest
and the richest labor union of all. The NEA, the National Education
Association, has tremendous political clout. Teachers need the
protection of their union because their skills are also of limited value
to an industry outside of education. So the rule of thumb is: “Highly
specialized; then unionize.” It’s the smart thing to do.
When I ask the classes I teach, “How many of you can cook a
better hamburger than McDonald’s?” almost all the students
raise their hands. I then ask, “So if most of you can cook a better
hamburger, how come McDonald’s makes more money than you?”
The answer is obvious: McDonald’s is excellent at business
systems. The reason so many talented people are poor is because they
focus on building a better hamburger and know little to nothing
about business systems.
A friend of mine in Hawaii is a great artist. He makes a sizable
amount of money. One day his mother’s attorney called to tell him
that she had left him $35,000. That is what was left of her estate after
the attorney and the government took their shares. Immediately, he
saw an opportunity to increase his business by using some of this
money to advertise. Two months later, his first four-color, full-page
ad appeared in an expensive magazine that targeted the very rich.
The ad ran for three months. He received no replies from the ad,
and all of his inheritance is now gone. He now wants to sue the
magazine for misrepresentation.
This is a common case of someone who can build a beautiful
hamburger, but knows little about business. When I asked him what
he learned, his only reply was, “Advertising salespeople are crooks.”
I then asked him if he would be willing to take a course in sales and
a course in direct marketing. His reply, “I don’t have the time, and I
don’t want to waste my money.”
The world is filled with talented poor people. All too often, they’re
poor or struggle financially or earn less than they are capable of, not
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because of what they know, but because of what they do not know.
They focus on perfecting their skills at building a better hamburger
rather than the skills of selling and delivering the hamburger. Maybe
McDonald’s does not make the best hamburger, but they are the best
at selling and delivering a basic average burger.
Poor dad wanted me to specialize. That was his view on how to
be paid more. Even after being told by the governor of Hawaii
that he could no longer work in state government, my educated
dad continued to encourage me to get specialized. Educated dad
then took up the cause of the teachers’ union, campaigning for
further protection and benefits for these highly skilled and educated
professionals. We argued often, but I know he never agreed that
overspecialization is what caused the need for union protection. He
never understood that the more specialized you become, the more
you are trapped and dependent on that specialty.
Rich dad advised that Mike and I groom ourselves. Many
corporations do the same thing. They find a young bright student
just out of business school and begin grooming that person to
someday take over the company. So these bright young employees
do not specialize in one department. They are moved from
department to department to learn all the aspects of business systems.
The rich often groom their children or the children of others. By
doing so, their children gain an overall knowledge of the operations
of the business and how the various departments interrelate.
For the World War II generation, it was considered bad to skip
from company to company. Today, it is considered smart. Since
people will skip from company to company rather than seek greater
specialization in skills, why not seek to learn more than to earn?
In the short term, it may earn you less, but it will pay dividends in
the long term.
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Chapter Seven
OVERCOMING OBSTACLES
The primary difference between a rich person
and a poor person is how they manage fear.
Once people have studied and become financially literate, they may
still face roadblocks to becoming financially independent. There are
five main reasons why financially literate people may still not develop
abundant asset columns that could produce a large cash flow. The five
reasons are:
1. Fear
2. Cynicism
3. Laziness
4. Bad habits
5. Arrogance
Overcoming Fear
I have never met anyone who really likes losing money. And in all
my years, I have never met a rich person who has never lost money.
But I have met a lot of poor people who have never lost a dime—
investing, that is.
The fear of losing money is real. Everyone has it. Even the rich.
But it’s not having fear that is the problem. It’s how you handle fear.
It’s how you handle losing. It’s how you handle failure that makes the
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Rich dad went on. “What I like best is the Texas attitude. They’re
proud when they win, and they brag when they lose. Texans have a
saying, ‘If you’re going to go broke, go big.’ You don’t want to admit
you went broke over a duplex.”
He constantly told Mike and me that the greatest reason for lack
of financial success was because most people played it too safe. “People
are so afraid of losing that they lose” were his words.
Fran Tarkenton, a one-time great NFL quarterback, says it still
another way: “Winning means being unafraid to lose.”
In my own life, I’ve noticed that winning usually follows losing.
Before I finally learned to ride a bike, I first fell down many times.
I’ve never met a golfer who has never lost a golf ball. I’ve never met
people who have fallen in love who have never had their heart broken.
And I’ve never met someone rich who has never lost money.
So for most people, the reason they don’t win financially is because
the pain of losing money is far greater than the joy of being rich.
Another saying in Texas is, “Everyone wants to go to heaven,
but no one wants to die.” Most people dream of being rich, but are
terrified of losing money. So they never get to heaven.
Rich dad used to tell Mike and me stories about his trips to Texas.
“If you really want to learn the attitude of how to handle risk, losing,
and failure, go to San Antonio and
For most people, the visit the Alamo. The Alamo is a great
reason they don’t win story of brave people who chose to
financially is because fight, knowing there was no hope of
the pain of losing money success. They chose to die instead of
is far greater than the surrendering. It’s an inspiring story
joy of being rich. worthy of study. Nonetheless, it’s
still a tragic military defeat. They got
their butts kicked. So how do Texans handle failure? They still shout,
‘Remember the Alamo!’”
Mike and I heard this story a lot. He always told us this story when
he was about to go into a big deal, and he was nervous. After he had
done all his due diligence and it was time to put up or shut up, he told
us this story. Every time he was afraid of making a mistake or losing
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money, he told us this story. It gave him strength, for it reminded him
that he could always turn a financial loss into a financial win. Rich dad
knew that failure would only make him stronger and smarter. It’s not
that he wanted to lose. He just knew who he was and how he would
take a loss. He would take a loss and make it a win. That’s what made
him a winner and others losers. It gave him the courage to cross the line
when others backed out. “That’s why I like Texans so much,” he would
say. “They took a great failure and turned it into inspiration… as well a
tourist destination that makes them millions.”
But probably his words that mean the most to me today are these:
“Texans don’t bury their failures. They get inspired by them. They take
their failures and turn them into rallying cries. Failure inspires Texans
to become winners. But that formula is not just the formula for Texans.
It is the formula for all winners.”
I’ve said that falling off my bike was part of learning to ride. I
remember falling off only made me more determined to learn to ride,
not less. I also said that I have never met a golfer who has never lost a
ball. For top professional golfers, losing
Failure inspires winners. a ball or a tournament provides the
Failure defeats losers. inspiration to be better, to practice
harder, to study more. That’s what
makes them better. For winners, losing inspires them. For losers, losing
defeats them.
I like to quote John D. Rockefeller, who said, “I always tried to
turn every disaster into an opportunity.”
And being Japanese-American, I can say this. Many people say that
Pearl Harbor was an American mistake. I say it was a Japanese mistake.
From the movie, Tora, Tora, Tora, a somber Japanese admiral says to
his cheering subordinates, “I am afraid we have awakened a sleeping
giant.” “Remember Pearl Harbor” became a rallying cry. It turned one
of America’s greatest losses into the reason to win. This great defeat
gave America strength, and America soon emerged as a world power.
Failure inspires winners. And failure defeats losers. It is the biggest
secret of winners. It’s the secret that losers do not know. The greatest
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If you hate losing, play it safe. If losing makes you weak, play it
safe. Go with balanced investments. If you’re over 25 years old and are
terrified of taking risks, don’t change. Play it safe, but start early. Start
accumulating your nest egg early because it will take time.
But if you have dreams of freedom—of getting out of the Rat
Race—the first question to ask yourself is, “How do I respond to
failure?” If failure inspires you to win, maybe you should go for it—but
only maybe. If failure makes you weak or causes you to throw temper
tantrums—like spoiled brats who call attorneys to file lawsuits every
time something doesn’t go their way—then play it safe. Keep your
daytime job. Or buy bonds or mutual funds. But remember, there is risk
in those financial instruments also, even though they may appear safe.
I say all this, mentioning Texas and Fran Tarkenton, because
stacking the asset column is easy. It’s really a low-aptitude game. It
doesn’t take much education. Fifth-grade math will do. But building
your asset column is a game in which attitude plays a major role. It
takes guts, patience, and a great attitude toward failure. Losers avoid
failing. And failure turns losers into winners. Just remember the Alamo.
Overcoming Cynicism
“The sky is falling! The sky is falling!” Most of us know the
story of Chicken Little who ran around warning the barnyard of
impending doom. We all know people who are that way. There’s a
Chicken Little inside each of us.
As I stated earlier, the cynic is really a little chicken. We all get
a little chicken when fear and doubt cloud our thoughts.
All of us have doubts: “I’m not smart.” “I’m not good enough.”
“So-and-so is better than me.” Our doubts often paralyze us. We
play the “What if?” game. “What if the economy crashes right after
I invest?” “What if I lose control and I can’t pay the money back?”
“What if things don’t go as I planned?” Or we have friends or loved
ones who will remind us of our shortcomings. They often say, “What
makes you think you can do that?” “If it’s such a good idea, how come
someone else hasn’t done it?” “That will never work. You don’t know
what you’re talking about.” These words of doubt often get so loud
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Kim and I are not real estate agents. We are strictly investors.
After identifying a unit in a resort community, we called an agent who
sold it to him that afternoon. The price was a mere $42,000 for a
two-bedroom townhome. Similar units were going for $65,000. He
had found a bargain. Excited, he bought it and returned to Boston.
Two weeks later, the agent called to say that our friend had backed
out. I called immediately to find out why. All he said was that he
talked to his neighbor, and his neighbor told him it was a bad deal. He
was paying too much. I asked Richard if his neighbor was an investor.
Richard said he was not. When I asked why he listened to him,
Richard got defensive and simply said he wanted to keep looking.
The real estate market in Phoenix turned, and a few years later,
that little unit was renting for $1,000 a month—$2,500 in the peak
winter months. The unit was worth $95,000. All Richard had to put
down was $5,000 and he would have had a start at getting out of the
Rat Race. Today, he still has done nothing.
Richard’s backing out did not surprise me. It’s called buyer’s
remorse, and it affects all of us. The little chicken won, and a chance
at freedom was lost.
In another example, I hold a small portion of my assets in
tax-lien certificates instead of CDs. I earn 16 percent per year on my
money, which certainly beats the interest rates banks offer on CDs.
The certificates are secured by real estate and enforced by state law,
which is also better than most banks. The formula they’re bought on
makes them safe. They just lack liquidity. So I look at them as 2- to
7-year CDs. Almost every time I tell someone that I hold my money
this way, especially if they have money in CDs, they will tell me it’s
risky. They tell me why I should not do it. When I ask them where
they get their information, they say from a friend or an investment
magazine. They’ve never done it, and they’re telling someone who’s
doing it why they shouldn’t. The lowest yield I look for is 16 percent,
but people who are filled with doubt are willing to accept a far lower
return. Doubt is expensive.
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My point is that it’s those doubts and cynicism that keep most
people poor and playing it safe. The real world is simply waiting for
you to get rich. Only a person’s doubts keep them poor. As I said,
getting out of the Rat Race is technically easy. It doesn’t take much
education, but those doubts are cripplers for most people.
“Cynics never win,” said rich dad. “Unchecked doubt and fear
creates a cynic.” “Cynics criticize, and winners analyze” was another
of his favorite sayings. Rich dad explained that criticism blinded while
analysis opened eyes. Analysis allowed winners to see that critics were
blind, and to see opportunities that everyone else missed. And finding
what people miss is key to any success.
Real estate is a powerful investment tool for anyone seeking
financial independence or freedom. It is a unique investment tool.
Yet every time I mention real estate as a vehicle, I often hear, “I don’t
want to fix toilets.” That’s what Peter Lynch calls noise. That’s what
my rich dad would say is the cynic talking, someone who criticizes and
does not analyze, someone who lets their doubts and fears close their
mind instead of open their eyes.
So when someone says, “I don’t want to fix toilets,” I want to fire
back, “What makes you think I want to?” They’re saying a toilet is
more important than what they want. I talk about freedom from the
Rat Race, and they focus on toilets. That is the thought pattern that
keeps most people poor. They criticize instead of analyze.
“I-don’t-wants hold the key to your success,” rich dad would say.
Because I, too, do not want to fix toilets, I shop hard for a property
manager who does fix toilets. And by finding a great property manager
who runs houses or apartments, well, my cash flow goes up. But, more
importantly, a great property manager allows me to buy a lot more real
estate since I don’t have to fix toilets. A great property manager is key to
success in real estate. Finding a good manager is more important to me
than the real estate. A great property manager often hears of great deals
before real estate agents do, which makes them even more valuable.
That is what rich dad meant by “I-don’t-wants hold the key to
your success.” Because I do not want to fix toilets either, I figured out
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how to buy more real estate and expedite my getting out of the Rat
Race. The people who continue to say “I don’t want to fix toilets” often
deny themselves the use of this powerful investment vehicle. Toilets are
more important than their freedom.
In the stock market, I often hear people say, “I don’t want to lose
money.” Well, what makes them think I or anyone else likes losing
money? They don’t make money because they choose to not lose
money. Instead of analyzing, they close their minds to another powerful
investment vehicle, the stock market.
I was riding with a friend past our neighborhood gas station. He
looked up and saw that the price of gas was going up and thus the
price of oil. My friend is a worry wart or a Chicken Little. To him, the
sky is always going to fall, and it usually does, on him.
When we got home, he showed me all the stats as to why the
price of oil was going to go up over the next few years, statistics I had
never seen before, even though I already owned substantial shares of
an existing oil company. With that information, I immediately began
looking for and found a new, undervalued oil company that was
about to find some oil deposits. My broker was excited about this
new company, and I bought 15,000 shares for 65 cents per share.
Three months later, this same friend and I drove by the same gas
station, and sure enough, the price per gallon had gone up nearly
15 percent. Again, the Chicken Little worried and complained. I
smiled because, a month earlier, that little oil company hit oil and
those 15,000 shares went up to more than $3 per share since he had
first given me the tip. And the price of gas will continue to go up if
what my friend says is true.
If most people understood how a “stop” worked in stock-market
investing, there would be more people investing to win instead of
investing not to lose. A stop is simply a computer command that
sells your stock automatically if the price begins to drop, helping to
minimize your losses and maximize some gains. It’s a great tool for
those who are terrified of losing.
So whenever I hear people focusing on their I-don’t-wants, rather
than what they do want, I know the noise in their head must be loud.
Chicken Little has taken over their brain and is yelling, “The sky is
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falling, and toilets are breaking!” So they avoid their don’t-wants, but
they pay a huge price. They may never get what they want in life.
Instead of analyzing, their inner Chicken Little closes their mind.
Rich dad gave me a way of looking at Chicken Little. “Just do what
Colonel Sanders did.” At the age of 66, he lost his business and began
to live on his Social Security check. It wasn’t enough. He went around
the country selling his recipe for fried chicken. He was turned down
1,009 times before someone said yes. And he went on to become a
multimillionaire at an age when most people are quitting. “He was a
brave and tenacious man,” rich dad said of Harlan Sanders.
So when you’re in doubt and feeling a little afraid, just do what
Colonel Sanders did to his little chicken. He fried it.
Overcoming Laziness
Busy people are often the most lazy. We have all heard stories of a
businessman who works hard to earn money. He works hard to be a
good provider for his wife and children. He spends long hours at the
office and brings work home on weekends. One day he comes home
to an empty house. His wife has left with the kids. He knew he and
his wife had problems, but rather than work to make the relationship
strong, he stayed busy at work. Dismayed, his performance at work
slips and he loses his job.
Today, I often meet people who are too busy to take care of their
wealth. And there are people too busy to take care of their health. The
cause is the same. They’re busy, and they stay busy as a way of avoiding
something they do not want to face. Nobody has to tell them. Deep
down they know. In fact, if you remind them, they often respond with
anger or irritation.
If they aren’t busy at work or with the kids, they’re often busy
watching TV, fishing, playing golf, or shopping. Yet deep down
they know they are avoiding something important. That’s the most
common form of laziness: laziness by staying busy.
So what is the cure for laziness? The answer is—a little greed.
For many of us, we were raised thinking of greed or desire as bad.
“Greedy people are bad people,” my mom used to say. Yet we all have
inside of us this yearning to have nice, new, or exciting things.
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spirit says, “I’m sick and tired of being poor. Let’s get out there and get
rich.” To which the lazy mind says, “Rich people are greedy. Besides it’s
too much bother. It’s not safe. I might lose money. I’m working hard
enough as it is. I’ve got too much to do at work anyway. Look at what
I have to do tonight. My boss wants it finished by morning.”
“I can’t afford it” also causes sadness, a helplessness that leads
to despondency and often depression. “How can I afford it?” opens
up possibilities, excitement, and dreams. So rich dad was not so
concerned about what we wanted to buy as long as we understood that
“How can I afford it?” creates a stronger mind and a dynamic spirit.
Thus he rarely gave Mike or me anything. He would instead ask,
“How can you afford it?” and that included college, which we paid
for ourselves. It was not the goal, but the process of attaining the goal
that he wanted us to learn.
The problem I see today is that there are millions of people who
feel guilty about their desire or their “greed.” It’s old conditioning
from their childhood. While they desire to have the finer things that
life offers, most have been conditioned subconsciously to say, “I can’t
have that,” or “I’ll never be able to afford that.”
When I decided to exit the Rat Race, it was simply a question
of “How can I afford to never work again?” And my mind began to
kick out answers and solutions. The hardest part was fighting my real
parents’ dogma: “We can’t afford that.” “Stop thinking only about
yourself.” “Why don’t you think about others?” and other similar
sentiments designed to instill guilt to suppress my “greed.”
So how do you beat laziness? Once again, the answer is a little
greed. It’s that radio station WII-FM, which stands for “What’s In
It For Me?” A person needs to sit down and ask, “What would my
life be like if I never had to work again?” “What would I do if I had
all the money I needed?” Without that little greed, the desire to have
something better, progress is not made. Our world progresses because
we all desire a better life. New inventions are made because we desire
something better. We go to school and study hard because we want
something better. So whenever you find yourself avoiding something
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you know you should be doing, then the only thing to ask yourself is,
“What’s in it for me?” Be a little greedy. It’s the best cure for laziness.
Too much greed, however, as anything in excess can be, is not good.
But just remember what Michael Douglas said in the movie Wall Street:
“Greed is good.” Rich dad said it differently: “Guilt is worse than greed,
for guilt robs the body of its soul.” I think Eleanor Roosevelt said it best:
“Do what you feel in your heart to be right—for you’ll be criticized
anyway. You’ll be damned if you do, and damned if you don’t.”
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“Of course not,” said rich dad. “I firmly believe in paying my bills on
time. I just pay myself first. Before I pay even the government.”
“But what happens if you don’t have enough money?” I asked.
“What do you do then?”
“The same,” said rich dad. “I still pay myself first. Even if I’m
short of money. My asset column is far more important to me than
the government.”
“But,” I said. “Don’t they come after you?”
“Yes, if you don’t pay,” said rich dad. “Look, I did not say not to pay.
I just said I pay myself first, even if I’m short of money.”
“But,” I replied. “How do you do that?”
“It’s not how. The question is ‘Why?’” rich dad said.
“Okay, why?”
“Motivation,” said rich dad. “Who do you think will complain
louder if I don’t pay them—me, or my creditors?”
“Your creditors will definitely scream louder than you,” I said,
responding to the obvious. “You wouldn’t say anything if you didn’t
pay yourself.”
“So you see, after paying myself, the pressure to pay my taxes and
the other creditors is so great that it forces me to seek other forms of
income. The pressure to pay becomes my motivation. I’ve worked
extra jobs, started other companies, traded in the stock market,
anything just to make sure those guys don’t start yelling at me. That
pressure made me work harder, forced me to think, and all in all,
made me smarter and more active when it comes to money. If I had
paid myself last, I would have felt no pressure, but I’d be broke.”
“So it is the fear of the government or other people you owe
money to that motivates you?”
“That’s right,” said rich dad. “You see, government bill collectors
are big bullies. So are bill collectors in general. Most people give into
these bullies. They pay them and never pay themselves. You know the
story of the 98-pound weakling who gets sand kicked in his face?”
I nodded. “I see that ad for weightlifting and bodybuilding lessons
in the comic books all the time.”
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“Well, most people let the bullies kick sand in their faces. I decided to
use the fear of the bully to make me stronger. Others get weaker. Forcing
myself to think about how to make extra money is like going to the
gym and working out with weights. The more I work my mental money
muscles out, the stronger I get. Now I’m not afraid of those bullies.”
I liked what rich dad was saying. “So if I pay myself first, I get
financially stronger, mentally and fiscally.”
Rich dad nodded.
“And if I pay myself last, or not at all, I get weaker. So people like
bosses, managers, tax collectors, bill collectors, and landlords push me
around all my life—just because I don’t have good money habits.”
Rich dad nodded. “Just like the 98-pound weakling.”
Overcoming Arrogance
“What I know makes me money. What I don’t know loses me
money. Every time I have been arrogant, I have lost money. Because
when I’m arrogant, I truly believe that what I don’t know is not
important,” rich dad would often tell me.
I have found that many people use arrogance to try to hide their own
ignorance. It often happens when I am discussing financial statements
with accountants or even other investors.
They try to bluster their way through the discussion. It is clear to me
that they don’t know what they’re talking about. They’re not lying, but
they are not telling the truth.
There are many people in the world of money, finances, and
investments who have absolutely no idea what they’re talking about.
Most people in the money industry are just spouting off sales pitches
like used-car salesmen. When you know you are ignorant in a subject,
start educating yourself by finding an expert in the field or a book on
the subject.
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GETTING STARTED
There is gold everywhere.
Most people are not trained to see it.
I wish I could say acquiring wealth was easy for me, but it wasn’t.
So in response to the question “How do I start?” I offer the thought
process I go through on a day-to-day basis. It really is easy to find
great deals. I promise you that. It’s just like riding a bike. After a little
wobbling, it’s a piece of cake. But when it comes to money, it takes
determination to get through the wobbling. That’s a personal thing.
To find million-dollar “deals of a lifetime” requires us to call on our
financial genius. I believe that each of us has a financial genius within us.
The problem is that our financial genius lies asleep, waiting to be called
upon. It lies asleep because our culture has educated us into believing that
the love of money is the root of all evil. It has encouraged us to learn a
profession so we can work for money, but failed to teach us how to have
money work for us. It taught us not to worry about our financial future
because our company or the government would take care of us when
our working days are over. However, it is our children, educated in the
same school system, who will end up paying for this absence of financial
education. The message is still to work hard, earn money, and spend it,
and when we run short, we can always borrow more.
Unfortunately, 90 percent of the Western world subscribes to the
above dogma, simply because it’s easier to find a job and work for
money. If you are not one of the masses, I offer you the following
10 steps to awaken your financial genius. I simply offer you the steps
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to learn to keep it. Many rich families lose their assets in the next
generation simply because there was no one trained to be a good
steward over their assets.
Most people choose not to be rich. For 90 percent of the population,
being rich is too much of a hassle. So they invent sayings that go: “I’m
not interested in money.” “I’ll never be rich.” “I don’t have to worry.
I’m still young.” “When I make some money, then I’ll think about my
future.” “My husband/wife handles the finances.” The problem with
those statements is that they rob the person who chooses to think such
thoughts of two things: One is time, which is your most precious asset.
The second is learning. Having no money should not be an excuse to
not learn. But that is a choice we all make daily: the choice of what we
do with our time, our money, and what we put in our heads. That is
the power of choice. All of us have choice. I just choose to be rich, and
I make that choice every day.
Invest first in education. In reality, the only real asset you have is your
mind, the most powerful tool we have dominion over. Each of us has the
choice of what we put in our brain once we’re old enough. You can watch
TV, read golf magazines, or go to ceramics class or a class on financial
planning. You choose. Most people simply buy investments rather than
first investing in learning about investing.
A friend of mine recently had her apartment burglarized. The
thieves took her electronics and left all the books. And we all have that
same choice. 90 percent of the population buys TV sets, and only about
10 percent buy business books.
So what do I do? I go to seminars. I like it when they are at least two
days long because I like to immerse myself in a subject. In 1973, I was
watching this guy on TV who was advertising a three-day seminar on
how to buy real estate for nothing down. I spent $385 and that course
has made me at least $2 million, if not more. But more importantly, it
bought me life. I don’t have to work for the rest of my life because of
that one course. I go to at least two such courses every year.
I love CDs and audio books. The reason: I can easily review what
I just heard. I was listening to an investor say something I completely
disagreed with. Instead of becoming arrogant and critical, I simply
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from the state government. The next day he sent me an article about
why my investment was dangerous. I have received 16 percent for
years now, and he still receives 6 percent.
I would say that one of the hardest things about wealth-building is
to be true to yourself and to be willing to not go along with the crowd.
This is because, in the market, it is usually the crowd that shows up
late that is slaughtered. If a great deal is on the front page, it’s too late
in most instances. Look for a new deal. As we used to say as surfers:
“There is always another wave.” People who hurry and catch a wave
late usually are the ones who wipe out.
Smart investors don’t time the markets. If they miss a wave, they
search for the next one and get themselves in position. This is hard
for most investors because buying what is not popular is frightening.
Timid investors are like sheep going along with the crowd. Or their
greed gets them in when wise investors have already taken their
profits and moved on. Wise investors buy an investment when it’s not
popular. They know their profits are made when they buy, not when
they sell. They wait patiently. As I said, they do not time the market.
Just like a surfer, they get in position for the next big swell.
It’s all “insider trading.” There are forms of insider trading that are
illegal, and there are forms of insider trading that are legal. But either
way, it’s insider trading. The only distinction is: How far away from
the inside are you? The reason you want to have rich friends is because
that is where the money is made. It’s made on information. You want
to hear about the next boom, get in, and get out before the next bust.
I’m not saying do it illegally, but the sooner you know, the better your
chances are for profits with minimal risk. That is what friends are for.
And that is financial intelligence.
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be careful what you learn, because your mind is so powerful that you
become what you put in your head. For example, if you study cooking,
you then tend to cook. If you don’t want to be a cook anymore, then
you need to study something else.
When it comes to money, the masses generally have one basic
formula they learned in school and it’s this: Work for money. The
predominant formula I see in the world is that every day millions of
people get up, go to work, earn money, pay bills, balance checkbooks,
buy some mutual funds, and go back to work. That is the basic
formula, or recipe.
If you’re tired of what you’re doing, or you’re not making enough,
it’s simply a case of changing the formula via which you make money.
Years ago, when I was 26, I took a weekend class called “How to
Buy Real Estate Foreclosures.” I learned a formula. The next trick was
to have the discipline to actually put into action what I had learned.
That is where most people stop. For three years, while working for
Xerox, I spent my spare time learning to master the art of buying
foreclosures. I’ve made several million dollars using that formula.
So after I mastered that formula, I went in search of other formulas.
For many of the classes, I did not directly use the information I learned,
but I always learned something new.
I have attended classes designed for derivative traders, commodity
option traders, and chaologists. I was way out of my league, being in a
room full of people with doctorates in nuclear physics and space science.
Yet, I learned a lot that made my stock and real estate investing more
meaningful and lucrative.
Most junior colleges and community colleges have classes on
financial planning and buying traditional investments. They are good
places to start, but I always search for a faster formula. That is why,
on a fairly regular basis, I make more in a day than many people will
make in their lifetime.
Another side note: In today’s fast-changing world, it’s not so much
what you know anymore that counts, because often what you know is
old. It is how fast you learn. That skill is priceless. It’s priceless in
finding faster formulas—recipes, if you will—for making dough.
Working hard for money is an old formula born in the day of cavemen.
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I would say the skills to manage these three apply to anything, not
just entrepreneurs. The three matter in the way you live your life as an
individual, or as part of a family, a business, a charitable organization,
a city, or a nation.
Each of these skills is enhanced by the mastery of self-discipline.
I do not take the saying, “Pay yourself first,” lightly.
The statement, “Pay yourself first,” comes from George Clason’s
book, The Richest Man in Babylon. Millions of copies have been sold.
But while millions of people freely repeat that powerful statement,
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few follow the advice. As I said, financial literacy allows one to read
numbers, and numbers tell the story. By looking at a person’s
income statement and balance sheet, I can readily see if people
who spout the words, “Pay yourself first,” actually practice what
they preach.
A picture is worth a thousand words. So let’s review the financial
statements of people who pay themselves first against someone
who doesn’t.
Study the diagrams and see if you can pick up some distinctions.
Again, it has to do with understanding cash flow, which tells the story.
Most people look at the numbers and miss the story.
Expenses
Taxes
Rent
Food
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
Save
Invest
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Do you see it? The diagram reflects the actions of individuals who
choose to pay themselves first. Each month, they allocate money to their
asset column before they pay their monthly expenses. Although millions
of people have read Clason’s book and understand the words, “Pay
yourself first,” in reality they pay themselves last.
Now I can hear the howls from those of you who sincerely believe
in paying your bills first. And I can hear all the responsible people who
pay their bills on time. I am not saying be irresponsible and not pay your
bills. All I am saying is do what the book says, which is: Pay yourself first.
And the previous diagram is the correct accounting picture of that action.
INCOME STATEMENT
Income
Salary
Job
Expenses
1. Taxes
2. Debt
3. Inflation (food-gas-other)
4. Retirement
BALANCE SHEET
Assets Liabilities
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If you can truly begin to understand the power of cash flow, you
will soon realize what is wrong with the previous diagram, or why
90 percent of people work hard all their lives and need government
support like Social Security when they are no longer able to work.
Kim and I have had many bookkeepers, accountants, and bankers
who have had a major problem with this way of looking at, “Pay
yourself first.” The reason is that these financial professionals actually
do what the masses do: They pay themselves last.
There have been times in my life when, for whatever reason, cash
flow was far less than my bills. I still paid myself first. My accountant
and bookkeeper screamed in panic, “They’re going to come after you.
The IRS is going to put you in jail.” “You’re going to ruin your credit
rating.” “They’ll cut off the electricity.” I still paid myself first.
“Why?” you ask. Because that’s what the story, The Richest Man In
Babylon, was all about: the power of self-discipline and the power of
internal fortitude. As my rich dad taught me the first month I worked
for him, most people allow the world to push them around. A bill
collector calls and you “pay or else.” A sales clerk says, “Oh, just put it
on your charge card.” Your real estate agent tells you, “Go ahead.
The government allows you a tax deduction on your home.” That is
what the book is really about—having the guts to go against the tide
and get rich. You may not be weak, but when it comes to money,
many people get wimpy.
I am not saying be irresponsible. The reason I don’t have high
credit-card debt, and doodad debt, is because I pay myself first. The
reason I minimize my income is because I don’t want to pay it to the
government. That is why my income comes from my asset column,
through a Nevada corporation. If I work for money, the government
takes it.
Although I pay my bills last, I am financially astute enough to not
get into a tough financial situation. I don’t like consumer debt. I actually
have liabilities that are higher than 99 percent of the population, but I
don’t pay for them. Other people pay for my liabilities. They’re called
tenants. So rule number one in paying yourself first is: Don’t get into
consumer debt in the first place. Although I pay my bills last, I set it up
to have only small unimportant bills that are due.
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So many times I have gotten into financial hot water and used my
brain to create more income while staunchly defending the assets in my
asset column. My bookkeeper has screamed and dived for cover, but I
was like a good soldier defending the fort—Fort Assets.
Poor people have poor habits. A common bad habit is innocently
called “dipping into savings.” The rich know that savings are only used to
create more money, not to pay bills.
I know that sounds tough, but as I said, if you’re not tough inside,
the world will always push you around anyway.
If you do not like financial pressure, then find a formula that works
for you. A good one is to cut expenses, put your money in the bank, pay
more than your fair share of income tax, buy safe mutual funds, and take
the vow of the average. But this violates the pay-yourself-first rule.
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Keep in mind that not all brokers are created equal. Unfortunately,
most brokers are only salespeople. They sell, but they themselves own
little or no real estate. There is a tremendous difference between a broker
who sells houses and a broker who sells investments. The same is true for
stock, bond, mutual fund, and insurance, brokers who call themselves
financial planners.
When I interview any paid professional, I first find out how much
property or stocks they personally own and what percentage they pay in
taxes. And that applies to my tax attorney as well as my accountant.
I have an accountant who minds his own business. His profession is
accounting, but his business is real estate. I used to have an accountant
who was a small-business accountant, but he had no real estate. I
switched because we did not love the same business.
Find a broker who has your best interests at heart. Many brokers will
spend the time educating you, and they could be the best asset you find.
Just be fair, and most of them will be fair to you. If all you can think
about is cutting their commissions, then why should they want to help
you? It’s just simple logic.
As I said earlier, one of the management skills is the management
of people. Many people only manage people they feel smarter than and
they have power over. Many middle managers remain middle managers,
failing to get promoted, because they know how to work with people
below them, but not with people above them. The real skill is to manage
and reward the people who are smarter than you in some technical area.
That is why companies have a board of directors. You should have one
too. That is financial intelligence.
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People who hate risk put their money in the bank. In the long run,
safe savings are better than no savings. But it takes a long time to get
your money back and, in most instances, you don’t get anything for
free with it.
On every one of my investments, there must be an upside,
something for free—like a condominium, a mini-storage, a piece
of free land, a house, stock shares, or an office building. And there
must be limited risk, or a low-risk idea. There are books devoted
entirely to this subject, so I will not talk about it here. Ray Kroc, of
McDonald’s fame, sold hamburger franchises, not because he loved
hamburgers, but because he wanted the real estate under the franchise
for free.
So wise investors must look at more than ROI. They look at
the assets they get for free once they get their money back. That is
financial intelligence.
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If we give 100 people $10,000 at the start of the year, I believe that
at the end of the year:
• 80 would have nothing left. In fact, many would have created
greater debt by making a down payment on a new car,
refrigerator, electronics, or a holiday.
• 16 would have increased that $10,000 by 5-10 percent.
• Four would have increased it to $20,000 or into the millions.
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Often just the process of thinking of what I want, and how I could
give that to someone else, breaks free a torrent of bounty. Whenever I feel
that people aren’t smiling at me, I simply begin smiling and saying hello.
Like magic, the next thing I know I’m surrounded by smiling people. It is
true that your world is only a mirror of you.
So that’s why I say, “Teach, and you shall receive.” I have found that
the more I teach those who want to learn, the more I learn. If you want
to learn about money, teach it to someone else. A torrent of new ideas
and finer distinctions will come in.
There are times when I have given and nothing has come back, or
what I have received is not what I wanted. But upon closer inspection
and soul searching, I was often giving to receive in those instances,
instead of giving for the joy that giving itself brings.
My dad taught teachers, and he became a master teacher. My
rich dad always taught young people his way of doing business. In
retrospect, it was their generosity with what they knew that made
them smarter. There are powers in this world that are much smarter
than we are. You can get there on your own, but it’s easier with the
help of the powers that be. You only need to be generous with what
you have.
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• Find someone who has done what you want to do. Take them
to lunch and ask them for tips and tricks of the trade. As for
16 percent tax-lien certificates, I went to the county tax office
and found the government employee who worked in that office.
I found out that she, too, invested in the tax liens. Immediately,
I invited her to lunch. She was thrilled to tell me everything
she knew and how to do it. After lunch, she spent all
afternoon showing me everything. By the next day, I found
two great properties with her help that have been accruing
interest at 16 percent ever since. It took a day to read the
book, a day to take action, an hour for lunch, and a day to
acquire two great deals.
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you have a second party who wants to deal. Most sellers ask too much.
It is rare that a seller asks a price that is less than something is worth.
Moral of the story: Make offers. People who are not investors have no
idea what it feels like to try to sell something. I have had a piece of real
estate that I wanted to sell for months. I would have welcomed any offer.
They could have offered me 10 pigs, and I would have been happy—
not at the offer, but just because someone was interested. I would have
countered, maybe for a pig farm in exchange. But that’s how the game
works. The game of buying and selling is fun. Keep that in mind. It’s fun
and only a game. Make offers. Someone might say yes.
I always make offers with escape clauses. In real estate, I make an
offer with language that details “subject-to” contingencies, such as the
approval of a business partner. Never specify who the business
partner is. Most people don’t know that my partner is my cat. If they
accept the offer, and I don’t want the deal, I call home and speak to
my cat. I make this ridiculous statement to illustrate how absurdly
easy and simple the game is. So many people make things too difficult
and take it too seriously.
• Finding a good deal, the right business, the right people, the
right investors, or whatever is just like dating. You must go
to the market and talk to a lot of people, make a lot of offers,
counteroffers, negotiate, reject, and accept. I know single
people who sit at home and wait for the phone to ring, but it’s
better to go to the market, even if it’s only the supermarket.
Search, offer, reject, negotiate, and accept are all parts of the
process of almost everything in life.
• Jog, walk, or drive a certain area once a month for 10 minutes.
I have found some of my best real estate investments doing
this. I will jog a certain neighborhood for a year and look for
change. For there to be profit in a deal, there must be two
elements: a bargain and change. There are lots of bargains, but
it’s change that turns a bargain into a profitable opportunity.
So when I jog, I jog a neighborhood I might like to invest in.
It is the repetition that causes me to notice slight differences.
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I notice real estate signs that are up for a long time. That
means the seller might be more agreeable to deal. I watch for
moving trucks going in or out. I stop and talk to the drivers. I
talk to the postal carriers. It’s amazing how much information
they acquire about an area. I find a bad area, especially an
area that the news has scared everyone away from. I drive it for
sometimes a year waiting for signs of some thing changing for
the better. I talk to retailers, especially new ones, and find out
why they’re moving in. It takes only a few minutes a month, and
I do it while doing something else, like exercising, or going to
and from the store.
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• Look for people who want to buy first. Then look for someone who
wants to sell. A friend was looking for a certain piece of land.
He had the money but did not have the time. I found a large
piece of land, larger than what my friend wanted to buy, tied
it up with an option, called my friend, and he said he wanted
a piece of it. So I sold the piece to him and then bought the
land. I kept the remaining land as mine for free. Moral of the
story: Buy the pie, and cut it in pieces. Most people look for
what they can afford, so they look too small. They buy only
a piece of the pie, so they end up paying more for less. Small
thinkers don’t get the big breaks. If you want to get richer,
think big.
These are just a few of the things I have done and continue to do
to recognize opportunities. The important words are “have done” and
“do.” As repeated many times throughout the book, you must take
action before you can receive the financial rewards. Act now!
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FINAL THOUGHTS
I would like to share some final thoughts with you.
The main reason I wrote this book, and the reason it has remained
a bestseller since 2000, was to share insights into how increased financial
intelligence can be used to solve many of life’s common problems. Without
financial training, we all too often use the standard formulas to get through
life: Work hard, save, borrow, and pay excessive taxes. Today, more than
ever, we need better information.
I use the following story as an example of a financial problem that
confronts many young families today. How do you afford a good
education for your children and provide for your own retirement?
It requires using financial intelligence instead of hard work.
A friend of mine was griping one day about how hard it was to
save money for his four children’s college educations. He was putting
$300 away in a college fund each month and had so far accumulated
only about $12,000. He had about 12 more years to save for college
since his oldest child was then six years old.
At the time, the real estate market in Phoenix was terrible. People
were giving houses away. I suggested to my friend that he buy a house
with some of the money in his college fund. The idea intrigued him,
and we began to discuss the possibility. His primary concern was that
he did not have credit with the bank to buy another house since he
was so over-extended. I assured him that there were other ways to
finance a property rather than through the bank.
We looked for a house for two weeks, a house that would fit all our
criteria. There were plenty to choose from so shopping was fun. Finally,
we found a three-bedroom, two-bath home in a prime neighborhood.
The owner had been downsized and needed to sell that day because he
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and his family were moving to California where another job waited.
The owner wanted $102,000, but we offered only $79,000. He took
it immediately and agreed to carry back the loan with a 10 percent
down payment. All my friend had to come up with was $7,900. As
soon as the owner moved, my friend put the house up for rent. After all
expenses were paid, including the mortgage, he put about $125 in his
pocket each month.
His plan was to keep the house for 12 years and let the mortgage
get paid down faster by applying the extra $125 to the principal each
month. We figured that in 12 years, a large portion of the mortgage
would be paid off and he could possibly be clearing $800 a month by
the time his first child went to college. He could also sell the house if it
had appreciated in value.
Three years later, the real estate market greatly improved in
Phoenix and he was offered $156,000 for the same house by the
tenant who lived in it. Again, he asked me what I thought. I advised
that he sell it, using a 1031 tax-deferred exchange.
Suddenly, he had nearly $80,000 to operate with. I called another
friend in Austin, Texas, who then moved this tax-deferred capital gain
into a mini-storage facility. Within three months, he began receiving
checks for a little less than a $1,000 a month which he then poured
back into the college fund.
A couple of years later, the mini-warehouse sold, and he received
a check for nearly $330,000 as proceeds from the sale. He rolled those
funds into a new project that would now generate over $3,000 a
month in income, again, going into the college fund. He is now very
confident that his goal will be met easily.
It only took $7,900 to start and a little financial intelligence. His
children will be able to afford the education they want, and he will
then use the underlying asset, wrapped in his legal entity, to pay for his
retirement. As a result of this successful investment strategy, he will be
able to retire early.
Thank you for reading this book. I hope it has provided some
insights into utilizing the power of money to work for you. Today,
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Rich Dad Poor Dad
175
Final Thoughts: Using Financial Intelligence
When my poor dad said to me, “Go to school, get good grades,
and find a safe secure job,” he was recommending I work for earned
income. When my rich dad said, “The rich don’t work for money.
They have their money work for them,” he was talking about passive
income and portfolio income. Passive income, in most cases, is income
derived from real estate investments. Portfolio income is income
derived from paper assets such as stocks and bonds. Portfolio income
is the income that makes Bill Gates the richest man in the world, not
earned income.
Rich dad used to say, “The key to becoming wealthy is the
ability to convert earned income into passive income or portfolio
income as quickly as possible.” He would say, “Taxes are highest on
earned income. The least-taxed income is passive income. That is
another reason why you want your money working hard for you. The
government taxes the income you work hard for more than the income
your money works hard for.”
In my second book, Rich Dad’s CASHFLOW Quadrant, I explain
the four different types of people who make up the world of business.
They are E (Employee), S (Self-employed), B (Business Owner), and
I (Investor). Most people go to school to learn to be an E or an S. The
CASHFLOW Quadrant is written about the core differences of these
four types and how people can change their quadrant. In fact, most
of our products are created for people in the B and I quadrants.
In Rich Dad’s Guide to Investing, book number three in the Rich
Dad series, I go into more detail on the importance of converting
earned income into passive and portfolio income. Rich dad used to
say, “All a real investor does is convert earned income into passive
and portfolio income. If you know what you’re doing, investing is not
risky. It’s just common sense.”
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Rich Dad Poor Dad
the reason my wife Kim and I are financially free, never needing to work
again. We continue to work because we choose to. Today we own a real
estate investment company for passive income and participate in private
placements and initial public offerings of stock for portfolio income.
We also went back to work to build a financial-education company
so that we can continue to create and publish books and games. All of
our educational products are created to teach the same skills my rich
dad taught me, the skills of converting earned income into passive and
portfolio income.
The games we create are important because they teach what books
cannot teach. For example, you could never learn to ride a bicycle by
only reading a book. Our CASHFLOW games for adults and
CASHFLOW for Kids game are designed to teach players the basic
investment skills of converting earned income into passive and
portfolio income. They also teach the principles of accounting and
financial literacy. These games are the only educational products in
the world that teach people all of these skills simultaneously.
CASHFLOW 202 is the advanced
You can play version of CASHFLOW 101 and
CASHFLOW Classic requires the game board from 101, as
on the web at well as a full understanding of 101,
www.richdad.com before it can be played. CASHFLOW
and learn to convert 101 and CASHFLOW for Kids
earned income into teach the principles of fundamental
passive and/or investing. CASHFLOW 202 teaches
portfolio income the principles of technical investing.
Technical investing involves advanced
trading techniques such as short selling, call options, put options, and
straddles. A person who understands these advanced techniques is able
to make money when the market goes up, as well as when the market
comes down. As my rich dad would say, “A real investor makes money
in an up market and a down market. That is why they make so much
money.” One of the reasons they make more money is simply because
they have more self-confidence. Rich dad would say, “They have more
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Final Thoughts: Using Financial Intelligence
self-confidence because they are less afraid of losing.” In other words, the
average investor does not make as much money because they are so afraid
of losing money. The average investor does not know how to protect
themselves from losses, and that is what CASHFLOW 202 teaches.
Average investors think investing is risky because they have not
been formally trained to be professional investors. As Warren Buffett,
America’s richest investor says, “Risk comes from not knowing what
you’re doing.” My board games teach the simple basics of fundamental
investing and technical investing while people are having fun.
I occasionally hear someone say, “Your educational games are
expensive,” which poses the question of ROI, the return on investment,
or the value returned for the price paid. I nod my head and reply, “Yes,
they may be expensive, especially when compared to entertainment board
games. But my games are not as expensive as a college education, working
hard all your life for earned income, paying excessive taxes, and then
living in terror of losing all of your money in the investment markets.”
When someone walks away mumbling about the price, I can hear
my rich dad saying, “If you want to be rich, you must know what kind
of income to work hard for, how to keep it, and how to protect it from
loss. That is the key to great wealth.” Rich dad would also say, “If you
do not understand the differences in those three incomes and do not
learn the skills on how to acquire and protect those incomes, you will
probably spend your life earning less than you could and working harder
than you should.”
My poor dad thought a good education, a good job, and years of
hard work were all you needed to be successful. My rich dad also thought
a good education was important. But to him it was also important
that Mike and I know the differences in the three incomes and what
kind of income to work hard for. To him, that was basic financial
education. Knowing the differences in the three incomes and learning
the investment skills of how to acquire the different incomes is basic
education for anyone who strives to acquire great wealth and achieve
financial freedom—a special kind of freedom that only a few will ever
know. As rich dad states in lesson number one, “The rich do not work
for money. They know how to have money work hard for them.”
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Rich Dad Poor Dad
Rich dad said, “Ordinary earned income is money you work for,
and passive and portfolio income is money working for you.” Knowing
that little difference has been significant in my life. Or, as Robert Frost
ends his poem, “And that has made all the difference.”
Take Action!
All of you were given two great gifts: your mind and your time.
It is up to you to do what you please with both. With each dollar bill
that enters your hand, you, and only you, have the power to determine
your destiny. Spend it foolishly, and you choose to be poor. Spend it
on liabilities, and you join the middle class. Invest it in your mind and
learn how to acquire assets, and you will be choosing wealth as your
goal and your future. The choice is yours, and only yours. Every day
with every dollar, you decide to be rich, poor, or middle class.
Choose to share this knowledge with your children, and you
choose to prepare them for the world that awaits. No one else will.
You and your children’s future will be determined by choices you
make today, not tomorrow.
I wish you great wealth and much happiness with this fabulous
gift called life.
– Robert Kiyosaki
179
About The Author
Robert Kiyosaki
Best known as the author of Rich Dad Poor Dad—the #1 personal finance book of
all time—Robert Kiyosaki has challenged and changed the way tens of millions of
people around the world think about money. He is an entrepreneur, educator, and
investor who believes the world needs more entrepreneurs who will create jobs.
With perspectives on money and investing that often contradict conventional wisdom,
Robert has earned an international reputation for straight talk, irreverence, and courage
and has become a passionate and outspoken advocate for financial education.
Robert and Kim Kiyosaki are founders of The Rich Dad Company, a financial
education company, and creators of the CASHFLOW® games. In 2014, the company
will leverage the global success of the Rich Dad games in the launch of a new and
breakthrough offering in mobile and online gaming.
Robert has been heralded as a visionary who has a gift for simplifying complex
concepts—ideas related to money, investing, finance, and economics—and has shared
his personal journey to financial freedom in ways that resonate with audiences of all
ages and backgrounds. His core principles and messages—like “your house is not an
asset” and “invest for cash flow” and “savers are losers”—have ignited a firestorm of
criticism and ridicule… only to have played out on the world economic stage over the
past decade in ways that were both unsettling and prophetic.
His point of view is that “old” advice—go to college, get a good job, save money,
get out of debt, invest for the long term, and diversify—has become obsolete advice
in today’s fast-paced Information Age. His Rich Dad philosophies and messages
challenge the status quo. His teachings encourage people to become financially
educated and to take an active role in investing for their future.
The author of 19 books, including the international blockbuster Rich Dad Poor Dad,
Robert has been a featured guest with media outlets in every corner of the world—from
CNN, the BBC, Fox News, Al Jazeera, GBTV and PBS, to Larry King Live, Oprah,
Peoples Daily, Sydney Morning Herald, The Doctors, Straits Times, Bloomberg, NPR,
USA TODAY, and hundreds of others—and his books have topped international
bestsellers lists for more than a decade. He continues to teach and inspire audiences
around the world.
His most recent books include Unfair Advantage: The Power of Financial Education,
Midas Touch, the second book he has co-authored with Donald Trump, and
Why “A” Students Work for “C” Students.
quadrant
Guide to Financial Freedom
By Robert T. Kiyosaki
®
Editor’s Note
ix
Contents
INTRODUCTION
Which Quadrant Are You In?.................................................. 1
WHAT IS YOUR
LIFE'S GOAL?
“What do you want to be when you grow up?” That is a question
most of us have been asked.
I had many interests as a kid, and it was easy to choose. If it
sounded exciting and glamorous, I wanted to do it. I wanted to be a
marine biologist, an astronaut, a Marine, a ship’s officer, a pilot, and
a professional football player.
I was fortunate enough to achieve three of those goals: a Marine
Corps officer, a ship’s officer, and a pilot.
I knew I did not want to become a teacher, a writer, or an accountant.
I did not want to be a teacher because I did not like school. I did not want
to be a writer because I failed English twice. And I dropped out of my
MBA program because I could not stand accounting.
Ironically, now that I have grown up, I have become everything
I never wanted to become. Although I disliked school, today I own an
education company. I personally teach around the world because I love
teaching. Although I failed English twice because I could not write,
today I am best known as an author. My book, Rich Dad Poor Dad, was
on the New York Times best-sellers list for over seven years and is one of
the top three best-selling books in the United States. The only books
ahead of it are The Joy of Sex and The Road Less Traveled. Adding one
more irony, Rich Dad Poor Dad and my CASHFLOW® board game are a
book and a game about accounting, another subject I struggled with.
So what does this have to do with the question: “What is your goal
in life?”
xv
Preface
xvi
CASHFLOW Quadrant
A Different Education
In 1973, in my last year of active duty flying for the Marine
Corps when I was stationed near home in Hawaii, I knew I wanted
to follow in my rich dad’s footsteps. While in the Marines, I signed
up for real estate courses and business courses on the weekends,
preparing to become an entrepreneur in the B and I quadrants.
At the same time, upon a friend’s recommendation of a friend,
I signed up for a personal-development course, hoping to find out
who I really was. A personal-development course is non-traditional
education because I was not taking it for credits or grades. I did not
know what I was going to learn, as I did when I signed up for real
estate courses. All I knew was that it was time to take courses to find
out about me.
In my first weekend course, the instructor drew this simple
diagram on the flip chart:
PHYSICAL
MENTAL
EMOTIONAL
SPIRITUAL
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CASHFLOW Quadrant
xx
CASHFLOW Quadrant
Finding My Path
I know some of you are now asking: Why is he spending so much
time talking about non-traditional education courses?
The reason is, that first personal-development seminar rekindled
my love of learning, but not the type of learning that is taught in
school. Once that seminar was over, I became a seminar junkie, going
from seminar to seminar, finding out more about the connection
between my body, my mind, my emotions, and my spirit.
The more I studied, the more curious about traditional education
I became. I began to ask questions such as:
• Why do so many kids hate school?
• Why do so few kids like school?
• Why are many highly educated people not successful
in the real world?
• Does school prepare you for the real world?
• Why did I hate school but love learning?
• Why are most schoolteachers poor?
• Why do schools teach us little about money?
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CASHFLOW Quadrant
xxiv
CASHFLOW Quadrant
BODY
MIND
EMOTION
SPIRIT
xxv
Preface
BODY
MIND
EMOTION
SPIRIT
one of the reasons so many people cling to job security is because they
lack emotional education. They let fear stop them.
One of the best things about military school and the Marine
Corps is that these organizations spend a lot of time developing
young men and women spiritually, emotionally, mentally, and
physically. Although it was a tough education, it was a complete
education, preparing us to do a nasty job.
The reason I created the CASHFLOW game is because the game
educates the whole person. The game is a better teaching tool than
reading or lecture, simply because the game involves the body, mind,
emotions, and spirit of the player.
The game is designed for players to make as many mistakes as
possible with play money, and then learn from those mistakes. To me,
this is a more humane way to learn about money.
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CASHFLOW Quadrant
In Conclusion
Finding one’s path is not necessarily easy. Even today, I do not
really know if I am on my path or not. As you know, we all get lost at
times, and it is not always easy to find our way back.
If you feel you are not in the right quadrant for you, or you are
not on your life’s path, I encourage you to search your heart and find
your path in life. You may know it is time to change if you are saying
things like the following statements:
xxvii
Preface
xxvii
Introduction
WHICH QUADRANT
ARE YOU IN?
The CASHFLOW Quadrant®
is a way to categorize people
based on where their money comes from.
Are you financially free? If your life has come to a financial fork in
the road, Rich Dad’s CASHFLOW Quadrant was written for you. If
you want to take control of what you do today in order to change your
financial destiny, this book will help you chart your course.
This is the CASHFLOW Quadrant. The letters in each quadrant
represent:
E for employee
S for small business or self-employed
B for big business
I for investor
1
Introduction
2
CASHFLOW Quadrant
SCHOOL
3
Introduction
SCHOOL
4
CASHFLOW Quadrant
“Once upon a time there was this quaint little village. It was a great
place to live except for one problem. The village had no water unless it
rained. To solve this problem once and for all, the village elders asked
contractors to submit bids to deliver water to the village on a daily basis.
Two people volunteered to take on the task, and the elders awarded the
contract to both of them. They felt that a little competition would keep
prices low and ensure a backup supply of water.
“The first person who won the contract, Ed, immediately ran out,
bought two galvanized steel buckets and began running back and forth
to the lake which was a mile away. He immediately began making
money as he labored morning to dusk, hauling water from the lake
with his two buckets. He would empty them into the large concrete
holding tank the village had built. Each morning he had to get up
before the rest of the village awoke to make sure there was enough
water for the people. It was hard work, but he was very happy to be
making money and for having one of the two exclusive contracts for
this business.
“The second winning contractor, Bill, disappeared for a while.
He wasn’t seen for months, which made Ed very happy, since he had
no competition.
“Instead of buying two buckets to compete with Ed, Bill wrote a
business plan, created a corporation, found four investors, employed
a president to do the work, and returned six months later with a
construction crew. Within a year, his team had built a large-volume
stainless-steel pipeline which connected the village to the lake.
“At the grand-opening celebration, Bill announced that his
water was cleaner than Ed’s water. Bill knew that the villagers had
complained about the water’s lack of cleanliness. Bill also announced
that he could supply the village with water 24 hours a day, 7 days
a week. Ed could only deliver water on weekdays because he didn’t
want to work on weekends. Then Bill announced that he would
charge 75 percent less than Ed did for this higher-quality, more-
reliable water. The villagers cheered and immediately ran for the
faucet at the end of Bill’s pipeline.
5
Introduction
6
CASHFLOW Quadrant
Part One The first part of this book focuses on the core differences
between people in the four quadrants. It shows why certain people
gravitate to certain quadrants and often get stuck there without realizing
it. It will help you identify where you are today in the quadrant and
where you want to be in five years.
Part Two The second part of this book is about personal change. It’s
more about who you have to be, instead of what you have to do.
Part Three The third part of this book explains how to find success
on the right side of the CASHFLOW Quadrant. I will share more of
my rich dad’s secrets on the skills required to be a successful B and I.
It will help you choose your own path to financial freedom.
7
My Environment…
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