Posts Tagged ‘Finances’

Yes! Pay Off Your Mortgage Early

Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki

This page includes my notes on the Rich Dad, Poor Dad book along with additional notes and comments that come from my work with clients on the subject.

This page is an ever evolving resource, so I suggest bookmarking this page and checking back periodically.
Also Highly Recommended

The Abundance Course

I’m Rich Beyond My Wildest Dreams

Wealth Beyond Reason

Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki

Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki I have read the three main books in this series.  While they are
not the best-written works I have ever laid my eyes on, in the words of author Richard
Kiyosaki, "I’m a best-selling author.  Not a best-writing author."

These books are full of basic, practical advice.  The knowledge is not specific how-to information, so much as it is a guide to thinking about your financial life.  I found the work truly eye-opening and I have been reading financial books since I was 19.

I highly recommend each of these books to anyone interested in improving their financial well-being.  These books will not make you a millionaire, but they will likely start you on the path to thinking like one.

Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money – That The
Poor and Middle Class Do Not!
– By Robert T. Kiyosaki

(Notes and comments by John Barker )

Lesson One – The Rich Don’t Work for Money

Two years ago I read Rich Dad, Poor Dad : What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money That the Poor & Middle Class Do Not! By Robert Kiyosaki.

The book really changed how I think about money and how I “spend/invest” my time. The book has had a big influence on some of the getSynergized philosophy, not just financially related either.

75 percent or more of the people who take our free self-assessment rate finances as the area of their life they are least satisfied with.

If this is true for you too, I think you will enjoy this series – and I highly recommend looking into the Rich Dad products.

Lesson One/Part One – The Rich Don’t Work for Money

What do the rich work for then? They work for the knowledge that will help them learn to leverage their money. In other words, they work to learn how to make their money work for them.

When we go to a job, we are paid for an hour of work. When that hour of work is complete, so is its ability to produce income. The rich learn to leverage that same hour of work by creating assets; an asset is defined by Kiyosaki as anything that puts money in our pocket. So the rich use that same hour of work to produce ongoing income.

That same hour of work may produce an income stream for life.

Kiyosaki points out that for most people a job is a temporary solution to a long-term problem. If you find yourself living from paycheck to paycheck, you probably understand what he means. The average person works for money instead of learning how to make their money work for them (we’ll discuss later in this series how to get your money to work for you).

If you find yourself in the position of working for an hourly wage – whether you are in business for yourself or working for another, then you may want to ask yourself how what you are doing is or could be creating a life-time asset.

Aside from money, what are you working towards? What skill are you learning or could you be
learning that will allow you to create leverage?

Rich Dad, Poor Dad offers some really great educational products. The
Cashflow 101 game is a ton of fun – and educational too.

A friend purchased the game (it is expensive, and for a reason) and invited other friends to come by a play for $5 per person.

It was well worth the money for everyone –and she not only paid for the game, but turned it
into a money making asset.

Fear
and Desire

Clever
marketing knows these are the motivating factors in the financial decisions of the average
person.
Publishers Clearing House uses the
slogan, “You May Already Be a Winner”.
Why? Because most of us have the desire to win millions
and the fear we may be throwing away a winning ticket.
Simply changing that slogan from “Enter to Win” significantly
boosted their business.

Fear and
Desire.

Fear of
being without money motivates people to work harder.
We want to work smarter, not harder.
Fear
is the driving force that puts people in jobs they don’t like and keeps them there. Most financial decisions are made to avoid risk,
however, these decisions often put is in greater risk.
Anyone who has experienced the recent rash of layoffs knows what I mean.

Desire
causes us to make impulsive decisions.
These
decisions often result in the removal of choice.
When
high levels of bad debt (good debt puts money in our pocket, bad debt drains money from
us) are accumulated, we essentially forfeit at least a portion of our freedom to choose.

Today,
when you reach for your wallet, ask yourself whether you are purchasing out of a fear or
desire motivation.
If the answer is yes, you
may want to reconsider your purchase.
Seek to
make all purchases investments – in yourself or the accumulation of assets.

Some
questions to ponder:

1. If I don’t drive a nice car, what do I
believe that to mean about me?

2.Do I envy people with “more” than I have and if so, what do I think they have that I don’t (other than financial resources)?

3. Are the majority of my purchases assets or liabilities? If a purchase provides ongoing
income, it is an asset. If a purchase depreciates in value or requires upkeep, it is a liability.

Your Greatest Asset

Financial success does not require an Ivy League education, financial resources or a huge network of
connections. (See Bill Gates)

We are all just an idea away. Yes, your greatest asset is your imagination and your eye for opportunity.

Opportunity doesn’t exist. You cannot buy a pound of it at the grocery store. Opportunity is ever
present, depending on one’s point of view. Opportunity is a function of attitude and outlook. One
person’s junk may be another person’s treasure as the say.

The difference? Imagination.

Today,
look at your world in a different way.
When
you pick up a pen, ask yourself, “How is this pen an asset?”
Or, “How could this book become an asset for
me?”

No object
is more significant than any other. You never
know where inspiration is going to come from and by staying open to the potential of all
things in your life you expand your possibilities.

Other Notes on Lesson One
Life pushes all of us around. Some give up.
Some fight. A few learn the lesson and
move forward.

If you think I’m the problem, then
you have to change me.
If you realize
you’re the problem, then you can change yourself, learn something and grow wiser.

The rich have money work for them.

Fear of being without money motivates
people to work harder.

Desire starts us thinking about all the
things we can buy.

Most people are motivated by their
emotions – specifically fear and desire (pain and pleasure).
Emotions take over and we react rather than think.

How
can we limit emotions?

How can we create an environment that
reduces reaction and encourages proaction?

If
fear and desire occupy our thoughts, is there room
to create?

Emotion = energy in motion

Look for opportunities

Lesson Two – Why Teach Financial Literacy

Rule One (The only rule)

Know the difference between assets and liabilities.

An asset is anything that puts money in my pocket.

A liability is anything that takes money out.

Wealth is the measure of the cash flow
from the asset column compared to the liability column.
How many days could you survive if you stopped working?

Income does not equal wealth.

Lesson Three – Mind Your Own Business

You must manage your own accounts, create your own business, have your own
investments.  Seek the advice of others, but know your business.

Investment vehicles

  1. Business
  2. Stocks
  3. Bonds
  4. Mutual
    Funds
  5. Income
    producing real estate
  6. Notes
    (IOU’s)
  7. Royalties
  8. Anything
    else that produces income or appreciates in value.

    “Excessive fear
    and self-doubt are the greatest detractors of
    personal genius.”(See
    The
    Abundance Course / Release Technique

    )

    Lesson Four
    - The History of Taxes and Corporations

    Own corporation

    1. Earn
    2. Spend
    3. Pay
      taxes

    Work
    for corporation

    1. Earn
    2. Pay
      taxes
    3. Spend

    Corporate
    spending is tax deductible (business spending
    is tax deductible)

    This game is awesome fun
    - and highly educational.  A friend of mine
    purchased it and turned it into a real money-maker
    by inviting friends to play for a small fee.
    We were only too happy to pay to play!

    Lesson Five
    - The Rich Invent Money

    Money is not real.
    It is an idea and an agreement.
    Value is an agreement.

    Self-doubt
    holds us back; it limits our options due to reluctance
    to take risks.

    Be
    creative and “invent” ways to make money.
    See potential; not “reality”.
    Leaders have vision.
    Followers must be shown.

    Lesson Six
    - Work to Learn — Don’t Work For Money

    Take jobs that will only support you
    in developing the skills to become a business
    owner or investor.  Learn to sell.
    That is the bottom-line of business success.
    (SPIN
    Selling
    is highly recommended reading)

    “I
    am a best selling author, not a best-writing author.”

    We
    are only one idea or one skill away from great
    wealth.

    Editorial Reviews

    Amazon.com

    The rich are different from the rest of us, if
    for no other reason than U.S. tax and securities
    laws allow them to invest in ways that keep us
    from catching up to them. That’s why 90 percent
    of all corporate shares of stock are owned by
    10 percent of the people. Kiyosaki believes it’s
    possible for anyone to move up into that 10 percent,
    but it takes a different view of investing than
    most people have: it takes a plan to be a successful
    investor. And a plan is more than simply buying
    and selling, or collecting "assets"
    that bring in no cash and are thus more akin to
    liabilities. The way most people invest, "they
    might as well be pushing a wheelbarrow in a circle,"
    he writes. A plan is "mechanical, automatic,
    and boring," a formula for success that has
    worked historically for most of those who’ve used
    it. Kiyosaki’s "rich dad" (actually,
    the father of his best friend) tells him the simplest
    analogy is the game Monopoly: buy four green houses,
    trade them for one red hotel, and repeat until
    you become rich.

    The overall message
    of Rich
    Dad’s Guide to Investing
    is that
    this is an abundant world, full of opportunity
    for the sophisticated investor. However, it sometimes
    takes a while to find this point. Much of the
    book is told in dialogues between young Kiyosaki
    and his rich dad, and these conversations can
    ramble. There are rewards for the careful reader–for
    example, in the middle of a section on the basic
    rules of investing, Kiyosaki’s rich dad compares
    investor education to toilet training: difficult
    at first but eventually automatic. But getting
    to these inspired metaphors means wading through
    a lot of repetitive dialogue. It’s a bit ironic
    that someone who advocates investor discipline
    should show so little as a writer. But by the
    end of the book, even the rambling starts to make
    sense. By the hundredth time you read that the
    rich don’t work for money, and that you don’t
    need money to make money, both concepts start
    to make sense. It still looks difficult to apply
    these ideas, but Rich
    Dad’s Guide to Investing
    certainly
    makes the case that they’ll work for anyone bold
    and smart enough to practice them. –Lou Schuler

It’s Called Work for a Reason : Larry Winget

Items of Interest