21st March 2007

Entrepreneurship creates riches!

Employees are resource-oriented. Entrepreneurs are opportunity-oriented.-
 

A person with an employee mindset might say, “I would start my own business but I don’t have the money.” The person focuses on their resources, in this case their lack of money, rather than the opportunity.

In a similar situation, a person with an entrepreneur’s mindset might say, “Let’s start the business and we can finance the business from the cash flow.” Or “Tie up the property and we’ll find the money later.”

Kiyosaki’s rich dad said, “If you do not have resources, you need to become resourceful.” Poor people say ‘I can’t afford it.’ That’s why they’re poor’. According to kiyosaki, when we say I can’t afford it, we just shut our brains to the opportunity, instead we should ask “how can I afford it”

Employees prefer to manage via hierarchical structures. Entrepreneurs manage via networks, utilizing the resources of other people and organizations.-

This means that employee-type leaders would rather hire people and bring their talent “in-house.” Rather than have an outside firm do their creative work, an employee-type leader would prefer to hire the talent and have them under their control. This is because employees gravitate to a leadership style that is more suited to a military command-and-control type of organization.

Instead of the military’s command-and-control leadership style, his Rich Dad used a more cooperative and collaborative style of leadership. He encouraged his son and Robert to learn to lead and manage people who are not required to follow our orders. Rather than hire people and bring them in-house, rich dad networked with other people and organizations, which tended to reduce his costs and at the same time increase his resources and influence in the marketplace.

Today, The Rich Dad Company follows rich dad’s advice. Instead of becoming a stand-alone publishing house, they choose to cooperate via a joint venture agreement with The Time Warner Book Group, as well as licensed publishers around the world who offer their books in 43 languages. In this way, they keep the core staff small, yet utilize the thousands of employees of publishers around the world.

But Robert Kiyosaki Says that leveraging the assets and resources of partners is not enough. It’s important to choose the right partners-ones who are aligned with your goals and values. Choosing the right partners can make the difference between success and failure-as I’ve learned the hard way.

In doing so, Rich Dad Company-as entrepreneurs-stay small, yet increase market share by cooperating rather than competing… by networking rather than hiring employees and bringing work “in-house.”

These were some basic differences in the mindset of employees and entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurship comes from the confidence to organize and take risks. Financial education is what builds up this confidence
 

 

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20th March 2007

How rich are you?

Success is a relative term and depends on person to person . Some people might believe that baing rich is being succcessful or some might say that being able to give your family  a comfortable life , or for some high position in society measures up to success. I guess the success is associated with the satisfaction and happiness a person feels when he achieves his goals . But definition of goals again depends on person to person.
 

  “Content makes poor men rich; discontent makes rich men poor.”Benjamin Franklin
 

Ask anyone around you how they define wealth or being rich, and you will get answers along these lines like “having 1 million dollars”, “owning that piece of real estate in the upper class area, complete with garage and swimming pool” or “owning that Ferrari sports cars” etc etc.

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Robert Kiyosaki understood that being rich is not just about owning 1 million dollars or a piece of real estate.  It is more than just that, it is about cashflow.  Incoming and outflowing of money.  Robert Kiyosaki therefore, defined being rich or wealth as the number of days which you can survive without working.
 
So we have to see how much wealth we have and work accordingly, creating passive sources of income .

No one has the knowledge to do it all . Its about learning from the best and then applying it .
 

“If you want to go somewhere, it is best to find someone who has already been there.” Robert Kiyosaki 

 

  

 

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16th March 2007

Education makes the difference!

In my past entries I’ve been harping on the need to get a financial education, on the need for you to DECIDE to STOP BEING A VICTIM and get on the road to creating your own financial future and until now I have not talked about how to start the process of educating yourself.
Before I reveal how I started, let me destroy some myths about understanding financial statements and getting a financial education.
I’m not an accountant, financial planner or other financial guru. Well here is the interesting thing, many of the people that are financial planners etc, don’t know how to read financial planners either. Financial Planners are typically just certified sales people so they are only responsible for selling you products and getting their commission. Accountants understanding P&L statements and balance statements often don’t understand the relationship between the two, so if thats the case where do you learn.
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 For most people investing is like giving money to a stranger in the street and making him promise to come back ten years later with more money. Fat chance.
So, you owe it to yourself, your family, your kids and grandkids, to get a financial education. You owe it to all of them to teach yourself and then teach them.

To live your life the way you want to , to be able to give yourself and your family the best you can , to be successful , its important to learn from the people who are already successful . Now what is success all about, I guess it depends on person to person. Get inspired , Believe in yourself and your dreams and make them a reality.

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Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…

Your partner in success…
Gagan.

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14th March 2007

Entreprenuership continued…

I will continue with the lessons kiyosaki learned on his jouney to be an entreprenuer. Small but powerful factors which can change the way we think about businesses .
Lesson 6: The Best Answers Are Found in Your Heart … Not Your Head
Make it your company’s mission to work for others, not just itself. Working towards a mission that goes beyond simply making money will ensure the best quality of work and greater likelihood of success. “If it had been just about the money, there are easier things the three of us [himself, wife Kim, and Sharon Lecter, the founders of The Rich Dad Company] could have done,” he says.
Lesson 7: The Scope of the Mission Determines the Product
While designing your business, determine how big you want it to be. Deciding whether you want to own a small business or a big corporation will set the stage for how you produce and market your product.
Lesson 8: Design a Business That Can Do Something That No Other Business Can Do
“Simply put, focus all your efforts on your core strength, your unique product,” Kiyosaki writes. Kiyosaki uses Domino’s Pizza as an example of a business designed around a unique tactical advantage: offering a pizza in 30 minutes or less. By offering something no other pizza vendor did, Domino’s immediately began taking market share from its competitors.
Lesson 9: Don’t Fight for the Bargain Basement
“Ultimately, the most important job of an entrepreneur is to be first in the mind of your customers,” Kiyosaki writes. While almost everyone knows that Lindbergh was the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic, almost no one remembers who flew second. Market your product as No. 1. “If you are not first in your category, then invent a new category you can be the first in.”
Lesson 10: Know When to Quit
Sometimes it is best to cut your losses. Not everyone should be an entrepreneur, and only those who love it and accept it as an educational process should do so. Understand that becoming an entrepreneur is a process that involves failing. Certainly, Kiyosaki’s mission in writing this book is to prevent others from making all the same mistakes he did, but there will be times when quitting will seem like the easiest and best thing to do.

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Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…

Your partner in success…
Gagan.

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13th March 2007

Entreprenuership!

Entreprenuership is something which comes from logical thinking, analyasing, and taking decisions. Anyone can be an entrepreneur, according to Robert Kiyosaki, author of ‘Rich Dad’s Before You Quit Your Job: 10 Real-Life Lessons Every Entrepreneur Should Know About Building a Multimillion-Dollar Business’ (Warner Business).
Given that Kiyosaki believes that everyone has the potential to create a thriving organization, it may seem ironic that one of the major motifs of his book is ‘failure.’ Failure, however, is part and parcel to becoming a successful entrepreneur, (”Humans are designed to learn by making mistakes,” he writes) and only those willing to risk failure should attempt to create their own industries.
 To help determine whether you should try to become an entrepreneur, he offers a few lessons he learned on his journey to becoming one himself:
 

Lesson 1: A Successful Business Is Created Before There Is a Business
All too often, new entrepreneurs get so excited about a new product or opportunity that they forget to invest the time designing the operation around the product or opportunity. Before you quit your job, study the lives of industrialists and the different types of companies they created, Kiyosaki advises. Better yet, keep your daytime job while starting a part-time business — for the experience. “Not only will you learn about business, you will learn a lot about yourself,” he says.
 
Lesson 2: Learn How to Turn Bad Luck Into Good Luck
Rather than wallowing in the anger or sadness of making a mistake, take the opportunity to learn something new from that mistake and turn a bad experience into a good one.
 


Lesson 3: Know the Difference Between Your Job and Your Work
Work is what you do to prepare for your job, and doesn’t necessarily mean getting paid. “Do your homework,” Kiyosaki stresses repeatedly. Creating a lucrative enterprise entails five jobs: delivering a good product, knowing your legal rights, establishing a system, establishing communications and managing cash flow. If you aren’t qualified to do all of these jobs, be prepared to work until you are or hire others — such as an accountant and a lawyer — who are.
  Lesson 4: Success Reveals Your Failures
“Before quitting your job, know that your most important job is to develop yourself,” Kiyosaki says. A business that is initially booming is still inclined to fail if the company does not continue to develop. It’s not enough to cover every aspect of launching a business; you must constantly strengthen those elements in order to maintain the prosperity of that undertaking.
 Lesson 5: The Process Is More Important Than the Goal
If you approach a business venture as a learning experience, rather than a get-rich-quick scheme, it will be that much easier to bounce back from mistakes and achieve long-term success. “High expenses are an everyday challenge in business,” Kiyosaki says. Consult an experienced accountant before you begin to help you anticipate how much money you will need to both support production and cover additional expenses. If you’re not willing to face these challenges, you should not become an entrepreneur.
 

Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…

Your partner in success…
Gagan.

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10th March 2007

Leveraging to be RICH

When I think of how people make huge amounts of money the first thing that comes to my my mind is that they have the resources. Now even if they don’t they have the ability to creadte them .Leveraging is one of the ways to create resource .In Robert Kiyosaki’s book, “Rich Dad, Poor Dad”, I learnt that one of the key ways to creation of wealth and to financial freedom is knowing how to use OPM - Other People’s Money and OPT - Other People’s time.  That is leveraging on other people’s time and money.

leverage-2.jpgThe rich have long known about this powerful concept and almost all have applied and used this principle in attaining their wealth. 
People like Jean Paul Getty, the first billionaire in America, as well as Donald Trump, Henry Ford, Robert Kiyosaki and almost every wealthy individual understood the power of leverage.
However, this should be a win win situation for the both ,do not get the wrong impression that we have to take advantage of other people’s time and money to reach our financial goal.  It is just an action of mutual benefit.
Metwork marketing, franchising are a few powerful tools to leverage on other people’s time and money.Banking, stock market and real estate are examples of those activities that take advantage of leveraging on other people’s money. By allowing other people to use your money, or by using someone else’s money, you share in the profits that are generated from these venture or activities.
Leverage creates a win-win situation for all.
In Robert Kiyosaki’s Cash Flow Quadrant, one of the difference between an ‘S’ (Self-employed), and a ‘B’ (Business Owner) is knowing and able to leverage on other people’s time and money.
 
A self-employed does not know and will not delegate.  They think no one else can do better than them and will try to handle everything all by themselves, which cuases them to stay small and working hard. They will be sweating their way to success.
On the other hand, a Business Owner will leverage on other people’s time and money to ramp up the business as quickly and efficiently as possible.  It is simply too hard and time consuming to attempt to create a business without leveraging the resources of other people, which includes not only money but also other people’s time and abilities.
This is a time when you have to be smart and efficient in your work , results matter, time matter . or you will be left out . Leveraging gives you an edge over the others.
“The only difference between a rich person and poor person is how they use their time” Robert Kiyosaki

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Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…

Your partner in success…
Gagan.

 

 

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7th March 2007

Passive Income

Going through kiyosaki’s rich dad series I learn that he speaks of a few businesses where in you can generate passive income. Kiyosaki talks of investing in equity and real estate. Network marketing is also one of the tools to generate passive income. This is a system which uses the power of leveraging to your benefits. Passive income is earned with little or no human intervention. That means if I were to do little or nothing for a long time, the cash will still come to me continuously. For example, when I invest in a property to collect rental income, there is little or no work required on my part to earn that rental income.

I should be focus on building passive income. That means I should be investing in assets that generate positive cash flow as a passive income.I think I have to give kiyosaki’s definition of assets and liabilities in here , according to which an asset is one that generates positive cash flow. If it does not generate income, then it is a liability. Very simple but very effective . If you have a big house , most of us consider it as an asset but the fact is , you have to pay in order to maintain it which generates a negative cash flow .So that is more of a liability. If we get a rental income on that house leading to a positive cash flow, it qualifies as an asset.

In my last post I talked about time. Passive income gives you more quality time which in return improves the quality of life. Time matters a lot , we should either look forward to speed up our processes or try and make the systems automated so that it takes over and does not require much input from us.

“The only difference between a rich person and poor person is how they use their time”Robert Kiyosaki

Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…

Your partner in success…
Gagan.

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6th March 2007

Time counts!

 

I have been traveling for the past few days. On my trip I happened to visit one of my close friends who run a food processing plant. He makes good production volumes but still he has been running the same plant for the last ten years without any major increase in production capabilities. While discussing things between us, he told me that he could not get enough time to think of anything else. After spending a few hours with him, I could analyze that he was too involved in day to day activities, this left no time for him to plan out anything else. Being a manager should mean balancing or control but leaving some of the things to the people responsible for it, so that they can learn to take control as well as feel attached to the organization. Some basic management facts but make a lot of difference when applied effectively. Time is money and if you can manage to take some more time out with the same amount of work or do more in the same time, you should always try and do that.

Financial education is the kind of education which makes you a better manager whether you are at job, a business owner or a smart investor. And Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad series helps you be all that. We should try and learn from the best and not amateurs.

 

Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…
 

Your partner in success…
Gagan.

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3rd March 2007

There is no tomorrow

A teacher teaches in a class of 50, the same course from the same textbook. All 50 students get the same time to work upon it, get the same question paper but their marks range from a few toppers to a few failures.   Given the same conditions, why is it, that some people can be successful while others cannot? I believe the difference lies within the desire for success. Not everyone is hungry for success. Some people are simply comfortable with what they have in life. Thus, there is no motivation for them to achieve any other things even when the conditions are perfect. Being in comfort zone will lead to the lack of enthusiasm and drive to achieve things. If we want to achieve something we will have to get out of our comfort zones and get going. Rich dad Kiyosaki says “what you do today will define your tomorrow.”

 

Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…
 
Your partner in success…
Gagan.

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28th February 2007

Rich Dad on Reed’s review

I wrote about Reed’s review of Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad Poor Dad in my last post. There is this letter written and posted by Robert Kiyosaki on Cashflow Technologies’ older discussion board sometime in February 2000 when the infamous review of “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” by John T. Reed first debuted. This is on one of the posts by Matthew Chan at his Mastermind Forums. I have a copy of this letter which answers most of the Reed’s comments.

A REPLY FROM ROBERT KIYOSAKI

SUB: JOHN T. REED’S COMMENTS ABOUT RICH DAD POOR DAD

I normally do not reply to comments about me or my books and products. But many friends called me with concern about John T. Reed’s comments on his personal web site, so I decided to glance over his in depth report on my book.

First of all, I support our right to the freedom of speech. When I read comments on my company’s bulletin board, I weigh both compliments and criticisms equally and welcome both. I make no comments simply because both compliments and criticism are important and I do not want to encourage or discourage either. I reply to John T. Reed’s report simply because it is much more than a criticism. I find it more of an angry attack and I wonder why. I wonder why someone so smart and so rich would spend so much time writing a lengthy heated report on my simple little book.

So rather than say nothing I thought it best to offer you my view on his report and let you come to your own conclusions.

The following are my points to you, not him, on some of the points he raised:

1. First of all, “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” is a very simple book. It was not meant to be a textbook for the Harvard Business School.

2. Second of all, RDPD was meant to take a very complex subject and make it simple. It seems he took what was simple and made it complex.

3. “Rich Dad Poor Dad” is a true story of a man who did not graduate from high school, yet ultimately became one of the richest men in Hawaii.

4. As my rich dad said, “In school, your measure of success is your report card. In the real world, your report card is your financial statement.” My rich dad did not have a good report card but he had a good financial statement.

5. “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” is a story of a simple man teaching two 9 year old boys his 6 basic lessons about money. As I said earlier, this book was not meant for students of the Harvard Business School. If “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” raised the hair on John T. Reed’s back, my next book, “Rich Dad’s Guide to Investing”, which is now due out on May 1, 2000, will cause him to write an even longer report. I can’t wait to read his next document.

6. And finally, his accusations about my college education are worthy of comment. I considered going to the school he went to, which was West Point. It is the federal military academy that trains officers for the U.S. Army. I did not apply for a congressional appointment to his school, although it is a fine school. I chose my school, the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point, New York for two reasons. And they are:

  • I wanted to learn about international trade. Kings Point trains officers to sail ships such as tankers, cargo ships, and passenger liners to carry on commerce throughout the world. At Kings Point I studied subjects I love such as Naval Architecture, International Trade, Sailing, Navigation, Admiralty Law, International Law, Business Law, as well as the regular hard sciences. I also spent a year abroad, sailing on passenger ships like the Love Boat and sailing to places such as Hong Kong, Thailand, Alaska, and Tahiti. I was being paid to go to school while I sailed the world. It was a great way to get a college education.
  • Kings Pointers were at that time, some of the highest paid graduates in the world. In 1964, when I had to choose between Kings Point and West Point, a West Point graduate was making about $200 a month. A Kings Point graduate was starting out at over $2,000 a month and higher. So although Kings Point is not as prestigious a school as West Point, a 1000% ROI difference per month for the same 4 year education seemed like a smart financial decision to me.

The reason King Pointers were paid more upon graduation than West Pointers was because Kings Pointers graduated as civilians and West Pointers graduated as military officers. Kings Pointers were paid by private shipping companies while West Pointers were paid by the federal government. That is why, when I graduated and went to work for Standard Oil of California, my pay was $42,000 a year, in 1969. West Pointers were making a little less than $5,000 a year. My classmates who sailed civilian cargo ships in Vietnam were paid double combat pay, although, they were not in much danger, which meant that many were paid $80,000 to $120,000 a year upon graduation. Not too bad for a 22 year old kid in 1969.

Although I was draft exempt and did not have to go to Vietnam because I was a Merchant Marine Officer, I chose to resign from my high paying job and join the U.S. Marine Corps. I went to flight school and then on to fight in Vietnam. Both of my dads thought it was the duty of a young man to defend his country in time of war and that is what I did in 1969. So I only had that high paying job for only a short period of time.

And that is my reply to John T. Reed’s report. It is written to you, not to him. I suspect he would only get angrier if I tried to reason with him.

I replied because what he said seemed much more than a criticism of my Book, it seemed like a personal attack. He has some valid points and I am sure he is a very smart man.

In fact, he acknowledges that the Thunderbird School of International Management of Arizona is one of the top schools in international business. Should we tell him that Thunderbird uses “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” as part of its curriculum in its entrepreneur program, and that I have been invited to speak to its students on several occasions? Please refer to the testimonial from Thunderbird on our website.

Yet, my book “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” while technically accurate, was not meant to be a technical book. It is a simple book about an often complicated and technical subject. “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” was written primarily to offer hope to people who wanted to find their own path to financial freedom rather than to be a slave to money all their lives.
It was written to let people know that regardless if you did well in school or not, regardless if you had a high paying job or not, that each and everyone of us has the ability to reach the land of financial freedom if we have the proper financial education.

As a final note, there is a new book out that I highly recommend, written by Thomas J. Stanley the author of “The Millionaire Next Door”. In his new book, “The Millionaire Mind”, Stanley surveyed over a thousand millionaires and found that most were B and C students and had an average SAT score of 1190. In fact, most of the millionaires would not have qualified for admission to most of the top academic institutions. Quoting from the book, “I find no correlation between SAT scores, grade-point averages and economic achievement. None.” says Stanley.

And I say, “Keep learning, keep an open mind, and thank you for taking an interest in your own financial education.”
Learn from Robert Kiyosaki and other world’s best gurus…..on your way to success and financial freedom, inspired…

Your partner in success…
Gagan.

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