Rich Dad Poor Dad is a starting point for anyone looking to gain control of their financial future



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Rich-Dad-Poor-Dad

Each dollar
in my asset column 
was a great employee, 
working hard to make 
more employees 
and buy the boss
a new Porsche.


Rich Dad Poor Dad
87
more successful, my bosses talked about promotions and raises. It was 
flattering, but I could hear my rich dad asking in my ear: “Who are 
you working for? Who are you making rich?”
In 1974, while still an employee for Xerox, I formed my first
corporation and began minding my own business. There were already 
a few assets in my asset column, but now I was determined to focus 
on making it bigger. Those paychecks, with all the deductions, made 
all the years of my rich dad’s advice make total sense. I could see the 
future if I followed my educated dad’s advice.
Many employers feel that advising their workers to mind their 
own business is bad for business. But for me, focusing on my own 
business and developing assets made me a better employee because
I now had a purpose. I came in early and worked diligently, amassing 
as much money as possible so I could invest in real estate. Hawaii 
was just set to boom, and there were fortunes to be made. The more 
I realized that we were in the beginning stages of a boom, the more 
Xerox machines I sold. The more I sold, the more money I made 
and, of course, the more deductions came out of my paycheck. It was 
inspiring. I wanted out of the employee trap so badly that I worked 
even harder so I could invest more. By 1978, I was consistently one 
of the top five sales people at the company. I badly wanted out of the 
Rat Race.
In less than three years, I was making more in my real estate
holding corporation than I was making at Xerox. And the money
I was making in my asset column in my own corporation was 
money working for me, not me pounding on doors selling copiers. 
My rich dad’s advice made much more sense. Soon the cash flow 
from my properties was so strong that my company bought me my 
first Porsche. My fellow Xerox salespeople thought I was spending 
my commissions. I wasn’t. I was investing my commissions in assets.
My money was working hard to make more money. Each dollar 
in my asset column was a great employee, working hard to make 
more employees and buy the boss a new Porsche with before-tax 
dollars. I began to work harder for Xerox. The plan was working,


Chapter Four: Lesson 4
88
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:

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