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How to Build Wealth

Posted by admin | December 29, 2009 .

How to Build Wealth
$15.25

Product Description

How to Build Wealth will provide you with the pattern for wealth building. The methodical and cookie-cutter approach contained in this book will simplify your personal finances and give you control over your money. How to Build Wealth explains how to control expenses and how to realize the greatest profit on all of your transactions, how to protect what you already have, and how to prepare to make even more. The book provides a practical plan for building wealth that will apply to your life no matter what condition your finances are in. How to Build Wealth can best be described as a new twist on an old subject. Many books narrowly focus on getting rich or on how one component of wealth building will increase your net worth. Others are vague and leave you feeling like you’ve spent time reading but never learned anything. How to Build Wealth is not like that. How to Build Wealth makes it simple. First there’s the formula for wealth building, and second there is an explanation of the components that support the formula. The book consolidates the major components of wealth building into one source, and it provides many insights that you can use as soon as you read them. If you want to learn how to build wealth, you need to bring every part under control. Employment, Education, Ethics, Investing, Emotions, Discipline, Risk Tolerance, Preparation, Control, and Financial Knowledge are all components of wealth building. Basically, if you lack in one area, you could ruin your success in all of the others. That is why it is so important to understand everything that goes into wealth building. That is why How to Build Wealth was written. It was written to fill in the financial “holes. ” It was written to stop the red ink. It was written because there’s more to wealth building than a high paying job or a successful investment. The most satisfying thing that you can do is to follow the formula and to continue to, because it gets increasingly easier to follow as time passes. In the same way, it is easy to spend less than your income when your income continually increases. That’s the logic. How to Build Wealth will show you the way.

From the Author

I wanted to read a book that would instruct me how to build wealth regardless of where I was. I wanted to read a book that was practical and did not provide vague or general advice. I wanted to read about how to pull together the concepts of investing, finances, emotion, good behavior, morality, hard work, dedication, and education, along with cost cutting and wise spending habits, to create a practical plan for building wealth. I wanted someone to explain how it all came together. I wanted application, not hype. I could not find that book. So, I wrote it.

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3 Comments so far
  1. Hume December 29, 2009 5:09 am

    I bought this book for a friend but I decided to read it. It is a very good book and it is easy to understand. What I liked most about this book was that it did not tell me that I had to go out and buy real estate and get creative with investments to build wealth. This book did not tell me that I was doomed to a life of mediocrity if I was not planning to quit my job in five years. This book laid out a plan of spending less than you earn and putting the money that you make into assets that help you to make more money. It was about paying down debts, controlling your spending, picking the assets that work for you and getting a grip on the emotional decisions that ruin everything else. It showed how decisions can make you build wealth faster or slower and it showed how to control spending and to buy the right kinds of assets for your personality and your desire for risk and reward. I was kind of unsure whether or not I wanted to buy this book because it seemed like it would be a book dwelling on financial planning or something like investing in real estate. I’m not interested in flipping property or being a landlord so I was surpised that the author mentioned different kinds of assets and showed how it is that you start to invest when the only thing that you know is how to work for a paycheck. Most financial books that I have read were either all about investing or mostly targeted to financial planning and 401(k) and mutual fund concerns for retirement. This book was different because it really covered everything that a person needs to be able to generate a higher income and to put that income to work for themselves. It was a good refresher for the things that I already did right and it taught me a lot of new methods for making the most of my money and putting it only to the things that get me what I want. There were not any kind of “you must save 10% of your income if you want to succeed” type of statements either. It just teaches a practical approach to living, spending, learning, and investing for the future.

  2. Luqman December 29, 2009 5:25 am

    I have read enough books to know that I do not always find what I am looking for. As you read any or all reviews, consider the best review possible: Previewing BEFORE you BUY. Everyone is looking for something slightly different and expectations are not the same from person to person. So, not only can you click on “Search Inside The Book” to see if it is what you are looking for, but you can also click on my author profile page to e-mail me, the author, directly. You can also visit my blog, as shown on my profile page under the website listing, to get a better idea of my writing style and perspectives. Reading my blog will let you see if you even want to read what it is that I have written. If you are unsure if this book is for you, please consider e-mailing me from Amazon. com’s Profile Page and I will send you the full first chapter in PDF format, for free. I do not like buying books that waste my time and money, so if this book is not going to benefit you then I do not want you to buy it. I’m here to help, not to swindle. This is a financial book for the average American. If you are looking for a highly technical and specific book on investing or one that is superficial or purely motivational, this is NOT the book for you. The book description states that “How to Build Wealth explains how finances, behavior, risk-taking, emotions, education, investing, discipline, and effort all relate to each other for the purpose of building wealth. ” That is the intent of the book and that is what it delivers. It is a practical book that shows HOW to Build Wealth. It was written to give the reader a point of reference from which to evaluate their own decisions and make adjustments so that they can have better and better results. If you have any questions or concerns about whether or not this book is for you, please e-mail me. To any who buy this book and to all of those who already have, all I can say is thank you and I hope you love it! If you love the book, please review it favorably. Thanks for reading!

  3. Anonymous December 29, 2009 5:44 am

    This book explains wealth accumulation in a manner that is easy to read, understand and apply. The main point is “here is what it takes to build wealth” and the rest of the book explains “how” to go about it, with many real world examples. What makes this book stand apart is that it explains how to “think” and “feel” about assets and wealth building. It explains concepts like “cost-effective” and how to seek such things out. It explains why certain assets are more appropriate for people at certain points in their financial growth than for others. Most significant is the theme of relationships. Whereas many wealth-building-type books explain assets and what they are, this book encourages the reader to recognize what assets they have, how to capitalize on their overall ownership of assets to build more wealth, and how to identify the assets that are the “next in line” to pursue. To illustrate this logic, an example. With a job, which is an asset, a person might have the money to gain more education, another asset. With the education, more money can be earned and that money could be saved to purchase a home. A home is an asset that can protect the owner from inflation and increases in rent. These cost savings, along with the job, will give a person more money to invest in another asset. Another asset might be further education. With the new knowledge from further education, the person will eventually have more earning power and the person can pay down their home faster. In paying down the home faster, capital will be available for investment in other assets. If the person chooses to sell their home to get the capital, they might buy a duplex and live in one side while renting the other. To further maximize the profitability of a person’s assets, the book would recommend that the person buy their new duplex as close to where they work as possible so that they save time commuting and save the costs related to the commute, such as fuel costs and automobile wear. With the time savings from the location of the person’s new, more profitable, home-in relation to their place of employment-the person would have the time and money to devote to acquiring the knowledge of how to invest in another asset such as stocks, or to do a better job with their real estate and acquire more. With a reduced mortgage payment after the rental income from their duplex is considered, they would have more of their own salary to devote to paying down their debt, acquiring additional education, buying stocks, buying more real estate, opening their own business, or fill in the blank. Even though the author expresses a fondness for real estate and education, the book is not focused on one particular asset, but rather what to do with assets and how to pursue more.