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4 Defense Strategies to Becoming A Millionaire

Written on 4/01/2008 by Alex Shalman, creator of the Practical Personal Development blog.

Something happened to me that completely took over my mind and made me think non-stop about money. I completely transformed every facet of my existence to thinking more and more like a millionaire. Come on, you know you have it bad when you think about it during sex.

What type of mindset do you have to have in order to become a millionaire? First off, let me say that I am a firm believer that in order to reach a goal you must first be the specific person, that takes the actions, that reach that goal. Be, do, have! I’m also a firm believer that one is much better off learning proper money management techniques while they have 1 dollar, instead of waiting until later in life and not knowing how to manage.

Dr. Thomas J. Stanley has taken a couple of decades of his life to do extensive field research on millionaires. In fact he has surveyed and personally interviewed +1,000 millionaires during this time. Carefully analyzing this statistical data, as well as their direct advice, and coming up with many fundamental success principles that are shared by these millionaires.

For the past couple of weeks I’ve been listening to the audio version of Dr. Stanley’s book ‘The Millionaire Mind‘. The facts I learned surprised me, but more importantly they changed my paradigm, and my actions towards money.

I’ll share a few of the interesting and unexpected facts I learned in this book, and if you’re interested you can certainly find the book at Amazon or your local library. Remember these facts are statistically significant for MOST millionaires, not all of them. The mentality could be used by anyone for success.

Defensive Money Strategies from Real Millionaires

    1. House Purchases. Real Millionaires do not get houses custom built, nor do they move into new developments. They live in clusters with each other in OLD neighborhoods, in OLD houses. Most are 15 years old and they often triple in price since their purchases.

 

 

 

 

 

 

First Cost Vs. Life Cycle Cost Defense Strategy

This applies to the amount of money that can be saved when purchasing an item, versus how much fixing and replacing this item will cost over a life time. The furniture purchases and shoe purchases I mention above are pretty good examples, but it can apply to many other situations as well.

A good example that Dr. Stanley used was in the case of paying a plumber to do some work for you. You might be able to buy a cheaper boiler, install it yourself, and save a few hundred dollars. However, you aren’t thinking about the big picture.

Factors To Consider

    1. Your Working Hours. While you were being a do-it-yourselfer you weren’t generating income from your regular job. Even if the professional that you hired was earning more money per hour, you must consider the work you’re missing. If the plumber makes $100 and you make $75, then by doing it yourself you only saved $25 per hour.

 

 

 

 

 

 

-Alex

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