"The main reason people struggle financially is because
they have spent years in school but learned nothing about
money. The result is that people learn to work for money. .
. but never learn to have money work for them." Robert
Kiyosaki
The #1 New York Times Bestseller "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" is
a story about the money lessons that Robert Kiyosaki
learned from his two dads, his biological father, who was
his poor dad, and his best friend's father, who was his
rich dad. Poor dad was a Ph.D. and held a very important
government position, but he never had enough money at the
end of the month and he died broke. Rich dad dropped out of
school at the age of 13 and went on to become one of the
wealthiest men in Hawaii.
"Rich Dad, Poor Dad" is a must-read for anyone looking
to develop a rich person's financial programming and
mindset. The first important lesson this book teaches is
the following: Don't work hard for money; instead, have
money work hard for you.
Kiyosaki explains in his book that there are three types
of income:
• Earned income
• Passive income
• Portfolio income
Poor dad taught his son Robert to go to school, study
hard, and get good grades so that he could find a secure
job that would pay him a good salary and give him excellent
benefits. That is, he advised him to work for earned
income, or to work for money. However, there are several
problems with this strategy. First, income streams from a
salary are linear: you only get paid once for your effort.
If you stop showing up for work, you stop getting a
paycheck. It's like being on a treadmill. Second, earned
income is confined to the amount of time that you work, and
time is a limited resource. Therefore, there's a limit to
how much earned income you can make. And third, earned
income pays the most taxes.
Passive income is income that does not require your
direct involvement. You make a strong initial effort to get
this type of income started, but then you do minimal work
thereafter to keep it going. It can be income derived from
royalties--for example, you write a book--, income derived
from patents--you invent something--, income derived from
real estate, and so on. Brian Lee at geniustypes.com swears
by bulk candy vending machines to create passive income.
There are many ways to create passive income and the key is
to be on the look-out for passive income producing
opportunities.
Portfolio income is generally derived from paper assets
such as stocks, bonds and mutual funds. Bill Gates is one
of the four richest men in the world because of portfolio
income, not earned income. That is, he's rich because of
the stock that he owns, not because of the salary he earns.
One of the many benefits of portfolio income is that paper
assets are easier to maintain than other types of
assets.
Another way to think of passive and portfolio income is
as residual income. With residual income you work hard
once, and it unleashes a steady flow of income for months
or even years. You get paid over and over again for the
same effort. That is, you get paid multiple times for every
hour of work and the stream of income continues to flow
whether you're there or not. Therefore, you can spend your
time doing things other than working for money. In
addition, how much money you make is not determined by how
many hours you work, but by how many residual streams of
income you create.
Rich dad would say to Robert: "The key to becoming
wealthy is the ability to convert earned income into
passive income and/or portfolio income as quickly as
possible." Start looking for opportunities to create
passive and portfolio income and develop a disciplined,
well-planned strategy for your money.