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Product: Rich Dad Poor Dad




Review: Rich Dad Poor Dad
Review By: Seemark    Review Date: 07 Mar 2009   

What makes this book unique is his approach to how he thinks about accumulating wealth and about having money work for the earner. "Poor Dad" accepts the notion that he will never be rich and thinks that "money doesnt matter." "Rich Dad" thinks that "money is power." Teens are encouraged to be creative in developing ways to earn cash and to limit spending. A chapter on identifying individual strengths and learning styles while developing a financial IQ on the path to financial freedom is a lesson for any age. Sidebars and quizzes promote individual ideas and concepts. Teens will be attracted by the notion of playing games to learn more about acquiring assets and managing money. The glossary clearly explains financial terms.

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Good: Good to know about situation in between rich and poor
Bad:
Recommend: Yes


Review: Financial Guide for the beginners.
Review By: RK    Review Date: 12 Mar 2009   

This book is a very good financial advicer for the beginners in the life of earning. The rich dad explains how to manage the money. How to plan our retirement. I liked one lesson from this book "Retirement is not to be decided by your age, it should be decided by your earnings".

One should plan their retairement by earning more money in a smart way than their job, so that they can live without hurdles even after left the job.

The author Rabert Kiyosaki retairs at his age of 46.


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Good: Money management and planning.
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Recommend: Yes


Review: Rich Dad & Poor Dad Whats in it?

This review has been rejected by the editors for poor quality or due to copy right violation. If you have any questions regarding this, please post your question in the forum along with the url of this page.
Review By: RK    Review Date: 05 Mar 2009   

The book is the story of a person (the narrator and author) who has two fathers: the first was his biological father – the poor dad - and the other was the father of his childhood best friend, Mike – the rich dad. Both fathers taught the author how to achieve success but with very disparate approaches. It became evident to the author which fathers approach made more financial sense. Throughout the book, the author compares both fathers – their principles, ideas, financial practices, and degree of dynamism and how his real father, the poor and struggling but highly educated man, paled against his rich dad in terms of asset building and business acumen.

The author compares his poor dad to those people who are perpetually scampering in the Rat Race, helplessly trapped in a vicious cycle of needing more but never able to satisfy their dreams for wealth because of one glaring lack: financial literacy. They spend so much time in school learning about the problems of the world, but have not acquired any valuable lessons about money, simply because it is never taught in school. His rich dad, by contrast, represents the independently wealthy core of society who deliberately takes advantage of the power of corporations and their personal knowledge of tax and accounting (or that of their financial advisers) which they manipulate to their advantage.

The book's theme reduces to two fundamental concepts: a can-do attitude and fearless entrepreneurship. The author highlights these two concepts by providing multiple examples for each and focusing on the need for financial literacy, how the power of corporations contribute to making the wealthy even wealthier, minding your own business, overcoming obstacles by not fostering laziness, fear, cynicism and other negative attitudes, and recognizing the characteristics of humans and how their preconceived notions and upbringing hamper their financial freedom goals.

The author presents six major lessons which he discusses throughout the book:

The rich don't work for money
The importance of financial literacy
Minding Your own business
Taxes and corporations
The rich invent money
The need to work to learn and not to work for money


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Good: The way how he explains to become Rich.
Bad:
Recommend: Yes


Review: Who is Rich Dad? & Who is Poor Dad?

This review has been rejected by the editors for poor quality or due to copy right violation. If you have any questions regarding this, please post your question in the forum along with the url of this page.
Review By: RK    Review Date: 05 Mar 2009   

Rich Dad, Poor Dad revolves around three main characters: poor dad, rich dad (Kiyosaki's second father) and the son (the author himself as narrator of the book). The essence of each character is:

Poor dad – educated but lacking the street smarts
Rich dad – very little education (eighth grade), tons of street smarts
Kiyosaki – the spectator who learns lessons from both but internalizes only rich dad's traits.


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Quality of Content:
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Good: The methodology of life of Rich Dad
Bad:
Recommend: Yes


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