Free Trading Education: Educational Training Classes
If you have a good financial education you don’t need money because you have a financial education. Most of people work for money, which is doled out in meager fashion, and they blame their boss for their poor financial position. They work hard, but they don’t think financially. The rich don’t work for money, money works for the rich.
People should be taking jobs to learn and not to earn.
What does Kiyosaki recommend as a solution? Taking seminars on futures trading, financial workshops and real estate. He writes about buying a property and quickly reselling it for a large profit and he set up a free educational training classes which moving around US, being at 8-10 cities at 1 time. It is amazing that you can take 2 day free financial workshops with ought spending anything and no future obligations. It is just to give people an idea of how to be in control of their trades and investments.The big difference between the rich and non-rich is that the rich use their money to buy things which generate future wealth-stocks, real estate, etc. The non-rich tend to buy personal things which depreciate in value and have no ability to earn future wealth. People should be taking jobs to learn and not to earn.Robert Kiyosaki, author of “Rich Dad Poor Dad,” is an investor, entrepreneur, and educator whose perspectives on money and investing fly in the face of conventional wisdom.
Rich Dad Poor Dad is the longest-running best-seller in US.
Robert Kiyosaki had two dads - a rich one and a poor one.
“One dad was highly educated and intelligent; he had a Ph.D. and had completed four years of under-graduate work in less than two years. He then went to Stanford University, the University of Chicago, and Northwestern University to do his advanced studies. All on full, financial scholarships. My other dad never finished the eighth grade. Both men were successful in their careers, working hard all their lives. Both earned substantial incomes. Yet one dad struggled financially all his life and the other dad would become one of the richest men in Hawaii. One died leaving tens of millions of dollars to his family, charities, and his church. The other left a legacy of unpaid bills. Both men were strong, charismatic, and influential. Both men offered me advice, but they did not advise the same things”.
If I can take a dollar and turn it into 100 dollars, my bank will give me all the money I want, so will the stock market. But if you’re a financial idiot, you know they don’t care if you went to Harvard they’re not going to give you any money.”Most people live their lives chasing paychecks, pay raises, and job security because of emotions of desire and fear, not really questioning where those emotion-driven thoughts are leading them. It’s just like the picture of a donkey, dragging a cart, with its owner dangling a carrot just in front of the donkey’s nose. The donkey’s owner may be going where he wants to go, but the donkey is chasing an illusion.” writes Kiyosaki.”In the real world outside of academics, something more than just good grades is required. I have heard it called ‘guts,’ ‘chutzpah,’ ‘balls,’ ‘audacity,’ bravado,’ ‘cunning,’ ‘daring,’ ‘tenacity,’ and ‘brilliance.’ This factor, whatever it is labeled, ultimately decides one’s future much more than school grades.”Rich Dad’s Guide to Investing RK: I think that money is a very important subject. You know, when somebody says, “Money’s not that important,” or the best one is, “Money doesn’t make you happy”. I say, “You must be a very unhappy person”. You know, because I am happier when I have all the money I want. Money buys my lifestyle; it buys my freedom. I can travel the world I can work if I don’t work. So I think it’s to be more honest with yourself about your relationship with money.

